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One day the people tried to get rid of her by attempting to drown her by chopping off her fingertips. However, in all versions, a young woman becomes the mother of all sea creatures. Copyright © 1999-2020 Godchecker, Inc. All rights reserved. As goddess of the ocean, Sedna sets strict rules about the proper way to treat the animals of the hunt which the Inuit require for sustenance. SEDNA MYTHOLOGY An Inuit story of betrayal and death Sedna is a beautiful young Inuit woman who drowns following betrayal by her husband and father, thereupon sinking to the bottom of the sea to become the immortal ocean goddess who governs the fish, seals, walrus, and whales upon which the Inuit depend for food. Just copy the text in the box below. See more ideas about Inuit, Inuit art, Art. The story of Sedna, which is a creation myth, describes how she came to rule over Adlivun, the Inuit underworld.
Her father throws Sedna overboard in the hope that this will appease the angry god. The varying legends each give different rationales for Sedna's death. Article last revised on October 23, 2018 by Rowan Allen. The birdman, arriving home and discovering his wife is gone, flies out over the ocean to get her back.Regardless of which two versions of the story are being told, a battle takes place in the ocean involving the father and either the birdman or his relatives. A second version has the father arriving while the birdman is out hunting fish, and the father and Sedna escape in the father’s kayak. The sea spirit locates the kayak with the two humans aboard and creates huge waves to kill them. He promptly takes off his furs and shows himself to be not a human but a fulmar, birdman. An elaboration of some of those variations follows.Most versions of the myth describe a beautiful young Inuit woman, Sedna, living with her widower father, although one version does mention her mother being alive. In one version the dog marriage is punishment by her father for refusing to marry and the marriage consummated by the dog raping Sedna, but in another version Sedna falls in love with the dog who proves to be a kind a loving husband. The story of Sedna, which is a creation myth, describes how she came to rule over Adlivun, the Inuit underworld. Yet, in each version, her father takes her to sea in his kayak, chopping off her fingers. Sedna tries to crawl back in the kayak to escape the cold water, but as she grabs the edge of the kayak, her father cuts off her fingers one by one so that she cannot grasp the boat, and she sinks into the frigid Artic ocean and drowns. Sedna’s father escapes death in the battle, but later dies of grief over what had happened.One version of the myth has the Moon spirit and the Air spirit turning Sedna in the Ocean goddess to govern the Inuit, but other versions simply say Sedna became the spirit of the ocean. Jul 6, 2017 - Explore sandrapmiller's board "Sedna" on Pinterest. As her severed fingers sink into the sea, one finger becomes the fish, another the seals, another the walrus, and another the whales. Sedna (Inuktitut: ᓴᓐᓇ, Sanna) is the goddess of the sea and marine animals in Inuit mythology, also known as the Mother of the Sea or Mistress of the Sea.Sedna is also known as Arnakuagsak or Arnaqquassaaq and Sassuma Arnaa ("Mother of the Deep", West Greenland) and Nerrivik ("Table", northern Greenland) or Nuliajuk (District of Keewatin, Northwest Territories, Canada). The creature, enraged by her disappearance, calls to a spirit of the sea to help him. Then one day a mysterious but utterly charming fellow turned up in his kayak. When an unknown hunter appears, Sedna's father agrees to give her to him as wife in return for fish. Found this site useful? In any event, the dog dies, is killed by the father, or drops out of the picture.Regardless of whether the dog marriage is contained in the myth, all versions talk about the fulmar, a birdman, as the key husband of the myth.
Fearing for his life, the father throws Sedna overboard into the cold sea in the hopes of placating the birdman or his relatives so that the father might live.
The birdman’s friends and relatives, discovering the birdman had been killed, fly off to attack the father in revenge. The stroke to her head sends Sedna to the ocean floor where she resides, commanding the animals of the sea.
“You’re not the man I married,” she often said. This includes proper treatment of the animals' spirit when killed for food. Sedna is also known as Arnakuagsak or Arnaqquassaaq (Greenland) and … Once there was a young woman named Sedna. The creature, enraged by her disappearance, calls to a spirit of the sea to help him.
Many songs are sung Some versions say she rejected suitors from pride, others say she simply refused to follow tradition. More than one version of the Sedna legend exists. Eventually, Nuliayuk marries a Other versions of the legend depict Sedna as a beautiful maiden who rejects marriage proposals from the hunters of her village.
