Lempo
Template:Short description Template:For Template:Needs more references Lempo (Template:IPA) is a demon from Finnish folklore and mythology. Lempo has been connected to the names Lemmes, Lemmas, Lemmätär and Lemmetär (Template:Lit.), as well as themes of love and fire. The -tär ending names are feminine, but Lempo has also been understood as a male demon in some instances.
Descriptions
Christfried Ganander called Lempo a flying evil spirit who forged evil flying arrows;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lemmes a forest god or faun who planted the alder and is its protector;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lemmas a nymph who stirred iron after it was lifted from bogs;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Lemmetär or Lemmätär a smith maid who pulled the bellows when iron was made and shook trees with her breath.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Matthias Castrén connected the name Lempo to the word lempi 'erotic love'. It was personalized as a capitalized Lempi in love spells. This lempi in spells could be a wild and raging feeling, like lust awoken by an evil witch, so Castrén thought a love god could've thus developed into an evil god. Elias Lönnrot connected the name to the Swedish word slem 'lousy'. Lemmetär is also mentioned in runic songs describing the origin of stones.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
A South Savonian description of a love spell explains that when a wife had broken the laws of chastity, Lempi in her had transformed into Lempo and was then driven out of her with a spell.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A North Savonian love spell includes expressions of gratitude to Lemmetär at the end of it.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Lönnrot wondered if love ("lempi") was in the process of forming into the god Lempi when Christianity arrived to Finland.<ref name="lempi">Template:Cite web</ref>
In runic songs, Lempo is connected to fire, which has created theories of Lempo's possible role as a fire haltija.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Lemmes or lemmäs means a meteorite which makes a howling sound when falling to the ground, while plural lemmenet means sparks above a campfire. The word lempo means a ball lightning. Similarly, erotic love (lempi) has been described like a flame which flares up within a person. Fire which came with a meteorite crash or ball lightning was considered sacred. There are many similar sounding place names in Lempäälä, such as Lempoinen and Lempää. According to folklore, there were Lempo's cave (Lemmon luola) and Lempo's hole (Lemmon kuoppa) in Lempäälä, the latter near the local church. It has been theorized these formations could've been caused by meteorite strikes. Local folklore states Lempo was worshipped there before the arrival of Christianity. Both formations were destroyed when a railway was built in the area. It is also possible the place names near Lempäälä originate from a name meaning a place of fire.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
According to Lauri Hakulinen, the Old Finnish word *lempä would've meant mythological fire. Partially based on this, author Juha Kuisma presented Lempo as Holy Fire, a fire woman, a fire goddess, who fertilized the fields in slash and burn cultivation. Her worship would've then been replaced by Saint Birgitta in Christian times.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Felix Johannes Oinas thought that "Lempo" was a name for a demon even before the arrival of Christianity; the name would originate from "love", as people called the demon their beloved in order to evade its wrath.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Ulla-Maija Kulonen believed the name to be connected to the meanings of 'fire' and 'flame', and that it became a swear word due to these meanings.<ref name="kello">Template:Cite web</ref>
Equivalents in other languages include Karelian Template:Lang and Ludic and Veps Template:Lang, also used as swear words and meaning a demon. These were also loaned into Russian. The Finnish word was also loaned into Sámi as the swear word Template:Lang. In Votic, Template:Lang means a similar creature as the Estonian Kratt (in Finnish usually Template:Lang).<ref name="kello"/>
Demonic Lempo
After Christianity came to Finland, the reputation of Lempo worsened: it is portrayed in the folklore usually as an erratic spirit, as love can be capricious, even dangerous, and it could even take control of a being and turn them to destruction.
Lempo brought down the hero Väinämöinen with the help of his two demon cohorts, Hiisi and Paha.<ref name="MPC-object" />
The words "lempo" and "hiisi" are also used as very mild swear words in the Finnish language. Piru is a slightly stronger swear word.
Sukkamieli
Ganander mentioned a being called Sukkamieli (Template:Lit.) who he connected to Asmodeus, who caused discord between a wedded couple to make the husband jealous ("to have black socks"). Sukkamieli was called mielen kääntäjä 'changer of minds' and was asked to change the minds of a couple in discord to be loving again.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The runic song Ganander refers to has, however, never been collected from anywhere else, which has led researchers to think this song and Sukkamieli could be of later, pseudo-mythological creation. Ganander did not dare write down the sexually explicit love spells of Finnish and Karelian runic song tradition.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Castrén explained the name Sukkamieli as someone who loves socks, and since socks are soft and smooth, the goddess of love was called Sukkamieli because she cared for the weakest and most tender feelings of the heart. He also refers to the verb suksutella 'to entice, to tease'.<ref name="lempi"/> According to Kaarle Krohn, it was originally siukka mieli 'mental illness' and the whole line siukkamieli-mielen kääntäjä ("the one who changes the mentally ill mind").<ref name="krohn">Krohn, Kaarle (1912). Suomalaisten runojen uskonto. Porvoo: WSOY and Finnish Literature Society. Pages: 244–245.</ref>
"Changing of minds" appears frequently in love spells. One Olonets Karelian runic song speaks of the mind changer as Melutar, though the song is focused on descending through rapids.<ref name="krohn"/> In Kainuu, North Ostrobothnia and North Savo, names like Mielutar<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Mielis-neiti<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> refer to the Mistress of the Forest; in one South Savo song, Mieluutar even refers to the Mistress of Water.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>