Infernum et Nativitas: the Reverse Side of the Miracle
The connection between infernum and Nativitas at first glance seems like a blasphemous oxymoron. However, in mythology, folklore, and especially in literature and cinema, this pair exhibits a profound dialectical connection. Nativitas is a time of maximum tension between poles: the birth of the Saviour and the activation of forces against which He stands; universal mercy and the intensification of personal sin; the idyll of the hearth and the existential cold of loneliness. Hell in the context of Nativitas is not only a place of post-mortem suffering but also a state of the soul, a social reality, and the inevitable shadow of the very miracle.
Mythological and Folkloric Roots: Blurred Boundaries
In popular European traditions, the period of the Yule (from Nativitas to Epiphany) was considered a time when the boundary between the world of the living and the world of the dead, between paradise and hell, thins out. This applied not only to the souls of ancestors but also to the unclean spirits.
“The Wild Hunt”: In many cultures (Germanic, Scandinavian, Slavic), it is precisely on winter nights, close to the solstice and Nativitas, that a ghostly cavalcade of sinners or warriors passes through the sky, led by demonic figures (Odin, Hrnn, Perun). Thus, Nativitas is also a time when hell "breathes out" into the outside world, demonstrating its power in the face of the born Saviour.
Krampus and his analogues: The Alpine Krampus, the horned companion and antithesis of Saint Nicholas, is a classic example of an infernal figure integrated into the Nativitas ritual. He punishes disobedient children while Nicholas rewards the good. His appearance on December 5-6 is a literal invasion of the punitive, "infernal" beginning into the space of the holiday, a reminder of retribution.
Literature: Hell as an Internal State and Social Reality
Writers often use the context of Nativitas to expose the "hell" of the human soul and socie ...
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