Lapland : The Laplanders have a reputation for magical
practice which is almost proverbial throughout Europe, and
certainly so among the peoples of the Scandinavian
•Peninsula. Indeed the Finns still credit them with
extraordinary power in sorcery and divination. Many
Scandinavian scions of nobility were in ancient times sent
to Lapland to obtain a magical reputation, and Eric the
son of Harold Haarfager found Gunhild, daughter of Asur
Tote, sojourning among the Lapps in A.D. 922 for that
purpose. English literature abounds with reference to
Lapland witches. But Sorcery in Lapland was a preserve of
the male shamans or magicians. Like the Celtic witches the
Lapps were addicted to the selling of wind or tempests in
knotted ropes.
Scheffer in his Lapponia (1674) writing of Lapp magic says
:—" The melancholic constitution of the Laplanders,
renders them subject to frightful apparitions and dreams,
which they look upon as infallible presages made to them
by the Genius of what is to befall them. Thus they are
frequently seen lying upon the ground asleep, some singing
with a full voice, others howling and making a hideous
noise not unlike wolves.
" Their superstitions may be imputed partly to their
living in solitudes, forests, and among the wild beasts
partly to their solitary way of dwelling separately from
the society of others, except who belong to their own
families sometimes several leagues distance. Hereafter it
may be added, that their daily exercise is hunting.it
being observed that this land of life is apt to draw
people into various superstitions, and at last to a
correspondence with spirits. For those who lead a solitary
life being frequently destitute of human aid, have
ofttimes recourse to forbidden means, in hopes to find
that aid and help among the spirits, which they cannot
find among men; and what encourages them in it is
impunity, these things being committed by them, without as
much as the fear of any witnesses; which moved Mr. Rheen
to allege, among sundry reasons which he gives for the
continuance of the impious superstitions of the
Laplanders, this for one : because they live among
inaccessible mountains, and at a great distance from the
conversa-
tion of other men. Another reason is the good opinion they
constantly entertain of their ancestors, whom they cannot
imagine to have been so stupid as not to understand what
God they ought to worship, v/herefore they judge they
should be wanting in their reverence due to them, if, by
receding from their institutions, they should reprove them
of impiety and ignorance.
" The parents are the masters, who instruct their oW sons
in the magical art. ' Those,' says Tornaeus, ' who have
attained to this magical art by instructions receive it
either from their parents, or from somebody else, and that
by degrees which they put in practice as often as an
opportunity oSers. Thus they accomplish themselves in this
art, especially if their genius leads them to it. For they
don't look upon every one as a fit scholar ; nay, some are
accounted quite incapable of it, notwithstanding they have
been sufficiently instructed, as I have been informed by
very credible people.' And Joh. Tornaeus confirms it by
these words : " As the Laplanders are naturally of
different inclinations, so are they not equally capable of
attaining to this art.' And in another passage, they
bequeath the demons as part of their inheritance, which is
the reason that one family excels the other in this
magical art. From whence it is evident, that certain whole
families have their own demons, not only differing from
the familiar spirits of others, but also quite contrary
and opposite to them. Besides this, not only whole
families, but also particular persons, have sometimes one,
sometimes more spirits belonging to them, to secure them
against the designs of other demons, or else to hurt
others. Olaus Petri Niurenius speaks to this effect, when
he says—' They are attended by a certain number of
spirits, some by three, others by two, or at least by one.
The last is intended for their security, the other to hurt
others. The first commands all the rest. Some of those
they acquire with a great deal of pains and prayers, some
without much trouble, being their attendants from their
infancy.' Joh. Tornaeus gives us a very large account of
it. ' There are some," says he, ' who naturally are
magicians; an abominable thing indeed. For those who the
devil knows will prove very serviceable to him in th's
art, he seizes on in their very infancy with certain
distemper, when they are haunted with apparitions and
visions, by which they are, in proportion of their age,
instructed in the rudiments of this art. Those who are a
second time taken with this distemper, have more
apparitions coming before them than in the first, by'which
they receive much more insight into it than before. But if
they are seized a third time with this disease, which then
proves very dangerous, and often not without the hazard of
their lives, then it is they see all the apparitions the
devil is able to contrive, to accomplish them in the
magical art. Those are arrived to such a degree of
perfection, that without the help of the drum (see infra),
they can foretell things to come a great while before ;
and are so strongly possessed by the devil, that they
foresee tilings even against their will. Tnus, not long
ago, a certain Laplander, who is still alive, did
voluntarily deliver his drum to me, which I had often
desired of him before; notwithstanding all this, he told
me in a very melancholy posture, that though he had put
away his drum, nor intended to have any other hereafter,
yet he could foresee everything without it, as he had done
before. As an instance of it, he told me truly all the
particular accidents that had happened to me in my journey
into Lapland, making at the same time heavy complaints,
that he did not know what use to make of his eyes, those
things being presented to his sight much against Ms will.'
