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Know all about the 13 Yule Lads of Iceland (Source: Instagram/@holiday_tours_iceland)
While adults indulge in year-enders and holiday season festivities, Christmas for children is all about looking forward to gifts dropped off by the enchanting Santa Claus. For the rest of the world, there’s only one Santa — who rides his reindeer-driven sleigh around snowy peaks and climbs down chimneys to fill children’s stockings. But in Iceland, there’s not one but 13 of them!
Well, the Icelanders like to call them the Yule Lads. The first mention of these 13 brothers was in 1862, when the author Jón Árnason drew inspiration from the famous Grimms and began collecting folktales. Later, in 1932, Icelandic poet Jóhannes úr Kötlum published the poem ‘Yule Lads’ in the book Christmas is Coming, which set the canon along with their names and personalities.
As far as the Yule Lad lore goes, these 13 brothers were born to a troll named Grýla, but with time, their sinister heritage got watered down and replaced with generous gift-giving and a dash of mischief on the side.
The 13 Yule Lads visit children every night leading up to Christmas:
To receive the gift, children place a shoe on their windowsill. (Source: Instagram/@iceland.parliament.hotel)
Iceland’s popular folklore says that kids who remain well-behaved all year round get a small gift from each of the Yule Lads, while the naughty kids get a raw or rotten potato. To receive the gift, children place a shoe on their windowsill.
Funnily enough, the Yule Cat, known as Jólakötturinn, is huge, vicious and keeps lurking about the snowy countryside during Christmas, eating people who have not received any new clothes to wear before Christmas Eve. He is the house pet of Grýla and her sons, the Yule Lads.
DISCLAIMER: This article is based on information from the public domain.