KABOUTER
'Kabouter' is the Dutch word for gnome. In folklore and mythology, the Dutch Kabouters are akin to the Scandinavian kind, known as Tomte and the German kobold. The term ''kabouter'' was also adopted by a 1970s hippie movement in Amsterdam that sprang from the Provo movement. One of its best known representatives is Roel van Duijn.
In Dutch mythology and Dutch folklore, kabouters are tiny men who live underground, in mushrooms, or else are household spirits helping in the home. The males have long, full beards (unlike dwarves, who don't always have full beards) and wear tall, pointed red hats. They are generally shy of humans.
In the ''Legend of the Wooden Shoes'', an old Dutch folktale, the kabouter teaches the Dutch man how to make piles and how to make wooden shoes.[1]
The Dutch illustrator Rien Poortvliet played an important part in Kabouter lore with his publication of "Leven en werken van de Kabouter" (English title "Lives and works of the Gnome"), later translated into English and published as "Gnomes".[2]
In popular culture today, the business Travelocity uses a Rien Poortvliet-style statue of a Kabouter for commercials calling him the Travelocity gnome.
1. ''Legend of the Wooden Shoes'', as retold by William Elliott Griffis in ''Dutch Fairy Tales For Young Folks.'' New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1918. (English). Available online by SurLaLane Fairy Tales.
2. (1977) ''Gnomes'', Harry N. Abrams Inc., ISBN 0-8109-0965-0 (20th Anniv.) ISBN 0-8109-5498-2 (30th Anniv.)
In Dutch mythology and Dutch folklore, kabouters are tiny men who live underground, in mushrooms, or else are household spirits helping in the home. The males have long, full beards (unlike dwarves, who don't always have full beards) and wear tall, pointed red hats. They are generally shy of humans.
In the ''Legend of the Wooden Shoes'', an old Dutch folktale, the kabouter teaches the Dutch man how to make piles and how to make wooden shoes.[1]
The Dutch illustrator Rien Poortvliet played an important part in Kabouter lore with his publication of "Leven en werken van de Kabouter" (English title "Lives and works of the Gnome"), later translated into English and published as "Gnomes".[2]
In popular culture today, the business Travelocity uses a Rien Poortvliet-style statue of a Kabouter for commercials calling him the Travelocity gnome.
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Notes
1. ''Legend of the Wooden Shoes'', as retold by William Elliott Griffis in ''Dutch Fairy Tales For Young Folks.'' New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1918. (English). Available online by SurLaLane Fairy Tales.
2. (1977) ''Gnomes'', Harry N. Abrams Inc., ISBN 0-8109-0965-0 (20th Anniv.) ISBN 0-8109-5498-2 (30th Anniv.)
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