Putuliq

Tradition / Region: Inuit mythology
Alternate Names: The Spirit of the Many Holes
Category: Helping spirit


The Myth

Putuliq, known as the Spirit of the Many Holes, is an Inuit spirit encountered by a human while fishing for salmon. One day, while the man was fishing on a lake, Putuliq rose up from the depths of the water and approached him. The spirit wished to help a human being and, after this meeting, became the man’s helping spirit.

Putuliq is characterized by having many holes across its body. These holes are believed to possess a special power connected to childbirth. Because of them, Putuliq serves as an accoucheur, aiding women during labor. It is said that when a child sees the many holes of Putuliq, the sight encourages the child, making it easier for the baby to emerge from the womb.

Through this role, Putuliq is remembered as a benevolent helper spirit associated with birth, assistance, and the easing of human suffering.


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Puksinå & Navagioq

Tradition / Region: Inuit mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Helping spirits


The Myth

Puksinå and Navagioq are helping spirits known from Inuit tradition. They are remembered together in a story witnessed by Anarqåq during one spring near a village.

On that day, Anarqåq saw a being called Qungiaruvlik, the helping spirit of his father. Qungiaruvlik was stealing a child, placing it into her amaut. In response, Anarqåq’s mother’s helping spirits appeared: Puksinå, on the right, and Navagioq, on the left.

Together, Puksinå and Navagioq attacked and killed Qungiaruvlik, preventing the child’s abduction. Through this act, they are remembered as powerful protective spirits, intervening directly to stop harm caused by another spirit.


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Kamingmålik

Tradition / Region: Inuit mythology (Tuneq people)
Alternate Names:
Category: Spirit of the dead


The Myth

Kamingmålik is the spirit of a woman belonging to the Tuneq people. She is remembered as a human spirit that persists after death, retaining her identity as a woman of the Tuneq. Her presence places her among the spirits that originate from human lives rather than purely natural or animal forces.


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Kavliliukåq

Tradition / Region: Inuit mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Spirit


The Myth

Kavliliukåq is a female spirit known in Inuit tradition. She is identified as a distinct supernatural being, recognized by her feminine form and presence among other spirits encountered in Inuit belief. Little detail is given about her actions, but she is remembered as a named female spirit within the spirit world.


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Norssutilik

Tradition / Region: Inuit mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Spirit


The Myth

Norssutilik is the name given to two spirits in Inuit belief who share the same defining feature: a norjut, a tassel attached to a flexible stick worn or placed over the hood of a frock.

Because both spirits possess this distinctive tassel, they are known by the same name. The norjut serves as their identifying mark, distinguishing them from other spirits encountered in Inuit tradition.


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Aksharquarnilik

Tradition / Region: Inuit Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Spirit


The Myth

Aksharquarnilik is a spirit encountered during shamanic healing rituals, acting as a helping spirit who reveals the hidden causes of illness.

In one account, a woman named Nanoraq, the wife of Måkik, lay gravely ill, suffering pain throughout her body and barely able to stand. She was placed on a bench, and all the people of the village were summoned. The shaman Angutingmarik began a ritual to discover the source of her sickness.

Walking slowly back and forth across the floor, Angutingmarik swung his arms while wearing mittens, breathing heavily and speaking in groans and sighs, his voice shifting in tone. He called upon his helping spirits and addressed Aksharquarnilik directly, asking whether the illness had come from a broken taboo—something eaten improperly, wrongdoing by himself, by his wife, or by the sick woman herself.

The patient answered that the sickness was her own fault. She confessed that she had failed in her duties and that her thoughts and actions had been bad. The shaman continued, describing what he perceived spiritually: something resembling peat, though not peat; something behind the ear like cartilage; something white and gleaming, possibly the edge of a pipe.

At this, the listeners cried out together that the woman had smoked a pipe she was forbidden to smoke. They agreed to forgive the offense and urged that it be ignored. But the shaman declared that this was not the only cause. There were further transgressions responsible for the illness.

Asked again whether the cause lay with him or with the patient, the woman replied that it was entirely her own doing. She said there had been wrongdoing connected to her abdomen, something internal that had brought about the sickness.

Through Aksharquarnilik, the hidden violations and their physical manifestations were revealed, allowing the community to acknowledge the causes of the illness and begin the process of purification and healing.


Source

Rasmussen, K. (1930). Intellectual Culture of the Hudson Bay Eskimos. p. 133.


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Veehaldjas

Tradition / Region: Estonian Mythology
Alternate Names: Vetevaim; Näkk (in some regions); Vesihaldijas; Merehaldjas; Vee-ema; Vesineits; Mereneid; Merineitsi
Category: Spirit


The Myth

In Estonian folk belief, a Veehaldjas is the guardian spirit of a body of water. Every sea, river, lake, spring, or well was believed to have its own water spirit who ruled and protected it. The vetevaim also appears as a character in the national epic Kalevipoeg.

Closely related to the veehaldjas are beings such as mereemad (sea mothers), meretaadid (sea fathers), järvevanad (lake elders), vete-emad, and their daughters. These figures, especially known in southern Estonia and on the islands, were usually benevolent. They granted abundance and calm waters but could punish those who polluted or disrespected their domain.

