Estonian mythology is a complex of myths belonging to the Estonian folk heritage and literary mythology.
Information about the pre-Christian and medieval Estonian mythology is scattered in historical chronicles, travellers' accounts and in ecclesiastical registers. Systematic recordings of Estonian folklore started in the 19th century.
Pre-Christian Estonian deities included a sky-god known as Jumal or Taevataat ("Old man of the sky") in Estonian, corresponding to Jumala in Finnish, and Jumo in Mari.
A traveler called Wulfstan reported to the king Alfred the Great (871-899) about Estonians' burial customs that included keeping the dead unburied in the house of their relatives and friends, who would hold a wake of drinking until the day of the cremation.
According to the Chronicle of Henry of Livonia in 1222 the Estonians even disinterred the enemy's dead and burned them. It is thought that cremation was believed to speed up the dead person's journey to the afterlife and by cremation the dead would not become earthbound spirits which were thought to be dangerous to the living.
Henry of Livonia also describes in his chronicle an Estonian legend originating from Virumaa in North Estonia - about a mountain and a forest where a god named Tharapita, worshipped by Oeselians, had been born.
The solstice festival of Midsummer (Estonian: Jaanipäev) celebrating the sun through solar symbols of bonfires, the tradition alive until the present day and numerous Estonian nature spirits: the sacred oak and linden have been described by Balthasar Russow in 1578.
Some traces of the oldest authentic myths may have survived in runic songs. There is a song about the birth of the world – a bird lays three eggs and starts to lay out the nestlings – one becomes Sun, one becomes Moon and one becomes the Earth. Other Finno-Ugric peoples have also myths according to which the world has emerged from an egg.
The world of the Estonians’ ancestors is believed to have turned around a pillar or a tree, to which the skies were nailed with North Star. Milky Way (Linnutee or Birds' Way in Estonian) was a branch of the World Tree (Ilmapuu) or the way by which birds moved (and took the souls of the deceased to the other world). These myths were based on animistic beliefs.
Changes occurred in proto-Estonian mythology as a result of the contacts with Baltic and Germanic tribes, as well as the transition from hunting and gathering to farming. Personifications of celestial bodies, sky and weather deities and fertility gods gained importance in the world of the farmers. There may have been a sky and thunder god called Uku or Ukko, also called Vanaisa (Grandfather) or Taevataat (Sky Father). Proto Estonian pre-Christian deities may also have included a sky-god by name Jumal, known also by other Finnic peoples as Jumala in Finnish and Jumo in Mari. Many recorded legends and myths depicting a supreme sky god are however probably of later origin and feature Christian or foreign influences.
Estonian legends about giants (Kalevipoeg, Suur Tõll, Leiger) may be a reflection of Germanic (especially Scandinavian) influences. There are numerous legends interpreting various natural objects and features as traces of Kalevipoeg's deeds. The giant has merged with Christian Devil, giving birth to a new character – Vanapagan (a cunning demon living on his farm or manor and his farm hand Kaval-Ants (Crafty Hans).
Other mythical motiffs from Estonian runic songs:
a mighty oak grows into the sky, is then felled and turned into various mythical objects
Sun, Moon and Star are the suitors of a young maiden, she finally accepts the Star
a crafty blacksmith forges a woman of gold but is not able to give her a soul or a mind
a holy grove starts to wither after having been desecrated by a love-making couple; only the scarification of nine brothers cleanses it
mighty heroes are not able to kill a terrible giant ox, but a little brother is
a woman is forced to kill her daughter who then goes to live in the heaven as Air Maiden
a girl finds a fish and asks her brother to kill it – there is a woman inside the fish
young girls go out at night and young men from the holy grove (or the land of the dead) seduce them by offering them riches
a lake travels to another place when it has been desecrated by an inconsiderate woman or an incestuous couple
It has been suggested, among others by ethnologist and former president Lennart Meri, that a meteorite which passed dramatically over populated regions and landed on the island of Saaremaa around 3,000-4,000 years ago was a cataclysmic event that may have influenced the mythology of Estonia and neighboring countries, especially those from whose vantage point a "sun" seemed to set in the east. In the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, cantos 47, 48 and 49 can be interpreted as descriptions of the impact, the resulting tsunami and devastating forest fires. It has also been suggested that the Virumaa-born Oeselian god Tharapita is a reflection of the meteorite that entered the atmosphere somewhere near the suggested "birthplace" of the god and landed in Oesel.