" Lundius observes, that some of the Laplanders are seized
upon by a demon, when they are arrived to a middle age, in
the following manner:—Whilst they are busie in the woods,
the spirit appears to them, where they discourse
concerning the conditions, upon which the demon offers
them his assistance, which done, he teaches them a certain
song, which they are obliged to keep in constant
remembrance. They must return the next day to the same
place, where the same spirit appears to them again, and
repeats the former song, in case he takes a fancy to the
person; if not, he does not appear at all. These spirits
make their appearances under different shapes, some like
fishes, some like birds, others like a serpent or dragon,
others in the shape of a pigmee, about a yard high ; being
attended by three, four, or five other pigmees of the same
bigness, sometimes by more, but never exceeding nine. No
sooner are they seized by the Genius, but they appear in
the most surprising posture, like madmen, before bereaved
of the use of reason. This continues for six months ;
during which time they don't suffer any of their kindred
to come near them, not so much as their own wives and
children. They spend most of this time in the woods and
•other solitary places, being very melancholy and
thoughtful scarce taking any food, which makes them
extremely weak. It you ask their children, where and how
their parents sustain themselves, they will tell you, that
they receive their sustenance from their Genii. The same
author gives us a remarkable instance of this kind in a
young Laplander called Olaus, being then a scholar in the
school of Liksala, of about eighteen years of age. This
young fellow fell mad on a sudden, making most dreadful
postures and outcries, that he was in hell, and his spirit
tormented beyond what could be expressed. If he took a
book in hand, so soon as he met with the name of Jesus, he
threw the book upon the ground in great fury, which after
some time being passed over, they used to ask him whether
he had seen any vision during this ecstacy ? He answered
that abundance of things had appeared to him, and that a
mad dog being tied to his foot, followed him wherever he
stirred. In his lucid intervals he would tell them, that
the first beginning of it happened to him one day, as he
was going out of the door of his dwelling, when a great
flame passed before his eyes and touching his ears, a
certain person appeared to him all naked. The next day he
was seized with a most terrible headache, so that he made
most lamentable outcries, and broke everything that came
under his hands. This unfortunate person's face was as
black as coal, and he used to say, that the devil most
commonly appeared to him in the habit of a minister, in a
long cloak; during his fits he would say that he was
surrounded by nine or ten fellows of a low stature, who
did use him very barbarously, though at the same time the
standers-by did not perceive the least thing like it. He
would often climb to the top of the highest fir trees,
with as much swiftness as a squirrel, and leap down
•again to the ground, without receiving the least hurt. He
always loved solitude, flying the conversation of other
men. He would run as swift as a horse, it being impossible
for anybody to overtake him. He used to talk amongst the
woods to himself no otherwise than if several persons had
been in his company.
" I am apt to believe, that those spirts were not
altogether unknown to the ancients, and that they are the
same which were called by Tertullian Paredri, and are
mentioned by Monsieur Valois, in his Ecclesiastical
History of Eusebius.
" Whenever a Laplander has occasion for his familiar
spirit, he calls to him, and makes him come by only
singing the song he taught him at their first interview;
by which means he has him at his service as often as he
pleases. And because they know them obsequious and
serviceable, they
•call them Sveie, which signifies as much in their tongue,
as the companions of their labour, or their helpmates.
Lun-dius has made another observation, very well worth
taking notice of, viz.:—That those spirits or demons never
appear to the women, or enter into their service, of which
I don't pretend to allege the true cause, unless one might
say,
that perhaps they do it out of pride, or a natural
aversion they have to the female sex, subject to so many
infirmities."
For the purposes of augury or divination the Lapps
enployed a magic drum, which, indeed, was in use among
several Arctic peoples. Writing in 1827, De Capell Erooke
states that the ceremonies connected with this instrument
had almost quite disappeared at that date. The
encroachments of Lutheranism had been long threatening the
existence of the native shamanism. In 1671 the Lapp drum
was formally banned by Swedish law, and several magicians
were apprehended and their instruments burnt. But before
that date the religion which the drum represented was in
full vigour. The Lapps called their drum Kannus (Regnard,
1681), also Kaunns, Kabdas, Kabdes Gabdas, and Keure (Von
Duben, 1873.) its Scandinavian designations being troll-trumma,
or Rune-bomme, " magic or runic drum," otherwise Spa-trumma,
" fortune-telling drum." J. A. Friis has shown that the
sampo of the Finnish Kalevala is the same instrument.
