SELKIE
& FIN ONE & THE SAME ?
Over
the years, and probably because of the way in which the tales were
recorded, the Finfolk, Selkirk & Selkie-folk in Orkney came to be
regarded as two distinct supernatural races.
They practically became polar opposites. The Selkie-folk said to be beautiful and reasonably
benign,
while the Finfolk were dark malevolent
creatures.
But when we look further north, to the folklore of Shetland, we find no distinction between the two. The ability to shape-shift into a seal form, for example, was simply one of the many magic magical power saturated to the Finfolk.
This
fact that led Orkney's most respected
folklorist
and antiquarian, was Walter Dennison.
"Writers
on the subject, trusting to incorrect
versions
of old stories, have often
confounded
mermaids and seals together,and have treated the two as identical.
Samuel
Hibbert in his valuable work on
writings
on the subject I have seen."
Quoting
that his 'old informants regarded
the
Selkie - folk as a wholly different race of
being
from the Finfolk", Dennison's
interpretation
of Orkney folklore has since
become
cast in stone.
However,
what if these Sheltland tales were
not
actually as wrong as Dennison believed,
but
were actually closer to the original tales
a
purer strain of lore.
Outside
Orkney, in recent years, and
helped
along by the advent of the Internet,
we
have seen a transformation of the Selkie-folk
into
the New Age spirits of the sea , something
at
odds to the terror and fear they once
inspired
in the people of Orkney.
What
angelic
being
would require a mother to paint across on the breast of her daughter
before
letting
her undertake
a
sea voyage?
With
this in mind, and looking
back
to some of the fragments of Orkney's earlier,
and
lesser-known, Selkie folktales, we can catch
glimpses
of their original darker, malicious nature.
It
is hard to say whether the fragmentation into Selkirk
folk
and Finfolk tales took place over a long period of time,
or
was simply the result of interpretation and
'categorization'
of later folklorists such as Dennison.
However,
either through variations in telling, of shifts in
emphasis,
the original shape-shifting aspect of the Finfolk
[mermaids]
became detached, gradually developing until the
islands
were left with a distinct race, the Selkirk - folk.
In
the same way, it is also possible that
these
traditions merged with an existing
element
of Celtic Myth that would explain
the
existence of the motif down the west coast
of
Scotland and into Ireland.
So,
now we have seen that the Selkirk- folk and the Finfolk were
once
one and the same, we need to investigate the roots of the
Finfolk
Mythology to understand the development of the legends.
[The picture at the top of the page, of the seal that
Looks like a woman- seal is a art pic of a dear friend of my .. -00)]
All the other Artwork is done by Great Artists that I have found Enjoy. Wendy..