Melusine
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In European legends and folklore, Melusine (or Melusina) is the name of a spirit of fresh waters in sacred springs and rivers. She is usually depicted as a woman who is a serpent or fish (much like a mermaid) from the waist down. She is also sometimes illustrated with wings, two tails or both.
Melusine is sometimes used as a heraldic figure, typically in German and Scandinavian coats-of-arms, where she supports one scaly tail in each arm. She may appear crowned. The Coat of Arms of Warsaw features a siren (identified in Polish as a syrenka) very much like a depiction of Melusine, brandishing a sword and shield. She is the water-spirit from the Vistula who identified the proper site for the city to Boreslaus of Masovia in the late 13th century. Ferenc Frangepán, Archbishop of Kalocsa in Hungary, included in his will of 1543 a series of seven tapestries representing the story of "The Beautiful Melusina." [1] (http://mek.oszk.hu/01900/01911/html/index1368.html)
The Archbishop's tapestries will have shown the most famous literary version of Melusine tales, that of Jean d'Arras, compiled about 1382 - 1394 and worked into a collection of "spinning yarns" told by ladies at their spinning. The tale was translated into English about 1500, and often printed in the 15th and 16th century. (There is also a prose version called the Chronique de la princesse.)
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It tells how Elynas, the King of Albany (a poetical euphemism for Scotland) went hunting one day and came across a beautiful lady in the forest. She was Melusine's mother, Pressyne. He persuaded her to marry him but she agreed, only on the promise — for there is often a hard and fatal condition attached to any pairing of fay and mortal — that he must not enter her chamber when she birthed or bathed her children. She gave birth to triplets. When he violated this taboo, Pressyne left the kingdom, together with her three daughters, and traveled to the lost Isle of Avalon.
The three girls — Melusine, Melior, and Palatyne — grew up in Avalon. On their fifteenth birthday, Melusine, the eldest, asked why they had been taken to Avalon. Upon hearing of their father's broken promise, Melusine sought revenge. She and her sisters captured Elynas and locked him, with his riches, in a mountain. Pressyne became enraged when she learned what the girls had done, and punished them for their disrespect to their father. Melusine was condemned to take the form of a serpent from the waist down every Saturday.
Raymond of Poitou came across Melusine in a forest in France, and proposed marriage. Just as her mother had done, she laid a condition, that he must never enter her chamber on a Saturday. He broke the promise and saw her in the form of a part-woman part-serpent. She forgave him. Only when, during a disagreement with her, he called her a "serpent" in front of his court, did she assume the form of a dragon, provide him with two magic rings and fly off, never to return.
Melusine myths are especially connected with the northern, most Celtic areas of Gaul and the Low Countries. Sir Walter Scott told a Melusine tale in Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802 – 1803) confident that
- "the reader will find the fairy of Normandy, or Bretagne, adorned with all the splendour of Eastern description. The fairy Melusina, also, who married Guy de Lusignan, Count of Poictou, under condition that he should never attempt to intrude upon her privacy, was of this latter class. She bore the count many children, and erected for him a magnificent castle by her magical art. Their harmony was uninterrupted until the prying husband broke the conditions of their union, by concealing himself to behold his wife make use of her enchanted bath. Hardly had Melusina discovered the indiscreet intruder, than, transforming herself into a dragon, she departed with a loud yell of lamentation, and was never again visible to mortal eyes ; although, even in the days of Brantome, she was supposed to be the protectress of her descendants, and was heard wailing as she sailed upon the blast round the turrets of the castle of Lusignan the night before it was demolished."
