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Contents

   



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1 Footnotes  





2 References  





3 Further reading  





4 External links  














Estonian folklore






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The earliest mentioning of Estonian singing dates back to Saxo Grammaticus' Gesta Danorum (c. 1179). Saxo spoke of Estonian warriors who sang at night while waiting for a battle.[1] Henry of Livonia at the beginning of the 13th century described Estonian sacrificial customs, gods and spirits. In 1578 Balthasar Russow described the celebration of midsummer (jaanipäev), the St. John's Day by Estonians.[2] In 1644 Johann Gutslaff spoke of the veneration of holy springs and J.W. Boecler described Estonian superstitious beliefs in 1685. Estonian folklore and beliefs including samples of folk songs appear in Topographische Nachrichten von Liv- und Estland by August W. Hupel in 1774–82. J.G von Herder published seven Estonian folk songs, translated into German in his Volkslieder in 1778 and republished as Stimmen der Völker in Liedern in 1807.[3]

At the beginning of the 19th century during the Estophile Enlightenment Period (1750–1840), increased interest in Estonian folklore occurred among Baltic Germans. J.H. Rosenplänter founded Beiträge zur genauern Kenntniß der ehstnischen Sprache, a journal for studies on Estonian language, literature, and folklore. In Beiträge the German translation of Mythologia FennicabyKristjan Jaak Peterson was published in 1822. In 1839 The Learned Estonian Society was founded as the central organization for collecting and studying Estonian folklore. A leading figure in the society, Friedrich Robert Faehlmann published a number of Estonian legends and myths in German based on genuine Estonian folklore and on Ganander's Finnish mythology "The Dawn and Dusk" (Koit ja Hämarik[a]), being considered one of the most beautiful Estonian myths having popular origin. In 1842 the Society of the Estonian Literati was founded in Tallinn.

Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald started collecting Estonian folklore in 1843 but ended up changing the tales considerably. The materials collected primarily from Virumaa were reworked and published as The Old Tales of the Estonian People in 1866. Alexander H. Neus' anthology Ehstnische Volkslieder[4] (3 vols; 1850–52) is considered the first scholarly publication on Estonian folksongs. In total 1,300 songs are given in Estonian and in German translation. The president of The Society of the Estonian Literati, Pastor Dr. Jakob Hurt, considered the "king of Estonian folklore" began collecting Estonian folklore in the 1870s. The total amount collected is approximately 12,400 pages. In The Old Harp (Vana Kannel), 2 volumes of folksongs were published from 1875 to 1876. Two more volumes were added in 1938 and 1941. The Setus Songs (Setukeste laulud) in 3 volumes were published from 1904 to 1907. Inspired by Hurt's work, Matthias J. Eisen started a folklore collection in the 1880s resulting a collection of 90,000 pages. Oskar Kallas, Ph.D (1868–1946) studied at the University of Helsinki and was the first folklore scholar of Estonian descent.

After the establishment of the Republic of Estonia, Walter Anderson was appointed to the newly founded chair of folklore at the University of Tartu. Anderson's most significant students were Oskar Loorits and et:August Annist. Loorits became the director of the Estonian Folklore Archives founded in 1927. His major field was folk religion and mythology, a study on Estonian, Livonian and Russian folk beliefs. His most monumental work Grundzüge des estnischen Volksglaubens[5] was published from 1949 to 1957 in Copenhagen. Arvo Krikmann and Ingrid Sarv assembled the five-volume Estonian proverb collection『Eesti vanasõnad』between 1980 and 1988.[6]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ Inspired by Faehlmann, the philologist Nikolai Anderson authored a ballad based on this myth: Anderson, Nikolai (1905). Koit und Hämarik: eine estnische Sage. J. Anderson. hdl:10062/38703.

References[edit]

  • ^ Stimmen der Völker in Liedern at google books
  • ^ Ehstnische Volkslieder at google books
  • ^ Grundzüge des estnischen Volksglaubens at googe books
  • ^ Wolfgang Mieder. 2014. Preface. Proverbium 31: ix-xi.
  • Further reading[edit]

    External links[edit]


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