Dictionary Definition
troll
Noun
1 (Scandanavian folklore) a supernatural creature
(either a dwarf or a giant) that is supposed to live in caves or in
the mountains
2 a partsong in which voices follow each other;
one voice starts and others join in one after another until all are
singing different parts of the song at the same time; "they enjoyed
singing rounds" [syn: round]
3 a fisherman's lure that is used in trolling;
"he used a spinner as his troll"
4 angling by drawing a baited line through the
water [syn: trolling]
Verb
1 circulate, move around
2 cause to move round and round; "The child
trolled her hoop"
3 sing the parts of (a round) in succession
4 angle with a hook and line drawn through the
water
5 sing loudly and without inhibition
6 praise or celebrate in song; "All tongues shall
troll you"
7 speak or recite rapidly or in a rolling
voice
User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology 1
From , or troll, from troll, of unknown origin. Compare Swedish trolla, Danish trylle.Noun
- A supernatural being, now especially a grotesque humanoid creature living in caves or hills or under bridges.
- An ugly person of either sex.
Translations
Etymology 2
Origin uncertain; compare Old French troller (modern French trôler) and Middle High German trollenVerb
- To saunter,
especially in order to find a sexual partner
- I am trolling for custom, said the actress to the bishop.
- In the context of "fishing": To entice fish with bait; to fish using a line and bait or lures trailed behind a boat.
- By extension, to search (for), to draw out, to entice
- To disrupt the operation of an online community.
- In the context of "archaic|transitive": To sing in the form of a round.
- Troll the ancient Yuletide carol. Fa la la la la la la la la.
- To tend a fire.
Noun
- An instance of trolling, especially, in fishing, the trailing of a baited line.
- In the context of "internet": A person who posts to a newsgroup, bulletin board, etc., in a way intended to anger other posters and to cause drama, or otherwise disrupt the group's intended purpose.
- In the context of "internet": A deliberately inflammatory post to a newsgroup, etc.
Translations
Derived terms
Swedish
Pronunciation
- /ˈtrɔl/|lang=sv
Noun
troll- troll (supernatural being)
Extensive Definition
A troll is a fearsome member of a mythical race
from Norse
mythology. Originally more or less the Nordic equivalents of
giants,
although often smaller in size, the different depictions have come
to range from the fiendish giants – similar to the ogres of England (also
called Trolls at times, see Troller's
Gill) – to a devious, more human-like folk of the wilderness,
living underground in hills, caves or mounds. In the Faroe
islands, Orkney and Shetland tales,
trolls are called trows,
adopted from the Norse language when these islands were settled by
Vikings.
Nordic literature, art and music from the
romantic era and
onwards has adapted trolls in various manners – often in the form
of an aboriginal race, endowed with oversized ears and noses. From
here, as well as from Scandinavian fairy tales such as Three
Billy Goats Gruff, trolls have achieved international
recognition, and in modern fantasy literature and
role-playing games, trolls are featured to the extent of being
stock
characters.
Origin of the myth
In the genre of paleofiction, the distinguished Swedish-speaking Finnish paleontologist Björn Kurtén has entertained the theory (e.g. in Dance of the Tiger) that trolls are a distant memory of an encounter with Neanderthals by our Cro-Magnon ancestors some 40,000 years ago during their migration into northern Europe. Spanish paleoanthropologist Juan Luis Arsuaga provides evidence for these types of encounters in his 1999 book El collar del Neandertal ('The Neanderthal's Necklace'). The theory that Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons occupied the same area of Europe at the same time in history has been theorized based on fossil evidence. Other researchers believe that they just refer to neighboring tribes. The problem with this theory of Trolls is that there are theories and evidence underbuilding that bigger areas in Europe and the Middle East were inhabited by these two groups at the same time. Encounters could have happened due to nomadic tribes and long distance hunting, etc. Nonetheless there is no coherent research showing a phenomenon or histories of "troll-like beings" in all these places reducing the post facto of Neanderthals preceding Trolls as nothing more than faintly plausible for the beholder of today.Another explanation for the troll myth is that
the trolls represent the remains of the forefather-cult which was
ubiquitous in Scandinavia until the introduction of Christianity in
the 10th and 11th centuries. In this cult the forefathers were
worshipped in sacred groves, by altars or by gravemounds. One of
the customs associated with this practice was to sit on top of a
gravemound at night, possibly in order to make contact with the
deceased. With the introduction of Christianity however, the
religious elite sought to demonize the pagan cult, and denounced
the forefathers as evil. For instance, according to Magnus
Håkonsen's laws from 1276 it is illegal to attempt to wake the
"mound-dwellers". It is in these laws that the word troll appears
for the first time, denoting something heathen and generally
unfavourable.
