Lalli is an apocryphal character from Finnish history. According to the legend, he killed Bishop Henry on the ice of Köyliönjärvi on 20 January 1156.[1][2][3]
Legend
editThe story begins with an expedition of one of the first Christian missionaries in Finland, Bishop Henry, during the alleged first crusade of Sweden. In the midst of travelling, he and his entourage stop at a dwelling. Only the matron of the house, Kerttu, is home. Bishop Henry asks for food for his party and hay for the horses, but the matron refuses him. In their hunger, Bishop Henry and his men then forcibly take the food and hay but leave payment before continuing on with their journey. After they are gone, Lalli, the husband of Kerttu, returns and hears of what has happened. In most versions of the story, Kerttu leaves out the part of the payment entirely. When Lalli hears of the bishop ransacking his home, he becomes enraged and pursues the bishop. Lalli catches up to the bishop on a frozen lake, said to be Köyliönjärvi. At Bishop Henry's bidding his entourage flees to a nearby forest. The bishop tries to calm the angered man, but Lalli strikes and kills Henry with an axe.[4][5]
There are numerous versions as to how Lalli then met his own gruesome fate, but typically Lalli takes the bishop's mitre to wear it pompously and cuts off the bishop's finger to snatch his valuable ring. The mitre becomes fused to Lalli's head and when he tries to remove it, it tears his scalp off with it. When he tries to remove the bishop's ring from his finger, it likewise tears his finger off. Lalli runs to the woods, where mice or rats corner him up a tree. Lalli then falls from the tree into the lake Hiirijärvi and drowns. The bishop's body parts are collected by his servants and transported with oxen towards the south. The place where the oxen stopped became the site of the first church in Finland.[5]
The legend is enshrined in a famous Finnish folk poem called Henrikin surma ("The Slaying of Henry"). The poem includes such characters as a talking statue of Christ. One of the versions of the poem is found in the Kanteletar, a collection of old Finnish folk poetry.
Cultural significance
editLalli is a well-known figure in Finnish folklore. He has been depicted as a figure prostrated at the feet of the Bishop Henry in wooden statues. The name Lalli is not common in Finland; it may be a form of "Laurentius", and is also said to be a name for the bear (traditionally saying the actual name of the animal was avoided, so the use of nicknames arose). Also, in the Finnish toponymy Lalli occurs, for example, in Pirkkala, where there is both the place name Lalli and Lallin lahti ("Lalli Bay") on the shores of Lake Pyhäjärvi.[6]
In the television series Suuret suomalaiset – the Finnish version of 100 Greatest Britons – Lalli was chosen as the 14th greatest Finn. Lalli used to be generally viewed as an evil-doer along with his wife, but in the 20th century he also became viewed as sort of a rebel pagan against imperialism and forced conversion of the Northern Crusades.[7]
Satakunta
editLalli's axe, along with Bishop Henrik's mitre feature in the coat of arms of the former municipality of Köyliö and now from 2015 the merged Säkylä. There is a statue of Lalli in Köyliö designed by Aimo Tukiainen, as well as two prominent relics in Satakunta: Lalli's hut and Lalli's tombstone. Both are, according to legend, places where Lalli took refuge after killing the bishop. Lalli's hut is located in Lootinnummi in Köyliö. There has been no actual archeological evidence that the mound of stone was once a house, but folklore claims that it was. 13 km away from Lalli's alleged hut is Lalli's tombstone: a boulder by Lake Hiirijärvi said to be still damp with Lalli's tears. This area has been called Lalli's farm.[8] Lake Hiirijärvi ("Lake Mouse") allegedly received its name from the Lalli myth.[9] Martti Haavio, a researcher of Finnish mythology, theorised that this was not part of the original story, but added later on. It is possible that the legends marking these areas as Lalli's settlements were manufactured by the church, as it would grant them rights to the land.[8]
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Köyliö Coat of Arms, featuring elements from the Lalli legend.