In some areas, the veehaldjas was associated with the soul of a drowned person, a ghost, a goblin-like being, or—especially in southern Estonia—with the devil. In this form, the water spirit was dangerous and malicious, dragging people beneath the surface to drown them. The näkk is the most well-known of these hostile water spirits, and parents often frightened children with stories of the näkk to keep them away from water.

The veehaldjas could appear in many forms: most often as a human—usually a woman—but also as a bird, animal, or even an object. Coastal fishermen offered food and drink to water spirits in exchange for good fishing luck.

According to folklorist Matthias Johann Eisen, the name vesihaldijas was most commonly used in Viru, Harju, and Järva counties, while in Läänemaa and other regions the näkk was more often considered the ruler of the waters. Both the vesihaldijas and the näkk were sometimes described as equally fierce, though the merehaldjas was occasionally said to warn humans or refrain from harming them.

To protect themselves from dangerous water spirits, people placed small human-shaped figures near the water’s edge. These effigies were believed to frighten the veehaldjas away, preventing it from harming passersby.

Many female water beings—called vesineitsid, mereneitsid, mereneiud, and the daughters of sea or water spirits—were considered gentle and helpful. Some legends say these beings could appear with sea cows grazing on land. If a human herded them together with ordinary cattle, the sea cows would remain on land, give birth, and produce a strong and valuable breed of dairy animals.

Through these many forms, the veehaldjas embodies both the generosity and the danger of water, guarding life-giving resources while punishing disrespect and carelessness.


Klaas Vaak

Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology, German Mythology
Alternate Names: Zandmannetje
Category: Spirit


The Myth

Klaas Vaak, also known as the Zandmannetje, is a figure believed to bring sleep to children. He is already mentioned in a poem from 1651, where it is said that he gently strokes people’s eyelids to make them yawn and fall asleep. In this early form, his presence is soothing and quiet, associated with the natural onset of sleep.

By 1767, the name Zandmannetje appears for the first time in a lullaby. In this version of the belief, Klaas Vaak causes sleep by sprinkling sand into people’s eyes, making them rub their eyelids. In the morning, the grains of sand are said to remain in the corners of the eyes as proof of his visit.

In a darker German version recorded in 1816, the Sandman is described as a frightening figure. Children were told that if they refused to go to bed, he would throw so much sand into their eyes that they would bleed from their sockets. He would then collect their eyes in a sack, carry them to the moon, and feed them to his own children. In this tradition, he becomes associated with the Man in the Moon and functions as a figure used to frighten children into obedience.

Like Sinterklaas, Klaas Vaak is sometimes said to enter homes through the chimney. While it is not known for certain whether the terrifying version of the Sandman was used in the Netherlands, the belief that Klaas Vaak visits at night to bring sleep was widespread and enduring.


Lange Wapper

Tradition / Region: Belgian Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Demon


The Myth

Lange Wapper is a water spirit said to dwell in the black mud of the canals and moats of Antwerp. He hides beneath the water and emerges to wander the city and its outskirts, playing cruel and often dangerous tricks on humans.

According to a legend from Wilrijk dating to the sixteenth century, Lange Wapper was once an ordinary boy. One day, he saved an old woman—revealed to be a witch—from drowning. As a reward, she granted him the power of shapeshifting. With this gift, he could alter his size at will, becoming so enormous that he could leap from one city to another in a single bound. From this ability, he gained his name, meaning “Long Strider.”

Lange Wapper can take many forms. He appears as a cat, a dog, a man, a child, or even as an ordinary object such as a white napkin. He may grow immensely tall, with long legs that allow him to peer into the windows of houses, or shrink himself to a tiny size. He can even duplicate himself. In one guise, he becomes a boy who plays with other children until he provokes a violent quarrel. In another, he transforms into a crying infant; when a young mother, moved by pity, offers him her breast, he suddenly resumes his true form as a large man and mocks her cruelly.

Many of his pranks ended in death. He was said to delay servants sent to fetch a midwife, causing newborns to die before baptism. He strangled drunkards by simply twisting their necks. Because of these acts, people came to regard Lange Wapper as a devil rather than a mere spirit.

When his mischief was complete, Lange Wapper would announce himself with a horrific, unmistakable laugh, so that people knew who had tormented them. According to tradition, his presence in Antwerp ended only after statues of the Virgin Mary were placed on street corners throughout the city. After this, Lange Wapper fled Antwerp and was seen no more.


Nachtwerkertjes

Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology
Alternate Names: Werkgeesten (related)
Category: Spirit


The Myth

In Dutch folklore, Nachtwerkertjes are mysterious beings heard at night inside workshops and workspaces. When loud hammering, sawing, or other work noises are heard in the middle of the night—without any human present—it is said that the nachtwerkertjes are at work.

Their presence is believed to be a sign of what is to come. Hearing them foretells that there will soon be much work to be done, as if the spirits are preparing in advance. In the Zaan region, where windmills dominate the landscape, the sounds of nachtwerkertjes are specifically taken as a warning that a storm is approaching. Such storms often caused damage to mills, leading to extensive repair work afterward.

Thus, the nachtwerkertjes do not appear directly to people, but announce themselves through sound, acting as unseen workers whose nocturnal activity signals impending labor and disruption.