Deities . From ancient regional mythology, most names of ancient gods and goddesses in this region come from local tribal lore, particularly in
the North. Many of the deities are the same as eastern
Germanic Deities:
Wodan is Dutch for
Odin, the god of war and leader of the
Wild Hunt. The Wild Hunt was retold in Dutch with Wodan leading under different guises:
Gait with his dogs; Derk with his dogs; Derk with his boar; the glowing horse; Henske with his dogs.).
Donar is Dutch for
Thor, the god of thunder. In Dutch the
days of the week are named for Germanic gods, a custom derived from parallel Roman practice. Note that the following days were named through Roman influence, because the Romans found them to be (roughly) equivalent to their Roman deities: • maandag (Monday) named after
Máni - compared to "dies Lunae" (
Luna's day) • dinsdag (Tuesday) named after
Tyr - compared to "dies Martis" (
Mars' day) • woensdag (Wednesday) after
Wodan - compared to "dies Mercurii" (
Mercury's day) • donderdag (Thursday) is named after
Donar - compared to "dies Jovis" (
Jupiter's day) • vrijdag (Friday) after
Frîja - compared to "dies Veneris" (
Venus' day). However other ancient deities are
Druidic,
Celtic and
Gallo-Roman in nature, particularly in the south and throughout Flanders:
Erecura, the goddess of the earth,
Rosmerta, goddess of fertility, and the deities mentioned by
Saint Eligius in Flanders (Jupiter, Neptune, Orcus, Diana, and Minerva). Finally some deities were regional or specific to one clan:
Arduinna was the Celtic goddess of the
Ardennes forest.
Nehalennia was a goddess of travellers in
Zeeland, where over 160 stone votives depicting her image were located in the sea.
Vagdavercustis was an ancient goddess of the
Batavians mentioned on an altar near
Cologne.
Tanfana is another more mysterious goddess recorded in the 1st century AD.
Other beings The Dutch words
witte wieven and
wittewijven in Dutch dialects means "white women". They were spirits of the women who died of heartbreak after their men had been untrue to them. They would live on in the mists and appear when it was night and misty. They would attack men who were untrue to their women by getting them lost in the mists. Nature spirits: The following beings may have originated as deities or supernatural beings in mythology, and later recharacterized as nature spirits during the Middle Ages; The Dutch like other Germanic people believed in
elves, the Dutch words for them are
elfen, elven, and
alven. The
moss maidens, who appear in Old Dutch and Southern Germanic folklore were known as tree spirits or wood elves, often chased in the Dutch version of the
Wild Hunt. The
Kabouter was the Dutch name for the
kobold (
gnome), a household spirit and earth spirit who usually lived underground.
Mythological heroes The first epic heroes, kings and leaders of The Low Countries, considered mythological, in the sense of supernatural and foundational, include: •
Tuisto (Tuisco) - the mythical ancestor of all Germanic tribes. •
Mannus - ancestor of a number of Germanic tribes, son of Tuisto. •
Ing (Ingwaz, Yngvi) - founder of the
Ingaevones tribe, son of Mannus. •
Istaev - founder of the
Istvaeones tribe, son of Mannus. •
Redbad, King of the Frisians •
Folcwald - hero of Frisian tribes. •
Finn (Frisian) - hero of Frisian tribes, Frisian lord, son of Folcwald. •
Merovech, semi-legendary founder of the
Merovingian dynasty Mythological objects Objects considered magical or sacred in the Low Countries (7th century) included:
Oak trees, springs and wooded groves had sacred and medicinal powers.
Corn dollies ("
vetulas") were thought to hold the spirit of the corn in harvest rituals.
Amulets and charms were worn on the head or the arms ("
phylacteries") for protection and veneration of the gods and goddesses. Neolithic ground axes were collected, thought to be Donar's lightning. Farmers hung these axes in their homes to protect against lightning strike, in accordance with the belief that 'lightning never strikes the same place twice'.
Missionary accounts After the influence of Christian missionaries, the original mythologies were lessened in power, and for the most part adapted into folklore and legends, often made
diminutive. The witte wieven for example became ghosts haunting sacred sites. However sacred beliefs and practices continued, often incorporated with Christianity. In a good example, the 12th century poem from the Netherlands
Karel ende Elegast (
Charlemagne and elf guest), an elven being is described as the hero who befriends and helps the Christian king Charlemagne in the forest. The
Bishop of Utrecht Arnold II van Hoorn, 1372-1375, noted the Flemish people still believed in wearing amulets and charms ("phylacteries"); he defined them as amulets worn on the head or arms, sometimes made out of books or scripture. In the
Hieronymous Bosch painting,
Cure of Folly, 1475-1480, the woman balancing a book on her head is thought to be a satire of the people wearing phylacteries. The written biographies of the Christian missionaries to the Netherlands, sermonizing against pre-Christian beliefs, are coincidentally some of the earliest written accounts of the myths that existed in the region. The missionary texts written by the incoming
Christian missionaries in the 7th century and 8th century recorded details of the pre-Christian myths of the native culture, although the missionaries showed religious hostility to them as
pagan beliefs. The main missionaries of the Netherlands were
Willibrord,
Bonifatius and
Saint Eligius.
Willibrord Willibrord (658 – 739), appointed Bishop of
Utrecht, came to the Netherlands in 690, and was the first Anglo-Saxon missionary to preach Christianity there. The Christian
Franks had just reoccupied and taken control of the lands from the
Frisian tribes. The
vita of Willibrord records he went on a missionary journey to an island called
Fositesland (most think this was
Helgoland occupied by ethnic
Frisians), between
Friesland and
Denmark. Willibrord found it had sanctuaries and shrines dedicated to the Scandinavian gods
Fosite, son of
Balder and
Nanna. He found the land was extremely
sacred to the native people. A sacred well existed, and people drank its spring water only in silence. Willibrord slew the sacred cattle he found there, and baptized three people in the well within a few days of arriving. Willibrord took other mission trips on the Dutch mainland where he witnessed that the people considered clearings in woods, springs and wells sacred to their mythology and religion. Willibrord tried to erase their pagan shrines and landmarks. He built a church in a sacred clearing in the forest, destroyed a sacred forest in
Heiloo and renamed heathen wells as Christian wells. Many wells were renamed in his name. In 714, the Frisian
King Radboud drove Willibrord and his priests out of the area. Willibrord returned about 719 after the Frankish troops had taken control of the area and the King Radboud had died. Willibrord continued to dismantle pre-Christian sanctuaries.
Bonifatius Bonifatius (672–753), also known as Boniface, was the next missionary among the Frisians and Saxons. He arrived on a missionary trip to the Netherlands in 716, specifically going to
Dorestad, modern-day
Wijk bij Duurstede. When he arrived, Bonifatius found that the Frisians had restored and rebuilt their
fana delubrorum, the
heathen temples, after Willibrord had been driven out. King Radboud allowed Bonifatius to spread Christian messages but he found the natives had a
pantheon of gods and were not that impressed with Christianity. He left the same year. In 719 Rome appointed Bonifatius to convert "the savage people of Germania". Bonifatius joined Willibrord in Utrecht to receive a three-year missionary training, then in 721 travelled east of the Netherlands into
Hesse,
Germany. Bonifatius undertook a final preaching mission in Friesland in June 753 when he was attacked and killed by a group of
Frisians with unknown (legend says resentful) intentions.
Procopius Procopius in the 540s records a belief and/or funerary rite observed at the mouths of the Rhine involving the passage of the dead to the island of
Brittia (Great Britain). ==Folklore==