King in the mountain
A king in the mountain, king under the mountain or sleeping hero is a prominent motif in folklore and mythology that is found in many folktales and legends. The Aarne-Thompson classification system for folktale motifs classifies these stories as number 766, relating them to the tale of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus.
General features
King in the mountain stories involve legendary heroes, often accompanied by armed retainers, sleeping in remote dwellings, including caves on high mountaintops, remote islands, or supernatural worlds. The hero is frequently a historical figure of some military consequence in the history of the nation where the mountain is located.
The stories gathered by the Brothers Grimm concerning Frederick Barbarossa and Charlemagne are typical of the stories told, and have been influential on many told variants and subsequent adaptations. The presence of the hero is unsuspected, until some herdsman wanders into the cave, typically looking for a lost animal, and sees the hero. The stories almost always mention the detail that the hero has grown a long beard, indicative of the long time he has slept beneath the mountain.
In the Brothers Grimm version, the hero speaks with the herdsman. Their conversation typically involves the hero asking, "Do the eagles (or ravens) still circle the mountaintop?" The herdsman, or a mysterious voice, replies, "Yes, they still circle the mountaintop." "Then begone! My time has not yet come."
The herdsman is usually supernaturally harmed by the experience: he ages rapidly, he emerges with his hair turned white, and often he dies after repeating the tale. The story goes on to say that the king sleeps in the mountain, awaiting a summons to arise with his knights and defend the nation in a time of deadly peril. The omen that presages his rising will be the extinction of the birds that trigger his awakening.[1][2]
Examples
A number of kings, rulers, and fictional characters and religious figures have become attached to this story. They include:
- King Arthur (Great Britain)
- Merlin of the Arthurian legend, who is imprisoned in an oak tree by Nimue.
- Bran the Blessed (Wales)
- Csaba, the son of Attila the Hun (Hungary) who is supposed to ride down the Milky Way when the Székelys are threatened.
- King St. Stephen, King St. Ladislaus, King Matthias Corvinus (Hungary)
- Emperor Charlemagne (Germany, France) rests in the Untersberg near Salzburg
- Emperor Constantine XI of the Roman Empire, a.k.a. the Immortal Emperor turned to marble (Greece) (a similar story, although Constantine was said to be turned into a statue, not to be resting in a mountain.)
- Fionn mac Cumhaill (Ireland), is said to sleep in a cave/mountain surrounded by the Fianna (he is differentiated from them because of his large stature). It is told that the day will come when the Dord Fiann is sounded three times and Fionn and the Fianna will rise up again, as strong and well as they ever were. In other accounts he will return to glory as a great hero of Ireland.[3]
- Ogier the Dane (Danish: Holger Danske, Denmark)
- King Rodrigo (Spain) Said to escape from the Moorish invasion and await for "the time of maximum need" to save his people.
- Vytautas the Great (Lithuania) He is believed to rise from its grave when the worst danger will threaten Lithuania to defend the motherland at the last battle.
- Owain Lawgoch
- Owain Glyndŵr (Wales) The Last native born Welshmen to hold the title "Prince of Wales", he disappeared after a long but ultimately unsuccessful rebellion against the English. He was never captured or betrayed and refused all Royal pardons.
- Emperor Frederick Barbarossa (Germany) sleeps in the Kyffhäuser mountain and will rise to save the Empire
- King Henry the Fowler (Germany)
- King Pelayo (Spain)
- The legendary Moravian king Ječmínek will, according to a prophecy, return to save his country from enemies.[4]
- An unnamed giant is supposed to sleep in Plynlimon in Wales.
- Giewont massif which is said to be a sleeping knight (Poland)
- The remains of the Golem of Prague are said to be in the attic of the Old New Synagogue in Prague, and that it can be brought back to defend the Jewish people. (Jewish mysticism)
- Gerald FitzGerald, 8th Earl of Kildare (Ireland)
- The Aztec hero-god Montezuma — believed to have been a divine king in prehistoric times, and suspended in an Arizona mountain that bears his image.
- Bernardo Carpio the "King of the Tagalogs" said to reside in the mountains of Montalban, Philippines.
- Muhammad al-Mahdi
- Marko Kraljević (Serbia)
- King Olaf I (Norway)
- Väinämöinen, the protagonist of the Finnish national epic Kalevala. At the end of Kalevala, he leaves on a boat, promising to return when he is most needed.
- Sebastian I, (Portugal) (it is said by Sebastianists that the king will return in a hazy morning in time of need)
- The Sleeping Giant mountain in Connecticut, United States was said by the local Quinnipiac Indians to be the demon Hobbomock, sealed by the Great Spirit. One day he would supposedly awaken and destroy the world.
- The Sleeping Ute
- Vlad III the Impaler (Romania)
- The poet and painter Taras Shevchenko (Ukraine), believed to be a supernatural hero (xarakternyk), is said to sleep under his grave mound in Kanev or even in the Kiev Pechersk Lavra.
- Tecumseh of the Shawnee
- William Tell (Switzerland, in some legends accompanied by two other Tells[5])
- Theseus (Athens)
- Thomas the Rhymer is found under a hill with a retinue of knights in a tale from Anglo-Scottish border. Likewise, Harry Hotspur was said to have been hunting in the Cheviots when he and his hounds got holed-up in the Hen Hole (or "Hell-hole") awaiting the sound of a hunting horn to awaken them from their slumber. Another border variant concerns a party of huntsmen who chase a roebuck into the Cheviots when they heard the sweetest music playing from the Henhole, however when they entered they became lost and are trapped to this day.[6]
- St. Wenceslas (Václav) of Bohemia (Czech Republic). He sleeps in the Blaník mountain (with a huge army of Czech knights) and will emerge to protect his country at its worst time, riding on his white horse and wielding the legendary hero Bruncvík's sword.[4]
- Boabdil, last Islamic prince of Granada.