According to Von Duben, the best pictures and explanations
of the drum are to be found in Friis's Lappish Mythologi
(Christiania, 1871), pp. 30-47, but there are good
descriptions in Von Duben's own work (On Lapland och
Lapparne, Stockholm, 1873), as also in the books of
Scheffer, Leem, Jessen, and others. The appearance of the
Lapp drum is thus described by Regnard in 1681 :—This
instrument is made of a single piece of wood, hollowed in
its thickest part in an oval form, the under part of which
is convex, in which they make two apertures long enough to
suffer the fingers to pass through, for the purpose of
holding it more firmly. The upper part is covered with the
skin of the reindeer, on which they paint in red a number
of figures, and from whence several brass rings are seen
hanging, and some pieces of the bone of the reindeer." A
wooden hammer, or, as among the Samoyeds (1614), a hare's
foot was used as a drum-stick in the course of the
incantation. An arpa or divining-rod was placed on a
definite spot showing from its position after sounding the
drum what magic inference might be drawn. By means of the
drum, the priest could be placed en rapport with the
spirit world, and was thus enabled to divine the future;
to ascertain synchronous events occurring at remote
distances; to forecast the measure of success attending
the day's hunting ; to heal the sick ; or to inflict
people with disease and cause death. Although obsolete in
Lapland these rites are still performed among the Samoyeds
and other races of Arctic Asia and America. It is
interesting to note how exactly the procedure among the
Vaigatz Samoyeds in 1556 (Pinkerton's Voyages, London,
1808, i; 63) tallies with that of the Sakhalin Ainos in
1883 (J. M. Dixon in Trans, Asiatic Soc. of Japan,
Yokohama, 1883, 47). The same practices can be traced
eastward through Arctic America, and the drum is used in
the same fashion by the Eskimo shaman priests in Greenland
(Henry Rink's Tales, etc., 1875, 60-61.) The shape of the
drum varies a little according to locality. The form of
the Eskimo drum is that of a tambourine.
" Their most valuable instrument of enchantment," says
Tornaeus, " is this sorcerer's kettle-drum, which they
call Kannas or Quobdas. They cut it in one entire piece
out of a thick tree stem, the fibres of which run upwards
in the same direction as the course of the sun. The drum
is covered with the skin of an animal; and in the bottom
holes are cut by which it may be held. Upon the skins are
many figures painted, often Christ and the Apostles, with
the heathen gods, Thor, Noorjunkar, and others jumbled
together ; the picture of the sun, shapes of animals,
lands and waters, cities and Toads, in short, all kinds of
drawings according to their various uses. Upon the drum
there is placed an indicator, which they call A rpa, which
consists of a bundle of metallic rings. The drumstick is,
generally, a reindeer's horn. This drum they preserve with
the most vigilant care, and guard it especially from the
touch of a woman. When they will make known what is taking
place at a distance,—as to how the chase shall succeed,
how business will answer, what result a sickness will
have, what is necessary for the cure of it, and the like,
they kneel down, and the sorcerer beats the drum ; at
first with light strokes, but as he proceeds, with ever
louder stronger ones, round the index, either till this
has moved in a direction or to a figure which he regards
as the answer which he has sought, or till he himself
falls into ecstasy, when he generally lays the kettle-dium
on his head. Then he sings with a loud voice a song which
they call Jogke, and the men and women who stand round
sing songs, which they call Daura, in which the name of
the place whence they desire information frequently
occurs. The sorcerer lies in the ecstatic state for some
time—frequently for many hours, apparently dead, with
rigid features; sometimes with perspiration bursting out
upon him. In the meantime the bystanders continue their
incantations, which have for their object that the sleeper
shall not lose any part of his vision from memory ; at the
same time they guard him carefully that nothing living may
touch him—not even a fly. When he again awakes to
consciousness, he relates his vision, answers the
questions put to him, and gives unmistakable evidence of
having seen distant and unknown things. The inquiry of the
oracle does not always take place so solemnly and
completely. In everyday matters as regards the chase,
etc., the Lapp consults his drum without falling into the
somnambulic crisis. On the other hand, a more highly
developed state of prophet vision may take place without
this instrument, as has already been stated. Claudi
relates, that at Bergen, in Norway, the clerk of a German
merchant demanded of a Norwegian Finn-Laplander what his
master was doing in Germany. The Finn promised to give him
the intelligence. He began then to cry out like a drunken
man, and to run round in a circle, till he fell, as one
dead, to the earth. After a while he woke again, and gave
the answer, which time showed to be correct. Finally, that
many, while wholly awake, free from convulsions and a
state of unconsciousness, are. able to become clairvoyant,
is placed beyond all doubt by the account of Tornaeus.
" The use which they make of their power of clairvoyance,
and their magic arts, is, for the most part, good and
innocent; that of curing sick men and animals ; inquiring
into far-off and future things, which in the confined
sphere of their existence is important to them. There are
instances however, in which the magic art is turned to the
injury of others."