All  

Ancient Origins Tour IRAQ

Ancient Origins Tour IRAQ Mobile

Icelandic legendary monster

Icelandic government commission announces legendary sea monster exists

Print

A government investigation carried out by the Fljotsdalsherao municipal council in Iceland has ruled that a legendary sea serpent named Lagarfljotsormurinn, which is rumoured to inhabit Lake Lagarfljot, actually exists. According to the Discovery News, the commission ruled that a 2012 video of what is claimed to be Iceland’s most famous lake monster is authentic. 

The Lagarfljótsormur, or ‘Lagarfljót worm’ is an Icelandic lake cryptid which is purported to live in Lagarfljót, a freshwater, glacial-fed lake in Egilsstaðir. The earliest recorded sightings of the Lagarfljótsormur date back to the Icelandic Annals of 1345, and have continued into the 21 st century. However, sightings increased exponentially after a home video shot in 2012 went viral. The home video shows what looks like a long, serpentine form swimming in the glacial lake in eastern Iceland.

The Lagarfljótsormur is typically described as being 90 metres in length with many humps, and has also been reported outside the water, lying coiled up or slithering into the trees. In ancient times, sightings were considered to precede a great event such as a natural disaster.

In their book “Icelandic Folk and Fairy Tales,” folklorists May and Hallberg Hallmundsson describe one origin tale of the beast:

At one time, long, long ago, there was a woman living on a farm in the Lagarfljót district, close by the stream where it broadens into a lake. She had a grown daughter. Once, she gave her daughter a gold ring.” The woman instructed her daughter to catch a snake and keep the gold ring underneath it in her linen chest (as, apparently, one did long ago in rural Iceland). She did so, “but when the girl went to look at her ring again, the snake had grown so large that the chest was beginning to come apart. Then the girl was frightened and she picked up the chest with everything in it and threw it into the lake. A long time passed, and gradually people became aware that there was a serpent in the lake, for it was beginning to kill both people and animals crossing the waters.

In 1963, the head of the Icelandic National Forest Service, Sigurður Blöndal, reported seeing the giant worm, and in 1998 a teacher and students at Hallormsstaðir School also claimed to have witnessed the legendary creature.

In February 2012, the Icelandic national broadcaster, RÚV, published the home video thought to show the Lagarfljót Worm, however, skeptics claimed that the video simply depicts an inanimate object moved by the rapid current.  Undeterred by skeptical explanations, the Fljótsdalshérað municipal council established a 13-person ‘truth commission’ to determine whether the video shot by Hjörtur E. Kjerúlf was authentic. The inquiry has just completed its investigation, and has determined that the video is authentic and recommends further investigation and research into the Lagarfljótsormur. The commission may have also been somewhat ‘motivated’ by the burst of tourism caused by the 2012 video.  A sightseeing boat named Lagarfljótsormurinn, which operates on the lake, seeks to preserve the traditions of the Lagarfljót Worm for cultural and tourism purposes.

If the video is authentic, and actually depicts a living creature, it may not be as monstrous as the legends say. Many species of fish have been found which resemble ‘sea monsters’ described in mythological tales, for example, the frilled shark (Chlamydoselachus anguineus), and the giant oarfish (Regalecus glesne). It might just be that a similar species may inhabit Lake Lagarfljot, leading to the development of legendary tales over the centuries.

A frilled shark

A frilled shark, image source.

A giant oarfish

A giant oarfish. Image source.

 

Featured image: Sea serpent by NetRaptor / deviantart

By April Holloway

 

Comments

angieblackmon's picture

the video itself is interesting with all of the jump cuts. makes me wonder how long the actual raw footage is....or if he stopped the camera, got closer, turned it back on, stopped, back up, turn it back on, etc. there's not a whole lot of zooming involved. 

love, light and blessings

AB

I think that i must invent an animal that is illusive and totally South African and boost tourism to S.A.

Anybody got any suggestions for a mythical creature that is only found in the Western Cape of S.A.

In fact the creature can only be seen in the mountains of map coordinates 34S03 20E43.

We get more tourists and I sell more of my products, like colloidal Gold.   

Super cool :-)

Tsurugi's picture

There is no such thing as "proof" in a scientific sense. There is evidence for, and evidence against, but no "proof". Proof is for maths.

So yeah...it's just another story...just like everything else. When you get right down to it, all scientific knowledge, theories, hypothesis, experimental results, whitepapers, etc...they are all just stories we tell each other, each with varying amounts of evidence for and/or against their propositions.

So what are the Icelanders doing here, really? It appears to me that they have had a good long look at the many stories which have accumulated there regarding something interesting in the water. Their conclusion after reviewing, as best they could, all of the urban legends, ancient myth, and historical folklore, is that there really is something interesting going on.
They've decided the phenomena--whatever it may be--is real. Whatever turns out to be the cause of the phenomema remains to be seen.

Pages

aprilholloway's picture

April

April Holloway is a Co-Owner, Editor and Writer of Ancient Origins. For privacy reasons, she has previously written on Ancient Origins under the pen name April Holloway, but is now choosing to use her real name, Joanna Gillan.

Joanna... Read More

Next article