This fits with the trolls in Norse sagas who are
often the restless dead, to be wrestled with or otherwise laid to
rest.
Scandinavian folklore
History
The meaning of the word troll is unknown. It
might have had the original meaning of supernatural or magical
with an overlay of malignant and perilous. Another likely
suggestion is that it means "someone who behaves violently". In old
Swedish law, trolleri was a particular kind of magic intended to do
harm. It should also be noted that North
Germanic terms such as trolldom (witchcraft) and trolla/trylle
(perform magic tricks) in modern Scandinavian languages does not
imply any connection with the mythical beings. Moreover, in the
sources for Norse
mythology, troll can signify any uncanny being, including but
not restricted to the Norse giants (jötnar).
In Skáldskaparmál,
the poet Bragi
Boddason encounters a troll-woman who hails him with this verse
(in Old
Norse):
The ambiguous original sense of the word troll
appears to have lived on for some time after the Old Norse
literature was documented. This can be seen in terms such as
sjötrollet (the sea troll) as a synonym for havsmannen (the sea
man) – a protective spirit of the sea and a sort of male
counterpart to the female sjörå (see huldra).
There are many places in Scandinavia
that are named after trolls, such as the Swedish town
Trollhättan
(Troll's bonnet) and the legendary mountain Trollkyrka
(Troll church). The most famous in Norway are Trollfjorden,
Trollheimen,
Trollhetta,
Trollstigen,
Trolltindan and
Trollveggen.
The Jætte Trolls
Gradually, forming of two main traditions regarding the use of troll can be discerned. In the first tradition, the troll is large, brutish and a direct descendant from the Norse jötnar. They are often described as ugly or having beastly features like tusks or cyclopic eyes. This is the tradition which has come to dominate fairy tales and legends (see below), but it is also the prominent concept of troll in Norway. As a general rule, what would be called a "troll" in Norway would in Denmark and Sweden be a "giant" (jætte or jätte, related to jötunn/jotunn in Jotunheimen).In some Norwegian accounts, such as the middle
age ballade Åsmund Frægdegjevar , the trolls live in a far northern
land called Trollebotten – the concept and location of which seems
to coincide with the Old Norse Jötunheimr.
The Vitterfolk Trolls
The second tradition is most prominent in
southern Scandinavia. Conversely, what would be called trolls in
southern Sweden and Denmark would be called huldrefolk in Norway
and vitterfolk in northern Sweden. The south-Scandinavian term
probably originate in a generalization of the terms haugtrold
(mound-troll) or bergtroll (mountain-troll), as trolls in this
tradition are residents of the underground.
These trolls have a human-like appearance.
Sometimes they had a tail hidden in their clothing, but even that
is not a definite. Many of these trolls had a single lock of hair
that no human could comb, whereas the rest was generally messy. A
frequent way of telling a human-looking troll in folklore is to
look at what it is wearing: Troll women in particular were often
too elegantly dressed to be human women moving around in the
forest. They could attract human males to do their bidding, or
simply as mates or pets. Later these would be found wandering,
decades later, with no memory of what had happened to them in a
troll woman's care.
More often than not, though, the trolls kept
themselves invisible, and then they could travel on the winds, such
as the wind-troll Ysätters-Kajsa,
or sneak into human homes. Sometimes you could only hear them
speak, shout and make noise, or the sound of their cattle.
Similarly, if you were out in the forest and smelled food cooking,
you knew you were near a troll dwelling. The trolls were also great
shapeshifters, taking shapes of objects like fallen logs or animals
like cats and dogs. A fairly frequent notion is that the trolls
liked to appear as rolling balls of yarn.