One day the people tried to get rid of her by attempting to drown her by chopping off her fingertips. However, in all versions, a young woman becomes the mother of all sea creatures. Copyright © 1999-2020 Godchecker, Inc. All rights reserved. As goddess of the ocean, Sedna sets strict rules about the proper way to treat the animals of the hunt which the Inuit require for sustenance. SEDNA MYTHOLOGY An Inuit story of betrayal and death Sedna is a beautiful young Inuit woman who drowns following betrayal by her husband and father, thereupon sinking to the bottom of the sea to become the immortal ocean goddess who governs the fish, seals, walrus, and whales upon which the Inuit depend for food. Just copy the text in the box below. See more ideas about Inuit, Inuit art, Art. The story of Sedna, which is a creation myth, describes how she came to rule over Adlivun, the Inuit underworld.
Her father throws Sedna overboard in the hope that this will appease the angry god. The varying legends each give different rationales for Sedna's death. Article last revised on October 23, 2018 by Rowan Allen. The birdman, arriving home and discovering his wife is gone, flies out over the ocean to get her back.Regardless of which two versions of the story are being told, a battle takes place in the ocean involving the father and either the birdman or his relatives. A second version has the father arriving while the birdman is out hunting fish, and the father and Sedna escape in the father’s kayak. The sea spirit locates the kayak with the two humans aboard and creates huge waves to kill them. He promptly takes off his furs and shows himself to be not a human but a fulmar, birdman. An elaboration of some of those variations follows.Most versions of the myth describe a beautiful young Inuit woman, Sedna, living with her widower father, although one version does mention her mother being alive. In one version the dog marriage is punishment by her father for refusing to marry and the marriage consummated by the dog raping Sedna, but in another version Sedna falls in love with the dog who proves to be a kind a loving husband. The story of Sedna, which is a creation myth, describes how she came to rule over Adlivun, the Inuit underworld. Yet, in each version, her father takes her to sea in his kayak, chopping off her fingers. Sedna tries to crawl back in the kayak to escape the cold water, but as she grabs the edge of the kayak, her father cuts off her fingers one by one so that she cannot grasp the boat, and she sinks into the frigid Artic ocean and drowns. Sedna’s father escapes death in the battle, but later dies of grief over what had happened.One version of the myth has the Moon spirit and the Air spirit turning Sedna in the Ocean goddess to govern the Inuit, but other versions simply say Sedna became the spirit of the ocean. Jul 6, 2017 - Explore sandrapmiller's board "Sedna" on Pinterest. As her severed fingers sink into the sea, one finger becomes the fish, another the seals, another the walrus, and another the whales. Sedna (Inuktitut: ᓴᓐᓇ, Sanna) is the goddess of the sea and marine animals in Inuit mythology, also known as the Mother of the Sea or Mistress of the Sea.Sedna is also known as Arnakuagsak or Arnaqquassaaq and Sassuma Arnaa ("Mother of the Deep", West Greenland) and Nerrivik ("Table", northern Greenland) or Nuliajuk (District of Keewatin, Northwest Territories, Canada). The creature, enraged by her disappearance, calls to a spirit of the sea to help him. Then one day a mysterious but utterly charming fellow turned up in his kayak. When an unknown hunter appears, Sedna's father agrees to give her to him as wife in return for fish. Found this site useful? In any event, the dog dies, is killed by the father, or drops out of the picture.Regardless of whether the dog marriage is contained in the myth, all versions talk about the fulmar, a birdman, as the key husband of the myth.
Fearing for his life, the father throws Sedna overboard into the cold sea in the hopes of placating the birdman or his relatives so that the father might live.
The birdman’s friends and relatives, discovering the birdman had been killed, fly off to attack the father in revenge. The stroke to her head sends Sedna to the ocean floor where she resides, commanding the animals of the sea.
“You’re not the man I married,” she often said. This includes proper treatment of the animals' spirit when killed for food. Sedna is also known as Arnakuagsak or Arnaqquassaaq (Greenland) and … Once there was a young woman named Sedna. The creature, enraged by her disappearance, calls to a spirit of the sea to help him.
Many songs are sung Some versions say she rejected suitors from pride, others say she simply refused to follow tradition. More than one version of the Sedna legend exists. Eventually, Nuliayuk marries a Other versions of the legend depict Sedna as a beautiful maiden who rejects marriage proposals from the hunters of her village.