Tradition / Region: Estonia
Alternate Names: The Dragon of the North, The Northern Frog, The Frog of the North
Category: Frog / dragon
The Myth
Põhja konn is a monstrous being said to come from the far north. It is described as a vast and terrible creature that devastates the land wherever it travels. In some tellings, its body is said to be as large as an enormous ox, with the legs of a frog and a long, snake-like tail stretching the length of a chain. Its body is covered in scales said to be stronger than stone or iron. It moves across the land in enormous leaps, devouring people and animals alike and leaving desolation behind it.
According to the tale collected by Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald, the monster’s destruction seemed unstoppable. It was said that Põhja konn might have devoured every living creature in the world had it not been opposed. The people believed that only someone in possession of King Solomon’s ring could defeat the creature.
A brave young man set out to find a way to stop Põhja konn. His journey led him to a powerful magician from the East, who told him that the birds might aid him. The magician gave the youth a magical brew that allowed him to understand the language of birds and promised that if the youth returned with King Solomon’s ring, he would explain the writing engraved upon it.
Listening to the birds, the youth learned that only a witch-maiden could help him and that she could be found at a certain spring on the night of the full moon. He went there and met her. Though she was angered by his approach, she forgave him and took him to her home. While there, the youth heard a mysterious voice warning him not to give her any blood.
The witch-maiden asked the youth to marry her. When he hesitated, she offered him King Solomon’s ring in exchange for three drops of his blood and explained the powers the ring possessed. The youth pretended to doubt her words, and she demonstrated the ring’s magic, allowing him to try it himself. Using its power of invisibility, the youth escaped and flew away with the ring.
He returned to the magician, who read the inscription on the ring and gave him precise instructions on how to kill Põhja konn. The youth then traveled to a kingdom where a king had promised his daughter and half his realm to anyone who could slay the monster. Following the magician’s directions, the king provided the youth with an iron horse and an iron spear. Using these and the powers of the ring, changing it from finger to finger as instructed, the youth confronted Põhja konn and killed it.
After the monster’s defeat, the youth married the princess. However, the witch-maiden soon sought revenge. She transformed into an eagle, attacked the youth, reclaimed King Solomon’s ring, and chained him inside a cave, intending to leave him there to die. Many years passed before the magician came to the king and revealed that the youth could still be found. Guided once again by birds, they located the cave and freed him. Though he was weak and emaciated, the magician nursed him back to health. The youth returned to his wife and lived in prosperity, but he never saw the ring again.
In other tellings, Põhja konn does not perish completely. After being defeated, it retreats deep underground, where it lies hidden. It is said to promise its service to the brave hero who overcame it, should the land ever face danger again. To awaken Põhja konn, however, one must know the ancient languages of birds or snakes. In later times, when enemies threatened the land and these languages were nearly forgotten, only a few people remembered the old words and were able to call the creature forth, driving the invaders away.
Across its many versions, Põhja konn remains a vast frog-dragon of the north, a being of immense power whose presence brings ruin, whose defeat reshapes kingdoms, and whose fate lies somewhere between destruction, sleep, and return.