When Count Siegfried of the Ardennes bought the feudal rights to Luxembourg in 963, his name became connected with the local version of Melusine. In 1997 Luxembourg issued a postage stamp commemorating this Melusina, with essentially the same magic gifts as the ancestress of the Lusignans. This Melusina magically made the castle of Bock castle appear the morning after their wedding. On her terms of marriage, she too required one day of absolute privacy each week. Alas, Sigefroid, as the Luxembourgeois call him, "could not resist temptation, and on one of the forbidden days he spied on her in her bath and discovered her to be a mermaid. When he let out a surprised cry, Melusina caught sight of him, and her bath immediately sank into the solid rock, carrying her with it. Melusina surfaces briefly every seven years as a beautiful woman or as a serpent, holding a small golden key in her mouth. Whoever takes the key from her will set her free and may claim her as his bride." [2] (http://www.luxcentral.com/stamps/LuxStamps1997.html#Europa.1997)
Martin Luther knew and believed in the story of another version of Melusine, die Melusina zu Lucelberg (Lucelberg in Silesia), whom he referred to several times as a succubus (Works, Erlangen edition, volume 60, pp 37–42). Goethe wrote the tale of Die Neue Melusine in 1807 and published it as part of Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre. The playwight Grillparzner brought Goethe's tale to the stage and Felix Mendelssohn provided a concert overture "The Fair Melusina," his Opus 32.
Melusine is one of the pre-Christian water-faeries who were sometimes responsible for changelings. The "Lady of the Lake," who spirited away the infant Lancelot and raised the child, was such a water nymph. For other European water sprites dangerous to humans, especially men, see Lorelei, Nixie.
"Melusina" would seem to be an uneasy name for a girl-child in these areas of Europe, but the Duchess of Kendal, George I of England's German mistress, was christened Ehrengard Melusina von der Schulenburg in 1667.
Trivia
A stylized cartoon version of a siren, which is similar to some of the Melusine legends, serves as the mascot that appears in the Starbucks logo to advertise the coffee chain.
On page 190 of Proust's Within A Budding Grove (translated by C. K. Scott Moncrieff and Terence Kilmartin and revised by D. J. Enright, part of his work In Search of Lost Time) the narrator refers to Gilberte as a Mélusine. Somewhat earlier Joris-Karl Huysmans, The Cathedral (English translation, 1898) mentioned a rather vaguely-recalled Melusine, among a host of monstrous medieval figures:
- "There must be some more fabulous beasts to be included," murmured Durtal, again turning over his papers.
- He found the wyvern, a sort of Melusina, half woman and half serpent; a very cruel beast, full of malice and devoid of pity, Saint Ambrose tells us..."
External links
- Well-translated legends about mermaids and water sprites that marry mortal men, with sources noted, edited by D. L. Ashliman. (http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/melusina.html)
- Terri Windling, "Married to magic: animal brides and bridegrooms in folklore and fantasy" (http://www.endicott-studio.com/rdrm/rrMarriedToMagic.html)
- Homeira Foth, "The Melusine Myth" (http://www2.sjsu.edu/depts/jwss/annotations/possession/melusina.html): sources, framework, history
- A Melusine myth retold for modern Goddess women (http://www.matrifocus.com/IMB04/myturn-linde.htm)
- Luxembourg stamps, 1997 (http://www.luxcentral.com/stamps/LuxStamps1997.html#Europa.1997)
- Sir Walter Scott, Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (http://www.geocities.com/avalonianchurch/scotttamlin.html) (e-text)
- Huysmans, The Cathedral (http://www.huysmans.org/catheng/cath13.htm) (e-text)
- Wolfgang Goethe, Die Neue Melusine (http://gutenberg.spiegel.de/goethe/melusine/melusine.htm) (in German)
References
- Donald Maddox and Sara Sturm-Maddox, Melusine of Lusignan: foundling fiction in late medieval France. A volume of essays that examine the monumental French prose narrative, the Roman de Melusine (1393), which was written by Jean d'Arras for Jean, Duc de Berry, the great patron of the 'Tres Riches Heures'. The Roman traces the powerful medieval dynasty of Lusignan from its founding in the city by the legendary Melusine, an enigmatic shape-shifting faery figure, through its glorious rise in Europe and in the Crusader kingdoms of the Eastern Mediterranean (see Guy of Lusignan, King of Cyprus), weaving together history and fiction, with elements of myth, folklore, and popular traditions fused with epic, Crusader narrative, knightly romance, and Christian doctrine, all to glorify and uphold the proprietary claims to Lusignan of the work's illustrious patron.
- Otto j. Eckert, "Luther and the Reformation," lecture, 1955. e-text (http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:-6AU_rXMR5gJ:www.wls.wels.net/library/Essays/Authors/E/EckertReformation/EckertReformation.pdf+Heraldry+Melusina&hl=en)de:Melusine