Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology
Alternate Names: —
Category: Gnome
The Myth
In the peatlands of the Soesterveen near Soest, people once spoke quietly of small beings called Meuzelmannekens. They were a kind of earth folk, living unseen among the turfhopen—the stacked piles of peat that lay drying on the land. While the peat remained, the Meuzelmannekens dwelled within it. When the turfhopen were taken away, they slipped back into the earth itself, vanishing without trace.
They were also said to live in the grain fields near the Lazarusberg. While the corn stood tall, the Meuzelmannekens remained hidden among the stalks. But when harvest time came and the fields were cut bare, they withdrew once more into the mountain. There, deep within the hill, they spent the entire winter, sheltered beneath the ground.
No one ever truly saw them. They caused no harm, stole nothing, and brought no illness or fear. Their presence was known only through tradition and quiet belief, as beings who shared the land but never troubled those who worked it.
The Meuzelmannekens were remembered as peaceful dwellers of soil and field, moving with the rhythms of harvest and winter, retreating into earth and hill as naturally as seeds sinking back into the ground.
Gallery
Sources
Abe de Verteller contributors. (n.d.). Van aardmannetje tot zwarte juffer: Een lijst van Nederlandse en Vlaamse elfen en geesten. In Abe de Verteller, from https://abedeverteller.nl/van-aardmannetje-tot-zwarte-juffer-een-lijst-van-nederlandse-en-vlaamse-elfen-en-geesten/
Interpretive Lenses
Religious Readings
- Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
- Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
- Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
- Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
- Marxist Deep Dive
Other
- How to Invite The Meuzelmannekens