Whereas the large, ogrish trolls often appear as
a solitary being, the "small" trolls were thought to be social
beings who lived together, much like humans except out in the
forest. They kept animals, cooked and baked, were excellent at
crafts and held great feasts. Like many other species in
Scandinavian folklore, they were said to reside in underground
complexes, accessible from underneath large boulders in the forests
or in the mountains. These boulders could be raised upon pillars of
gold. In their living
quarters, they hoard gold and treasures. Opinion varied as to
whether or not the trolls were thoroughly bad or not, but often
they treated people as they were treated. Trolls could cause great
harm if vindictive or playful, though, and regardless of other
things they were always heathen. Trolls were also great thieves,
and liked to steal from the food that the farmers had stored. They
could enter the homes invisibly during feasts and eat from the
plates so that there was not enough food, or spoil the making of
beer and bread so that it failed or did not end up plentiful
enough.
The trolls sometimes abducted people to live as
slaves or at least prisoners among them. These poor souls were
known as bergtagna ("those taken to/by the mountain"), which also
is the Scandinavian word for having been spirited away. To be
bergtagen does not only refer to the disappearance of the person,
but also that upon returning, he or she has been struck with
insanity or apathy caused by the trolls. Anyone could be taken by
the trolls, even cattle, but at the greatest risk were women who
had given birth but not yet been taken back to the church.
Occasionally, the trolls would even steal a
new-born baby, leaving their own offspring – a (bort)byting
("changeling") – in
return.
To ward off the trolls you could always trust in
Christianity:
Church bells, a cross or even words like "Jesus" or "Christ" would
work against them. Like other Scandinavian folklore creatures they
also feared steel. Apart from that they were hunted by Thor, one of the last
remnants of the old Norse
mythology, who threw Mjolnir, his
hammer, causing lightning bolts to kill them. Though Mjolnir was
supposed to return to Thor after throwing, these hammers could
later be found in the earth (actually Stone Age axes)
and be used as protective talismans.
Fairytales and legends
While the everyday folklore consisted mostly of short anecdotes describing things that had (supposedly) happened to local people, fairytales are narratives that rarely claim to be true in the same way. Many of the fairytales featuring trolls were written in the late 19th century to early 20th century, reflecting the romanticism of the time, and published in fairytale collections like Tomtar och Troll. These tales, and illustrations by artists like John Bauer and Theodor Kittelsen, would come to form the ideas most people have of trolls today.Legends from the Middle Ages
and earlier also feature a kind of trolls of more horrifying
dimensions. This might reflect a past view of trolls as distinctly
bad creatures that would soften in later folklore (see the above),
or just be another example of fantastic tales demanding fantastic
dimensions.
In fairytales and legends trolls are less the
people living next to humans and more frightening creatures.
Particularly in these tales they come in any size and can be as
huge as giants
or as small as dwarfs.
They are often regarded as having poor intellect (especially the
males, whereas the females may be quite cunning), great strength,
big noses, long arms, and as being hairy and not very beautiful
(Once again, females often constitute the exception, with female
trolls frequently being comely). In Scandinavian
fairy
tales trolls sometimes turn to stone if exposed to sunlight, a
myth generally attributed to pareidolia found in naturally
eroded rock outcrops.
Asbjørnsen
and Moe's collection feature a number of traditional fairy
tales where trolls hold princesses captive, such as
The Three Princesses of Whiteland, Soria
Moria Castle, and Dapplegrim, and
two where trolls invade homes on Christmas
Eve to make merry, Tatterhood and
The Cat on the Dovrefell. Female trolls may conspire to force
the prince to marry their daughters, as in
East of the Sun and West of the Moon, or practice witchcraft,
as in
The Witch in the Stone Boat, where a troll usurps a queen's
place, or The
Twelve Wild Ducks, where she turns twelve princes into wild
ducks. In other tales, the hero matches wits with the troll:
Boots
and the Troll, and
Boots Who Ate a Match With the Troll.
The following excerpts from the Danish Ballad of
Eline of Villenskov describe the physical aspects of trolls within
Scandinavian mythology:
- There were seven and a hundred Trolls,
- They were both ugly and grim,
- A visit they would the farmer make,
- Both eat and drink with him.