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Storied "Lalli's residence" at Lootinnummi
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Similar Lalli's "crystone" in Hiirijärvi, which is still said to be moist from his tears[10]
In modern popular culture
editThe story of Lalli and Henry’s death on the lake is the subject of the song Köyliönjärven jäällä, by Finnish metal band Moonsorrow.[11]
Historicity
editAlthough often considered a fictional story as there are no records of a Bishop Henry (as pointed out in research by historian Tuomas Heikkilä),[12] new research by linguist Mikko Heikkilä claims that Bishop Henry was in fact a German missionary named Heinrich. He claims to have found records that state a missionary by the name of Heinrich (or "Heinärikki" as called by Finns) was slain in the early 12th century, only a few decades before the Bishop Henry of legend. According to him the fictional character of Bishop Henry was mostly based on Heinrich but was then conflated with the legend of Eric IX of Sweden, who is also storied to have met his end gruesomely murdered.[13][14][15] Tuomas Heikkilä doubts this version of the events and states that Mikko Heikkilä combines different sources liberally.[16]
Gallery
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Nousiainen Coat of Arms, with Henry stepping on Lalli
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Bishop Henry with Konrad Blitz and Maunu Särkilahti on top of Lalli, Missale Aboense (1488)
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1955 stamp depicting a wooden sculpture of Henry stepping on Lalli, from the church of Isokyrö
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Henry on Lalli, 15th century Isokyrö church retable
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Wooden statue in the church of Pyhtää
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Wooden sculpture of Henry stepping on a bloodied Lalli from Akaa church, c. 1500
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Drawing of a medieval wooden sculpture from Sääksmäki church
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Decorative panel of Lalli slaying Henry and wearing his mitre from Nousiainen church, c. 1420
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Decorative panel of Lalli's finger wearing Henry's ring being found in Spring on a block of ice, Nousiainen church c. 1420
References
edit- ^ Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .
- ^ Michell, Thomas (1888). Handbook for Travellers in Russia, Poland, and Finland. J. Murray, [etc., etc.] pp. 532.
Lalli bishop.
- ^ Fryxell, Anders Fryxell (1844). The History of Sweden. Original from the New York Public Library: R. Bentley. pp. 192.
Lalli bishop.
- ^ Helminen, MInna. "Legenda piispa Henrikistä ja Lallista". opinnot.internetix.fi. Otavan Opisto. Archived from the original on 9 February 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- ^ a b "Puoli seitsemän: 2 Legendat - Piispa Henrik ja Lalli". Yle Areena. Yle. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- ^ Karttapaikka: Lalli ja Lallin lahti - National Land Survey of Finland
- ^ Heininen, Simo. "Talonpoika Lalli - Paha pakana vai vihainen viljelijä?". tiede.fi. Tiede. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- ^ a b Salminen, Tapio (2007). Joki ja sen väki – Kokemäen ja Harjavallan historia jääkaudesta 1860-luvulle, Kokemäen ja Harjavallan kaupungit ja seurakunnat. Kokemäen ja Harjavallan kaupungit ja seurakunnat. ISBN 9789529994113.
- ^ "Hiirijärven kylä Karhuseudun suistoissa". Karhuseudun suistomaat. 18 December 2006.
- ^ Lallin itkukivi (tr. "Lalli's weeping stone") www.raumakuvasto.fi, accessed 3 May 2021
- ^ Moonsorrow – Köyliönjärven jäällä (Pakanavedet II) – Genius Lyrics
- ^ Peuhkuri, Lea. "Historiantutkija kyseenalaistaa piispa Henrikin olemassaolon". Turun Sanomat. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- ^ Heikkilä, Mikko K. (2016). Kuka oli herra Heinäricki? - piispa Henrikin arvoitus. Tampere University Press. ISBN 978-952-03-0305-1.
- ^ Tapio, Ilari (25 January 2017). "Ratkesiko 900 vuoden takainen murha? – talonpoika Lalli tappoikin ehkä saksalaisen Heinrichin". Turun Sanomat. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- ^ Nuuttila, Sakari (21 January 2017). "Uusi tutkimus: Lalli ei surmannutkaan piispa Henrikiä, vaan herra Heinärikin - historialliset kaimat ovat menneet legendassa sekaisin". Iltalehti. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- ^ Manninen, Tuomas (27 January 2017). "Tappoiko Lalli piispan sijaan saksalaisen lähetyssaarnaajan? Uusi tulkinta Suomen kuuluisimmasta surmasta". Iltasanomat. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
External links
edit- Media related to Lalli at Wikimedia Commons