Waterreus

Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology
Alternate Names: none recorded
Category: Mermaid, Shapeshifter


The Myth

Along the coast near Scheveningen, people once spoke of a being who rose from the sea and wandered near the shore. From above the water he appeared as a handsome young man, fair-faced and strong, so beautiful that any girl who saw him might fall in love at once. Yet those who knew the tale warned that beneath the surface he was no man at all, but a sea-being with the tail of a fish.

It was said that if a girl truly wished to keep him in the world of humans, there was only one way. She had to draw the sign of the cross upon his forehead three times. If she succeeded, the water spirit would lose his sea-form and become fully human, bound to live on land.

Because of this tale, the people of the coast spoke of such beings as water giants, or waterreuzen, and the name came to be used for others of their kind. They remained figures of both longing and caution — beautiful strangers from the sea, who might be turned into husbands, if only the right sign were made before they slipped back beneath the waves.


Gallery


Sources

abedeverteller.nl contributors. (n.d.). Van aardmannetje tot zwarte juffer: Een lijst van Nederlandse en Vlaamse elfen en geesten. In abedeverteller.nl, 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 Waterreus

Zeeridder

Tradition / Region: Dutch Mythology
Alternate Names: Sea Knight
Category: Mermaid


The Myth

In the year 1305, fishermen sailing on the open sea off the coast of Friesland made a strange capture. In their nets they found not a fish nor a beast, but a figure shaped like a man — a knight of the sea.

He appeared clad in armor, wearing a helmet as though he had come from battle beneath the waves. At first glance he seemed handsome, with a great moustache and thick flowing hair. But when the fishermen looked closer, they saw that both hair and moustache were made not of human strands, but of seaweed, tangled and dripping with saltwater.

The Sea Knight made no attempt to resist, yet neither did he speak. He refused all food and drink, answering no question and uttering no sound. Silent and unmoving, he was taken ashore and brought from town to town across Friesland, where crowds gathered to see the strange being drawn from the depths.

For three weeks he was displayed in villages and cities, a wonder of the sea and a mystery no one could explain. But he never spoke, never ate, and never gave any sign of life beyond his silent presence.

At last, in the town of Dokkum, the Sea Knight died.

And with his death, whatever secret he carried from the depths of the ocean died with him, leaving only the story of the armored man of the sea who had once been hauled from the waters and walked, briefly and silently, among the people of Friesland.


Gallery


Sources

abedeverteller.nl contributors. (n.d.). Van aardmannetje tot zwarte juffer: Een lijst van Nederlandse en Vlaamse elfen en geesten. In abedeverteller.nl, 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 Zeeridder