Tradition / Region: Inuit mythology Canadian Mythology, Greenlandic Mythology
Alternate Names: Erqigdlet, Adlit
Category: Dog, Hybrid
The Myth
The Adlet are a race of beings spoken of in Inuit tradition. They are said to be taller than ordinary people and to live inland, away from the coast. Their form is half human and half dog: from the waist up they resemble a man, but their lower bodies are those of dogs. They run swiftly across the land and are often remembered as fierce enemies of humankind. In some stories they are cannibals, and encounters with them are dangerous and violent.
Their origin is told in an old story about a young woman named Niviarsiang, who lived with her father, Savirqong. Though many men wished to marry her, she refused every suitor. Because she would not take a husband, people came to call her “she who would not marry.”
At last, instead of choosing a man, she took a dog as her husband. The dog, named Ijirqang, had white and red spots on his coat. From this strange union ten children were born. Five of them were fully dogs, but the other five were unlike any people before them: their upper bodies were human, while their lower halves were those of dogs. These children were the first Adlet.
Ijirqang did not hunt, and the household was soon starving. The hungry children cried constantly, and Savirqong, their grandfather, was forced to bring them food. At last he grew weary of this burden. He carried his daughter, her husband, and their children out to a small island and left them there, saying that he would provide meat if the dog swam to shore each day to fetch it.
To help her husband, Niviarsiang hung a pair of boots around Ijirqang’s neck so he could carry the meat back across the water. The dog swam to shore as instructed. But when he arrived, Savirqong did not fill the boots with food. Instead, he filled them with stones. Weighted down, Ijirqang drowned in the sea.
When Niviarsiang learned what had happened, she sought revenge. She sent her young dogs across the water to attack her father. They gnawed off his hands and feet as punishment for killing their father.
Later, when Niviarsiang herself came near Savirqong in his boat, he seized his chance. He pushed her overboard. She clung to the side, trying to pull herself back in, but he cut off her fingers one by one. As they fell into the ocean, each finger changed form and became a sea creature. From them came the seals and the whales that fill the waters.
Fearing that her father might next destroy her strange children, Niviarsiang sent the Adlet away from the coast and into the interior lands. There they multiplied and became a great inland people.
Her dog children she placed in a makeshift boat and sent them across the sea. It is said that when they reached the far shore, they became the ancestors of distant northern peoples.
From that time on, the Adlet lived inland, remembered as swift, powerful, and dangerous beings whose blood was both human and animal.
Gallery
Sources
Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Adlet. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adlet
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