- Bernardo del Carpio
- Lāčplēsis, the eponymous hero of the Latvian epic poem. It is said that he will rise out of the Daugava River when his country needs him to again take on her attackers and invaders. Alternatively, he will rise out of the Daugava at the end of the world.
- Matija Gubec (Croatia)
- King David is depicted in Haim Nachman Bialik's tale "King David in the Cave" as sleeping along with his warriors deep inside a cave, waiting for the blast of the ram's horn that will awaken them from their millennia of slumber and arouse them to redeem Israel.[7][8] This role was not attributed to King David in earlier Jewish tradition.
In Tolkien
- J. R. R. Tolkien uses the king in the mountain in various places in his legendarium: the form of the Dead Men of Dunharrow, the armies and king of Númenor who are trapped by the Valar when Númenor is destroyed, and in the Second Prophecy of Mandos which states that the dead heroes Túrin and Beren would return to help to defeat Morgoth at the end of times. Although in the Hobbit the term 'King under the mountain' itself is used, it refers to a quite different context: the Dwarven king who resides at the Lonely Mountain of Erebor. The King Under the Mountain was also by right King of Durin's Folk.[9] The king under the mountain can also be applied to what happens at the end of the book, when Thorin dies and is laid to rest under the mountain with the Arkenstone, the precious gemstone heirloom of his family. The sword Orcrist was placed on his tomb by the Elven-King Thranduil, and is said to glow whenever danger approaches, so the fortress could never be taken by surprise.
In The Hobbit, the dragon Smaug was (ironically) said to be the only "king" on Erebor. The true ruler was Thorin Oakenshield.
Kings under the Mountain
The sleeping hero in other popular culture
- A version of the sleeping hero legend is included in several entries in the Nintendo game franchise 'The Legend of Zelda', most explicitly in the Gamecube game The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker and the most iconic of the series The Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time.
- American comic book icon Captain America fell into suspended animation at the end of World War II, only to be awakened in the modern era.
- American comic book super hero Captain Marvel from Fawcett Comics, after having been cancelled in 1953, was given a story where he (and most of his friends and his arch foes) was trapped in suspended animation for 20 years to explain his revival in 1973 by DC Comics.
- In the Final Crisis: Superman Beyond comic series, a mysterious statue, resembling Superman, is left behind by the original Monitor, to activate only when the DC Multiverse is endangered.
- British author Susan Cooper makes use of the return of King Arthur and the awakening of sleeping hereos as plot elements in The Dark Is Rising Sequence.
- In music, a single by Kate Bush released on 24 October 2005 is named "King of the Mountain". This song connects popular beliefs about Elvis Presley's death, with references to Citizen Kane also, to the "King in the Mountain" motif.
- In the novel Marauders of Gor, the ninth in the Gor series by John Norman, the hero Torvald is supposed to return in times of need for a Viking-like civilization.
- In The Books of Magic, Timothy Hunter sees the mystical King in the mountain and talks to a minstrel who is guarding his grave.
- In Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time, heroes from ages past reside in the world of dreams until they are called forth to fight the Dark One.
- In Robin Hobb's Farseer series, skilled coteries from the past have used their own lives to create dragons that sleep in a mountain glade, to be awakened in times of need.
- In the Transformers Marvel Comics series, the Last Autobot, a final repository of some of the power of the Transformers' god Primus, waits at the center of Cybertron. Similarly, there is a prophecy that says that an Autobot will arise from the ranks and use the power of the Matrix of Leadership to "light their darkest hour".
- In Star Trek, "Kahless the Unforgettable" is the Klingon version. In the TNG episode , "Rightful Heir," he is returned as a clone by ambitious prelates. The fact that this Kahless is a clone is discovered by the Enterprise's Worf, who convinces the Klingon government to allow the clone to be installed as a figurehead emperor, a symbol to unite the fractured Klingon Empire.
- The plot of the book The Weirdstone of Brisingamen by Alan Garner revolves around a Cheshire variant of the legend.
- The main character in the 2006 Science Fiction Series The Lost Fleet by John G. Hemry (writing as Jack Campbell) is a mythical hero to his people. He is rediscovered on the eve of a large calamity and must return the remnants of his nations military from being trapped deep behind enemy lines. The author was inspired by the King Arthur Myth.
- In That Hideous Strength by C. S. Lewis, which was the third book in a trilogy preceded by Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra, the main character in the series (a philologist named Elwin Ransom) summons Merlin.
See also
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References
- ^ Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Deutsche Sagen (1816/1818), no. 23.
- ^ Kaiser Karl im Untersberg (German)
- ^ Augusta, Lady Gregory - Gods and Fighting Men (1904)
- ^ a b Alois Jirásek, Old Bohemian Legends (1894, Staré pověsti české)
- ^ The Three Tells
- ^ Henry Tegner; Ghosts of The North Country, 1991 Butler Publishing, ISBN 0-946928-40-1. p.13
- ^ "Canaanism:" Solutions and Problems, Boas Evron, Alabaster's Archive
- ^ הַמֶּלֶךְ דָּוִד בַּמְּעָרָה ח"נ ביאליק
- ^ Tolkien, J. R. R. (1980), Christopher Tolkien, ed., Unfinished Tales, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, Part III, chapter III, Notes, ISBN 0-395-29917-9
External links