Tradition / Region: Icelandic Mythology
Alternate Names: none firmly fixed; related beings include Skuggabaldur, Urdarköttur, and Modyrmi
Category: Fox
The Myth
In Icelandic lore there is a dreadful creature called the Skoffín, born from the unnatural union of an Arctic fox and a house cat. It carries the cunning of the fox and the cruelty of the cat, and its very existence is considered a sign of evil.
The Skoffín resembles both parents at once. Its fur may change with the seasons like a fox’s coat, and some say its body bears bare patches of skin. Yet its most feared power lies in its eyes. The creature’s gaze is said to bring instant death to anything it looks upon, whether human or animal.
It is said that Skoffín kittens are born with their eyes already open. If they are not destroyed at once, they sink into the ground and vanish, only to emerge again after three years, fully grown and dangerous. Because of this, people once took great care to destroy such kittens before they could escape into the earth.
When grown, the Skoffín roams farms and wilderness alike, killing livestock and sometimes people simply by fixing its eyes upon them. The safest way to deal with one is from afar, with a bullet blessed by prayer or made of silver. Some stories say that even hardened sheep dung can serve as a missile against it.
Yet the creature is not invincible. If a Skoffín sees another of its kind, both die instantly from the meeting of their deadly gazes. Mirrors also defeat it, for if it sees its own reflection, it perishes at once. One tale tells of a Skoffín that perched upon a church roof, causing people to die as they stepped outside. A clever man raised a mirror toward it on a long pole, and the monster died the moment it saw itself.
The Skoffín belongs to a family of similar hybrid beasts — foxes, cats, and other creatures twisted into monstrous forms. But among them all, the Skoffín is remembered as one of the most feared: a creature whose eyes alone could end a life, and whose birth was taken as an omen of darkness in the land.
Gallery
Sources
A Book of Creatures. (n.d.). Skoffín. Retrieved March 1, 2026, from https://abookofcreatures.com/2015/11/06/skoffin/.
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