- They were both ugly and grim,
- Out then spake the tinyest Troll,
- No bigger than an emmet was he,
- Hither is come a Christian man,
- And manage him will I surelie
- No bigger than an emmet was he,
Nordic art, music and literature
Edvard
Grieg, a prominent Norwegian composer of the later 19th
century, wrote several pieces on trolls, including a score based on
Henrik
Ibsen's Peer Gynt, with
the famous
In the Hall of the Mountain King, and March
Of The Trolls. Regarding his motivations, Grieg wrote: "The
peculiar in life was what made me wild and mad...dwarf power and
untamed wildness...audacious and bizarre fantasy." Grieg's former
home, Troldhaugen
("The Troll's Hill"), is now a museum.
Like Grieg, conductor Johan
Halvorsen was a nationalist Norwegian composer. He wrote, The
Princess and the Giant Troll, The Trolls enter the Blue Mountain,
and Dance of the Little Trolls. Geirr Tveitt
was heavily influenced by Grieg's romanticism and cultural
exploration of Scandinavian
folklore and Norwegian folk-music. Tveitt's Troll Tunes,
includes works such as Troll-Tuned Hardanger Fiddle, and The Boy
With The Troll-Treasure. Tragically, 80% of Tveitt's oeuvre was
destroyed in a fire.
Few Norwegian illustrators or painters have
managed to capture these strange creatures and the enchanted
atmosphere of Norwegian nature on paper an canvas as successfully
as Theodor
Kittelsen. Kittelsen's art and artistic use of the medium of
drawing, with black and white extremities and scales of gray in
between, are in a class of their own in Norwegian art. Theodor
Kittelsen was fascinated by this shadowy world populated by
supernatural siren beings and spirits. Walking in the forests and
fields, he could see them everywhere: in the mists over the
marches, in the twilight surrounding fallen pine trunks and in the
dripping fir trees on rainy days.
In Swedish children's
literature, trolls are not naturally evil, but primitive and
misunderstood. Their misdeeds are due to a combination of basic and
common human traits, such as envy, pride, greed, naïveté, ignorance
and stupidity. In some early 20th century fairy tales, by Elsa Beskow,
trolls are also depicted as an aboriginal race of hunters and
gatherers who are fleeing the encroaching human civilization. Where
man makes a road, the trolls disappear.
Young Scandinavian
children usually understand the concept of trolls, and a way to
teach children to brush their teeth is to tell them to get rid of
the very small "tooth trolls" that otherwise will make holes in
their teeth. This is a pedagogic
device used to explain bacteria by the Norwegian
author Thorbjørn
Egner in his story Karius
and Baktus.
The Swedish-speaking
Finnish author Tove Jansson
has reached a world-wide audience with her Moomintrolls.
There is some speculation that the famous story
Rumpelstiltskin
originated from a troll folk tale which bears many similarities.
While the original story of the troll involves a preacher
contracting a troll to build a church as opposed to a woman needing
to spin straw into gold, the central element of a bargain which is
satisfied by guessing the name of the involved party, and the
subsequent death of the troll or being whose name is guessed is
central to both stories. (see Fin
(troll))
All the music of folk metal
bands Finntroll and
Trollfest
are based on Trolls, presented as
a naturalist, alcohol-loving and viciously anti-Christian and
anti-human race.
Gallery
Gallery of trolls as imagined by various Nordic artists.See also:
- Gourmander, painting by Hasse Bredenberg http://runeberg.org/bredberg/ http://home.tiscali.se/visater/bredenberg/.
- Världens största Trollmålning, mural by Rolf Lidberg http://www.pinocchioamarcord.it/pinocchio_troll_2.htm.
- Trold, der vejrer kristenblod http://www.kid.dk/VarkBillede.asp?objectid=13759 http://www.vejenkunstmuseum.dk/Dansk/samlingen/nhj/skulpturer/trolden.htm, sculpture by Niels Hansen Jacobsen.
- The moomintrolls of Tove Jansson.
Trolls in America
Scandinavian folk-tales involving trolls such as
"Three Billy Goats Gruff" are familiar to other European and
European-derived cultures. In the US and
Canada, the
old belief in trolls is paralleled by a modern belief in Bigfoot and
Sasquatch.
Many statues of trolls adorn the downtown
business district of Mount
Horeb, Wisconsin, leading to the town being dubbed The Troll
Capital. There is also a neighborhood on the northeast side of
Fargo,
North Dakota which is named Trollwood.
