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Lindworm

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Lindworm
(wingless bipedal dragon) in British heraldry
Lindorm (seaserpent) in Scandinavian heraldry

Lindworm or lindorm (cognate with Old Norse linnormr "snake", German Lindwurm "dragon", Scandinavian languages lindorm "seaserpent", from two Germanic roots meaning roughly "constrictor snake"), in British heraldry, is a technical term for a wingless bipedal dragon. In Scandinavian heraldry, lindorm is a technical term for a 'seaserpent' (sjøormer).

Generally, lindworm was equivalent to Latin draco thus could refer to any draconic creature.

In European mythology and folklore, creatures identified as a 'lindworm' may be winged or wingless, plus quadrapedal, bipedal or limbless. 'Lindworm snake' may specify a limbless dragon.

Lindworms in tales

Saxo Grammaticus begins his story about Ragnar Lodbrok, a semi-legendary king of Denmark and Sweden, by telling of how a certain Thora Borgarhjort receives a cute baby lindworm, curled up inside of a casket, as a gift from her father Herrauðr, the Earl of Götaland. As the lindworm grows, it eventually encircles the hall of the Earl and takes Thora hostage, demanding to be supplied with no less than one ox a day, until she is freed by a young man in fur-trousers named Ragnar, who thus obtains the byname of Lodbrok ("hairy britches") and becomes Thora's husband.

The dragon Fafnir from the Norse Völsunga saga appears in the German Nibelungenlied as a lindwurm that lived near Worms.

A famous Austrian lindworm was said to harass the city of Klagenfurt.

Another German tale from the 1200's tells of a lindworm that lived near Klagenfurt. Flooding threatened travelers along the river, and the presence of a dragon was blamed. The story tells that a Duke offered a reward for anyone who could catch it, so some young men tied a bull to a chain, and when the lindworm swallowed the bull, it was hooked like a fish, and killed.

In 1335, when the skull of a wooly rhinoceros was found in a cave nearby, it was believed to be a dragon's skull.

Marco Polo reported seeing lindworms on the steppes of Central Asia.

The shed skin of a lindworm was believed to greatly increase a person's knowledge about nature and medicine.

A 'dragon' with the head of a 'salamander' (not the real animal but the medieval mythological creature) features in the legend of the Lambton wyrm. The dragon who was caught in the Wear river when young, and which terrorized the countryside of Durham while the fisher who caught it was away at the crusades. The villagers caught on and started leaving a sacrifice of milk for the creature, and when the fisher returned home, it was prophesied that he would be the only one who could kill it. He was given armor with bladed spikes to protect himself from the worm's crushing weight, and eventually cut its head off. Bram Stoker the author of Dracula used this legend in his short story Lair of the White Worm.

The sighting of a "whiteworm" one was thought to be an exceptional sign of good luck.

The knucker or the Tatzelwurm is a wingless biped, and often identified as a lindworm. In legends, lindworms are often very large and eat cattle and bodies, sometimes invading churchyards and eating the dead from cemeteries. The creature is also called a Lindworm snake.

In the 19th-century tale of "Prince Lindworm" (also "King Lindworm"), from Scandinavian folklore, a "half-man half-snake" lindworm is born, as one of twins, to a queen, who, in an effort to overcome her childless situation, has followed the advice of an old crone, who tells her to eat two onions. She did not peel the first onion, causing the first twin to be a lindworm. The second twin boy is perfect in every way. When he grows up and sets off to find a bride, the lindworm insists that a bride be found for him before his younger brother can marry. Since his bride must love him willingly and none of the chosen maidens do, he eats each new bride they bring him, this creates a slight problem for the kingdom until a shepherd's daughter who spoke to the same crone is brought to marry him. She comes wearing every dress she owns. The lindworm tells her to take off her dress, but she insists he shed a skin for each dress she removes. Eventually he is out of skin and underneath is a handsome prince. Some versions of the story omit the lindworm's twin, and the gender of the soothsayer varies.

Late belief in lindworms in Sweden

The belief in the reality of lindworms persisted well into the 19th century in some parts. The Swedish folklorist Gunnar Olof Hyltén-Cavallius collected in the mid 19th century stories of legendary creatures in Sweden. He met several people in Småland, Sweden that said they had encountered giant (limbless) snakes, sometimes equipped with a long mane. He gathered around 50 eyewitness reports, and in 1884 he set up a big reward for a captured specimen, dead or alive. Hyltén-Cavallius was ridiculed by Swedish scholars, and since nobody ever managed to claim the reward, it resulted in a cryptozoological defeat. Rumours about lindworms as actual animals in Småland rapidly died out (Sjögren, 1980).

Lindworm in cryptozoology

Lindworm
GroupingCryptid
Other name(s)Lindworm snake, whiteworm
CountryVarious
RegionNorthern Europe

In cryptozoology, the name lindworm is applied to plausible but unverified reports of a wingless bipedal dragonlike animal, perhaps related to certain species of dinosaur.

Compare the Mexican Mole Lizard, a verified species of lizard resembling a snake with two mole-like forelimbs.

See image here.

Other uses

In modern Dutch, lintworm refers to a kind of tubeworm.

References

  • Sjögren, Bengt, Berömda vidunder, Settern, 1980, ISBN 91-7586-023-6 Template:Sv icon

See also