
Tietäjä (, pl. ''tietäjät'', 'seer', 'wise man', literally 'knower') is a magically powerful figure in
traditional Finnic culture, whose supernatural powers arise from his great knowledge.
Roles
The activities of a ''tietäjä'' were primarily healing and preventing illness, but also included helping with farming, fishing and hunting; dealing with witchcraft; supporting approved marriages and disrupting disapproved liaisons; identifying thieves; and bringing success to ventures such as journeys or building. Their
incantations might call on helpers such as the dead, ''
väki'',
Ukko, Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, or animal spirits.
Many ''tietäjät'' knew ''
Kalevala''-metre poems, as well as mythical stories, spells, and healing charms. One of the key branches of the ''tietäjäs knowledge concerned aetiologies (''
synnyt'', s. ''synty'') of natural phenomena. It was believed that beings and phenomena could be controlled if their origin was known. For example, disease could be overcome if one recited or sang its ''synty''. This knowledge was closely guarded. ''Tietäjät'', sorcerers and healers were seen as protectors of a kind of cosmic equilibrium. Different kinds of beings had their own place in the universe, and if beings found themselves out of place, problems arose. The healer's role was often to return the beings to the right place. A sage generally knew the different requirements for different spells, in which often one needed to do rituals and recite spells, often also use magical substances or magic items. Their practices have often been compared with
shamanism.
History
The ''tietäjä'' is first recorded in
Gabriel Maxenius's 1733 ''De effectibus fascino naturalibus''. People known as ''tietäjät'' existed in real life, though the institution is now 'nearly extinct'. Traditions of Kalevalaic poetry, and the associated institution of the ''tietäjä'', were aggressively opposed in
Lutheran
Lutheranism is a major branch of Protestantism that emerged under the work of Martin Luther, the 16th-century German friar and Protestant Reformers, reformer whose efforts to reform the theology and practices of the Catholic Church launched ...
early modern Sweden (which included modern Finland), but became integrated into
Russian Orthodox
The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC; ;), also officially known as the Moscow Patriarchate (), is an autocephaly, autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Church, Eastern Orthodox Christian church. It has 194 dioceses inside Russia. The Primate (bishop), p ...
culture in
Karelia and
Ingria, partly assimilating to and partly thriving alongside Christian culture. Remnants of the ''tietäjä'' tradition also persisted among the
Forest Finns as late as the twentieth century.
The history of the institution before the eighteenth century is obscure. The current scholarly consensus, based on
comparative anthropological and
linguistic
Linguistics is the scientific study of language. The areas of linguistic analysis are syntax (rules governing the structure of sentences), semantics (meaning), Morphology (linguistics), morphology (structure of words), phonetics (speech sounds ...
evidence, is that Finnic-speaking cultures once shared in a wider central and northern Eurasian tradition of
shamanism, most distinctively characterised by ritual specialists being believed to leave their bodies in spirit form. Such people were, in the
Proto-Uralic language
Proto-Uralic is the unattested reconstructed language ancestral to the modern Uralic language family. The reconstructed language is thought to have been originally spoken in a small area in about 7000–2000 BCE (estimates vary), and then exp ...
, probably denoted with the word *''nojta'' (cf. Finnish ''noita'' 'witch' and Sámi ''
noaidi''). However, while ''tietäjä'' traditions clearly have important characteristics in common with shamanism, ''tietäjät'' were not believed to leave their bodies; their supernatural power arose rather from their command of memorised incantations and rituals. It is thought that these aspects of the tradition, and so the institution of the ''tietäjä'' as we know it, arose from contact with
Germanic-speaking cultures, which exerted huge linguistic influence on
Proto-Finnic language, and on other aspects of Finnic culture, in the first millennia BCE and CE. This is not to say that the ''tietäjä''-institution was identical to its Germanic models, nor that it did not then change over time. Further influences, for example, came from later contact with Christianity.
Appearances in myth and literature
''Tietäjät'' also appear in
Finnish mythology, the most famous mythological ''tietäjä'' being
Väinämöinen
() is a deity, demigod, hero and the central character in Finnish folklore and the main character in the national epic ''Kalevala'' by Elias Lönnrot. Väinämöinen was described as an old and wise man, and he possessed a potent, magical sing ...
, 'the mythic founder of the institution', who 'provided an identity
model for its practitioners'. In Kalevalaic poetry, he is routinely referred to using the formulaic epithets ''vaka vanha Väinämöinen, , tietäjä iän ikuinen'' ('trusty old Väinämöinen, , the soothsayer old as time').
''Tietäjät'' have been extensively studied in recent years by
Anna-Leena Siikala and
Laura Stark.
[Laura Stark, ''The Magical Self: Body, Society and the Supernatural in Early Modern Rural Finland'', FF Communications, 290 (Helsinki: Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia, 2006).]
See also
*
Noaidi
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tietaja
European shamanism
Finnish paganism
Forest Finns
Shamans
Finnish mythology