Scandinarnia

Lena Heide-Brennand

Scandinarnia: Unlocking the Dark & Mystical North What if the stories we were told as children were never meant for children at all? Scandinarnia opens the door to the older, darker layers of Scandinavian mythology, folklore, and cultural history—before they were softened, simplified, and made safe. This is a podcast for those who want to understand not only the stories themselves, but the world that created them. Each episode explores a creature, a place, or a tradition from the North: the Nøkken who inhabits rivers as both musician and predator; the Huldra, whose beauty conceals something deeply inhuman; the Myling, a voice of guilt and unresolved justice; and countless other figures drawn from oral tradition, archival sources, and historical accounts. But these are not simply stories retold. Through a blend of narrative, anthropology, and cultural analysis, Scandinarnia examines: how folklore functioned as social control and moral instructionhow fear, landscape, and survival shaped beliefhow Christianity reshaped older mythologiesand how these figures continue to live on in modern imaginationYou will hear not only the tales themselves, but the meanings beneath them—the anxieties they reveal, the behaviours they enforced, and the realities they reflect. Rivers become thresholds. Forests become spaces of transformation. The supernatural becomes a language for very human fears. Drawing on historical texts, folklore collections, and lived tradition, Scandinarnia invites you to step into a world where myth and reality were never clearly separated.

  1. Stallo- The Terrifying Giant Of Sàpmi

    May 6

    Stallo- The Terrifying Giant Of Sàpmi

    In this deeply unsettling episode, we journey into the ancient folklore of the Sámi people of northern Scandinavia to uncover one of the most terrifying figures in Arctic mythology: the giant cannibal of the tundra. The devourer. The hunter who follows ski tracks through snowstorms and calls your name in the voice of someone you love. But this is not merely a scary story. This episode explores the historical roots of the Stállu legend, examining how folklore may preserve cultural memory of real dangers — hostile outsiders, famine, violence, colonisation, and the brutal realities of surviving in the Arctic north during the medieval period. We delve into Sámi oral traditions, noaidi shamanism, winter storytelling traditions, and the chilling symbolic role of monsters in landscapes where darkness could last for months. Expect eerie tales of girls vanishing into the mountains, footsteps circling lavvu camps at night, and giant figures carrying iron cauldrons through blizzards beneath the northern lights. But beneath the horror lies something even more haunting: The Stállu may not simply represent a monster. He may represent humanity’s oldest fear — the fear of being hunted in a world utterly indifferent to whether you survive. This episode blends folklore, anthropology, history, mythology, and genuinely spine-chilling storytelling into a dark journey through one of northern Europe’s most fascinating and terrifying legends. Perfect listening for: – lovers of Scandinavian folklore – dark history enthusiasts – mythology and horror fans – those fascinated by Arctic cultures and oral traditions – anyone who enjoys atmospheric, intelligent, deeply eerie storytelling So light a candle. Listen carefully to the wind. And if someone calls your name from outside after dark… Do not answer.

    21 min

About

Scandinarnia: Unlocking the Dark & Mystical North What if the stories we were told as children were never meant for children at all? Scandinarnia opens the door to the older, darker layers of Scandinavian mythology, folklore, and cultural history—before they were softened, simplified, and made safe. This is a podcast for those who want to understand not only the stories themselves, but the world that created them. Each episode explores a creature, a place, or a tradition from the North: the Nøkken who inhabits rivers as both musician and predator; the Huldra, whose beauty conceals something deeply inhuman; the Myling, a voice of guilt and unresolved justice; and countless other figures drawn from oral tradition, archival sources, and historical accounts. But these are not simply stories retold. Through a blend of narrative, anthropology, and cultural analysis, Scandinarnia examines: how folklore functioned as social control and moral instructionhow fear, landscape, and survival shaped beliefhow Christianity reshaped older mythologiesand how these figures continue to live on in modern imaginationYou will hear not only the tales themselves, but the meanings beneath them—the anxieties they reveal, the behaviours they enforced, and the realities they reflect. Rivers become thresholds. Forests become spaces of transformation. The supernatural becomes a language for very human fears. Drawing on historical texts, folklore collections, and lived tradition, Scandinarnia invites you to step into a world where myth and reality were never clearly separated.