Friedrich Robert Faehlmann and Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald compiled the Estonian national epic Kalevipoeg out of numerous prosaic folk legends and runo verse imitations that they themselves had written. Faehlmann also wrote eight fictional myths combining motives of Estonian folklore (from the legends and folk songs), Finnish mythology (from Ganander’s "Mythologia Fennica") and classical Greek mythology. Matthias Johann Eisen was another folklorist and writer who studied folk legends and reworked them into literary form. Many of their contemporary scholars accepted this mythopoeia as authentic Estonian mythology.
The Estonian literary mythology describes the following pantheon: The supreme god, the god of all living is Taara. He is celebrated in sacred oak forests around Tartu. The god of thunder is Uku. Uku's daughters are Linda and Jutta, the queen of the birds. Uku has two sons: Kõu (Thunder) and Pikker (Lightning). Pikker possesses a powerful musical instrument, which makes demons tremble and flee. He has a naughty daughter, Ilmatütar (Weather Maiden).
During the era of Estonian national awakening the elements in the literary mythology were quickly and readily incorporated into contemporary popular culture through media and school textbooks. It can be difficult to tell how much of Estonian mythology as we know it today was actually constructed in the 19th and early 20th century. One should also note that some constructed elements are loans from Finnish mythology and may date back to the common Baltic-Finnic heritage.
Estonian mythological and literary mythological beings, deities and legendary heroes
Äiatar – a female demon, Devil's daughter
Äike - Thunder
Alevipoeg - Alev's son, a brother of Kalevipoeg
Ebajalg - demonic whirlwind
Ehaema - Mother Twilight, a nocturnal spirit or elf, encouraging spinning
Eksitaja - an evil spirit who makes people lose their way in a forest or a bog
Haldjas (the ruler) - elf, fairy, protector spirit of some place, person, plant or animal
Hall - personification of malaria
Hiid - a giant
Hiiela - another world, land of the dead
Hiieneitsid - maidens from the land of the dead
Hiis - holy grove
Hingeliblikas – a person's spirit in the form of a moth
Hingeloom - a person's spirit in the form of an insect or a small animal
Hoidja - protector, keeper
Hämarik - personification of dusk, a beautiful young maiden
Hännamees – a demon who stole and brought food, money and other worldly goods to its maker and owner
Härjapõlvlane - goblin
Ilmaneitsi, Ilmatütar - Air Maiden, Sky Maiden
Ilmarine, Ilmasepp - a mythical blacksmith who forged among other things the Sun and the Moon (cf. Ilmarinen)
Ilo - Joy, the hostess of feasts
Jumal - God
Jutta - queen of the birds, daughter of Taara
Juudaline - demon
Järvevana - Old Man from the Lake
Kaevukoll - bogeyman of the well
Kaitsja - protector
Kalevipoeg, Kalevine, Sohni, Soini, Osmi - giant hero, mythical ancient king of Estonia
Kalm - grave; spirit of a dead person; ruler of the land of the dead
Kalmuneiu - Maiden of the Grave; a girl from the land of the dead
Katk - personification of plague
Kaval-Ants (Crafty/Sly Hans) - wicked farm hand who deceives his master Vanapagan - the Devil
Kodukäija - a restless visitant ghost
Koerakoonlane - a demonic warrior with a dog snout
Koit - personification of Dawn, a young man, eternal lover of Hämarik
Koll - bogey
Kolumats – bogeyman
Kratt - a demon who stole and brought food, money and other worldly goods to its maker and owner in the form of a whirlwind or meteor-like tail of fire (also called pisuhänd, tulihänd, hännamees)
Kuu - Moon
Kõu - Thunder; son of Uku, brother of Pikker
Kääbas - grave, death spirit
Külmking - a spirit of an unholy dead, eats children when they bother the forest spirits
Lapi nõid - witch of Lapland
Leiger (player) - a giant living in Hiiumaa island, younger brother of "Suur Tõll"
Lendva - an illness sent by an evil witch
Libahunt, Sutekskäija - werewolf
Liiva-Annus or Surm - Death
Linda - mother of Kalevipoeg
Lummutis - ghost, wraith
Luupainaja - incubus, nightmare
Maa-alune - a creature living under the earth and causing illnesses
Maajumalad - Gods of Earth
Maaemä - Mother Earth
Majauss - domestic grass-snake, protector spirit
Mana - a hypothetical ruler of the dead