Residents of the
Upper Peninsula of Michigan, known as Yoopers, refer to their
lower-peninsula counterparts as "trolls," because they live "Under
the Bridge" (Referring to the Mackinac
Bridge.)
Northern Central California (Sacramento,
Stockton, Lodi, Modesto, Yuba City and Marysville) hispanic
residents tell their children tales of the "Colupe" (KOH-LOOPIE)
the little man that lives in the walls which comes out at night
stealing away the breath of its sleeping victims. This story was
made famous in Stephen King's movie "Cat's Eye".
See also
- Dwarf
- Dark Elves
- Huldre
- Fin (troll)
- Grendel
- Moomin
- Ogre
- Patent troll
- Rölli
- Troll (Internet)(internet aggression)
References
- Folktro från förr, Ebbe Schön (2001), ISBN 91-7203-420-3
- Troll och människa, Ebbe Schön (1999), ISBN 91-27-06873-0
- Svensk folktro A-Ö, Ebbe Schön (1998), ISBN 91-518-2892-8
- Trollmakter og godvette, Olav Bø (1987), ISBN 82-521-2923-4
- Camilla Asplund Ingemark's, The Genre of Trolls. The Case of a Finland-Swedish Folk Belief Tradition is the first doctoral dissertation in Finland on traditional forest trolls. Her research describes trolls according to the folklore of Swedish-speaking Finns. Ingemark compares the style and content of troll tales in folklore with biblical stories.
References
External links
- Trollmoon – The Scandinavian Troll in Art and Folklore
- The Moomin Trove - comprehensive lists of Tove Jansson's Moomin books
- http://www.trollshop.net/trolls Norway based website with articles and stories about Trolls
- Art Passions – Images from Bland Tomtar Och Troll, and other illustrations from Norse mythology
troll in Bulgarian: Трол
troll in Catalan: Troll
troll in Czech: Troll (severská mytologie)
troll in Welsh: Trol
troll in Danish: Trold
troll in German: Troll (Mythologie)
troll in Spanish: Trol
troll in Persian: ترول
troll in French: Troll
troll in Galician: Troll
troll in Korean: 트롤
troll in Indonesian: Troll
troll in Italian: Troll (mitologia)
troll in Hebrew: טרול (מיתולוגיה)
troll in Lithuanian: Troliai
troll in Hungarian: Troll
troll in Dutch: Trol
troll in Japanese: トロール
troll in Norwegian: Troll (eventyr)
troll in Norwegian Nynorsk: Troll
troll in Polish: Troll
troll in Portuguese: Troll
troll in Romanian: Trol
troll in Russian: Тролль
troll in Scots: Trowe
troll in Serbian: Трол
troll in Finnish: Peikko
troll in Swedish: Troll
troll in Thai: โทรลล์
troll in Turkish: Troll
troll in Ukrainian: Троль
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Argus,
Briareus, Cerberus, Charybdis, Cyclops, Echidna, Gorgon, Harpy, Hydra, Loch Ness monster, Medusa, Minotaur, Pegasus, Python, Scylla, Sphinx, Talos, Typhon, advance, angle, anthem, bait the hook, ballad, bob, bowl, bunt, butt, canon, carol, catch, centaur, chant, chimera, chirp, chirrup, choir, chorus, clam, cockatrice, croon, dap, descant, dib, dibble, do-re-mi, drag, draggle, dragon, drake, draw, drive, fish, fly-fish, forward, fugato, fugue, furl, gig, go fishing, griffin, grig, guddle, hale, haul, heave, hippocampus, hum, hymn, impel, intonate, intone, jack, jacklight, jig, lilt, lug, mermaid, merman, minstrel, move, net, nixie, ogre, ogress, pedal, pipe, pole, propel, psalm, pull, push, quaver, roc, roll, roll up, rondeau, rondino, rondo, rondoletto, roulade, round, roundelay, row, salamander, satyr, sea horse, sea serpent,
seine, serenade, shake, shove, shrimp, shunt, sing, sing in chorus, siren, snake, sol-fa, solmizate, spin, still-fish, sweep, sweep along, take in tow,
thrust, torch, tow, trail, train, trawl, treadle, tremolo, trill, trundle, tug, tweedle, tweedledee, twit, twitter, unicorn, vampire, vocalize, warble, werewolf, whale, whistle, windigo, xiphopagus, yodel, zombie