Krampus Redux: More
Love and Scary Stuff,
The Day before St. Nicholas Day
A couple of years ago I wrote a blog about
Krampus, and since then, he’s become so much more famous in the U.S. that I
scarcely need to introduce him. Nevertheless, here’s a summary:
The day
before the Feast of St. Nicholas, which is on Dec. 6th, a strange
creature is honored in the Germanic and Central/Eastern European lands. Though
he goes by more than one name, he is best known as Krampus. He’s a strange
looking fellow: covered with hair, bound with chains and bells, a basket on his
back and a switch in his hand. He sometimes has one human foot and one hoof,
and a long red tongue. His face is frightening; he’s like a cross between a
wild animal and a demon. He’s also St. Nicholas’s helpmate and friend.
Basically,
the idea is that someone dressed like St. Nick and someone dressed as Krampus
will go around and visit families. Krampus will switch bad kids, and leave them
coal instead of candy, and threaten to put them in his basket and carry them
away if they’re really bad. It’s a stick and carrot kind of thing.
I’m not
sure I agree with some of the lore about Krampus—the link below seems to
connect him to the Norse goddess Hel, but I’m not sure about that. However, his
female counterpart, Frau Perchta, is definitely related to the Norse legends.
She’s sometime conflated with Frau Holle, who is also reckoned to be somewhat
like Hel. She looks like an old witch, and she switches you with her broom.
Like Krampus she has horns, and some of his other accoutrements. According to
the legends, Perchta is likely to mess with you on Twelfth Night, and she goes
for the women. If you haven’t finished your housework by then, she disembowels
you. Yikes!
Rev. Dee
makes a Krampus oil, and it is perfectly appropriate to wear this oil as a
unisex fragrance all through the holiday season, or use it in an oil warmer (we
sell those too) to perfume the room for your holiday parties or rituals.
Krampus oil smells like cinnamon, patchouli, carnation, rose, vanilla, mugwort…and
maybe just a bit of brimstone. If you feel moved to leave out a snack for him
as well as for St. Nick, well, he likes traditional European sweets like stollen,
pfeffernusse, fruitcake, marzipan, and similar seasonal desserts. Toast him
with Gluhwein, Glogg, spiked eggnog or cinnamon schnapps.
In the
places where these legends are popular, Perchta and Krampus often appear
together, often in big groups that parade through town in a Karmpuslauf, or a
“Krampus run.” Many large cities in the U.S.
now have Krampus runs, including Los
Angeles. Having just attended the Los Angeles Krampus Ball
at Alpine Village and being switched by no less than FOUR Krampuses, I can tell
you that it’s all worthwhile. I have been punished for my sins. Now the party
may begin!
https://boroughsofthedead.com/frau-perchta/
http://mentalfloss.com/article/71999/9-facts-about-krampus-st-nicks-demonic-companion
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