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| Tellervo | |
|---|---|
Maiden of Tapio | |
| Other names | Kainuu: Tillervo Karelia: Killervö, Tellervö, Tillervo Ostrobothnia: Hillervo? |
| Gender | Female |
| Ethnic group | Finns,Karelians |
| Genealogy | |
| Parents | |
Tellervo (Finnish pronunciation:[ˈtelːerʋo]) is theFinnish goddess of forests. She is the daughter ofTapio,[2] the King of the Forest.
Mentions of Tellervo inrunic songs are limited toKainuu,North Karelia, theKarelian Isthmus andWhite Karelia. In Kainuu and White Karelia, Tellervo is asked to help with hunting a bear;[3] in North Karelia, to find help against an illness that came from the forest; on the Karelian Isthmus, to protect cattle.
It has been suggested that the Tellervo name is a variant of Hillervo, Mother of Otters, mentioned in one runic song. This view has been supported by e.g.M.A. Castrén andMartti Haavio.
The name Tellervo has been theorized to originate fromPellervo, associated with an agricultural god. The name would have morphed intoTellervo in order to sharealliteration withTapio, the epithet developing frompoika ('son') topaimen ('shepherd') totytär ('daughter'), as explained byKaarle Krohn.[4]Jacob Grimm suggested the name to come fromtelta,tellan 'tegmen'. M.A. Castrén believed the name Tellervo to have developed from earlier Hillervo. One White Karelian poem also mentions "Killervö, Maiden of Tapio", which Martti Haavio connected to Hillervo and Tellervo as well, suggesting that the original name could have been Killervo afterkilleri 'trap'. However, Haavio believed it more likely that Hillervo came fromhilleri 'polecat'. He considered Castrén's Tellervo–Hillervo connection the best explanation, as Tellervo's name also appears in the forms Tillervo and Tellervö.[5]
Hillervo was first mentioned byChristfried Ganander in 1786. He called Hillervo an otter goddess, the Mother of Otters.[6] This name, Hillervo, only appears in one collected runic song, and the same song mentions Juoletar, a beautiful man and, according to Ganander, Hillervo's husband and the FinnishNeptune.[7] However, Juoletar is an explicitly feminine name with the final suffix-tar. According to Haavio's theory, Hillervo was originally the Mother of Polecats, but as polecats only lived in Finland between the 13th and 17th centuries before returning in the 20th century, Hillervo in songs was originally for polecat hunting spells, only later being reutilized in otter hunting spells after polecats had disappeared. Therefore, Juoletar would be the original Mother of Otters, or the Elder of Otters (whether the rune singer referred to Juoletar as a mistress or a king).[5]
| Epithet | Epithet meaning | Regions |
|---|---|---|
| Tellervo, Tapion neiti[8] Tellervo, Tapion neito[9] Tillervo, Tapion neiti[10] Tellervö, Tapion neiti[11] Killervö, Tapion neito[12] | 'Tellervo, Maiden of Tapio' | Kainuu,Karelian Isthmus,North Karelia,White Karelia |
| Tellervo, Tapion paimen[13] | 'Tellervo, Shepherd of Tapio' | White Karelia |
| Hillervo, oma emuu[14] | 'Hillervo, mother of one's own' | Ostrobothnia, unknown |
| Hillervo, hyvä emäntä[14] | 'Hillervo, good mistress' | Ostrobothnia, unknown |
| (About Hillervo:) Vejen ehtosa emäntä[15][14] | 'generous mistress of water' | Ostrobothnia, unknown |
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