Manala - land of the dead
Manalane - inhabitant of the land of the dead
Marras - spirit of death, predictor of death
Mereveised - Sea cows
Metsaema - Mother of Forest
Metsavana - Old Man of the Forest
Metsik - a fertility god
Mumm - bogey, monster, ghost
Murueide Tütred - daughters of Murueit, beautiful maidens
Murueit - a female spirit of forest and earth, connected to the land of the dead
Näkk - mermaid
Nõid - witch
Olevipoeg - the brother of Kalevipoeg, city builder, related to St Olaf
Painaja - nightmare, incubus
Pakane - Frost
Pardiajaja - (< Parteigänger) half-demonic warrior
Peko - Seto god of fertility and brewing
Peko - a fertility god
Peninukk - half-demonic warrior
Penn
Peremees - Master
Pikne, Pikker - Thunder, "The Long One"
Piret - wife of Suur Tõll
Pisuhänd - tail of fire, treasure-bringing goblin
Puuk – treasure-bringing goblin
Põrguneitsi - literally: virgin of Hell
Päike - Sun
Rongo
Rukkihunt
Rõugutaja - a female deity, protector of the rye crops, women in labor and the city of Narva
Salme
Sulevipoeg - Sulev's son, friend of Kalevipoeg
Suur Tõll - giant hero living in Saaremaa Island
Taara - the god of nature, sometimes considered supreme god
Tharapita, Taarapita, Tarapita - mythological Osilian God of War
Taevataat (literally Sky Father), Vanaisa ("Grandfather")
Tallaja - trampler
Tikutaja
Tont - ghost
Toonela - land of the dead
Tooni - god of death, ruler of the dead
Toor, Tooru - a deity known in western Estonia, related to Scandinavian Thor
Tulbigas
Tulihänd, Pisuhänd - "tail of fire" - flying house elf, helps to gather and protect the wealth
Turis
Tuule-Emä - Mother Wind
Tuuleisa - Father Wind
Tuulispask - whirlwind
Tuuslar - a sorcerer living in Finland
Tõll - (see Suur Tõll)
Täht - Star
Udres-Kudres - serf, called "Son of the Sun", hero of folksongs
Uku - the supreme god
Vanemuine - the god of songs, art and literature
Vanapagan ("The Old Heathen") Vanatühi, ("The Old Empty one"), Vanakuri ("The Old Evil One"), Vanapoiss ("The Old Boy"), Vanasarvik ("The Old Horned One") in some texts also Vanataat ("The Old Father") - The Devil
Varavedaja - loot carrier
Varjuline - shadowling
Veehaldjas - spirit of the water, the weaver of a spring Ahjualune
Veteema – Mother of Waters
Vetevana - Water Spirit
Vihelik
Vilbus
Virmalised - Polar Lights
Viruskundra
Christian saints interpreted as gods:
Jüri (St George) - god of agriculture
Laurits (St Lawrence) - god of fire
Mart (St Martin) - god of fertility
Olev (St Olaf) - mythical builder of St. Olaf's Church
Tõnn (St Anthony) - fertility god of the crops and pigs
Estonian mythical and magical objects
White Ship (valge laev) - mythical ship that brings freedom or takes people away to a better land. This myth was born around 1860 when a small sect led by Juhan Leinberg (also known as Prophet Maltsvet) gathered near Tallinn to wait for a white ship to take them away.
Hat of fingernails (küüntest kübar) - makes the bearer (usually Vanatühi) invisible.
Mittens (kirikindad) – were believed to have protective or magic powers, especially church mittens and the ones that sailors wore. Mittens were (are) decorated with special geometric patterns and narrow red stripes; they have many whispers and spells in them because the crafter used to sing while making, dyeing and knitting yarn.
Belt (kirivöö) - the belt had the most ancient and magical patterns of all the craft items, red woven belts and laces were a common item to sacrifice (they were tied to the branches of holy trees). A belt was tied around parts of body that were sick and, pulled tightly around the waist, had to protect and give strength to the bearer.
Sacred stones - the last ice age has left a lot of great stones (erratics) in Estonia. Many of them were considered sacred and people came to them to sacrifice silver, blood, red ribbons and coins and ask for welfare and prosperity. Often, the stones have little holes in them, some of them probably used to place the sacrifice in. The meaning and function of the holes is however still disputed; according to paleoastronomer Heino Eelsalu they may have had a calendary function.
Travelling forests - when people are mean, greedy and cruel in some place, the forests will leave this place. The most stories about travelling forests are found in coastal areas of Estonia.