Fänggen
A Fängge is a wood sprite or a subtype of wild women in German folklore, found in German-speaking parts of the Alpine Region into more northerly non-Alpine parts of Bavaria.
The Fängge has been conceived of strictly as female, a hairy, ugly giantess. However, the gender demarcation is vague. Also, the spirit when called by the variant name Fankerl or Waldfänken tends to be regarded as a dwarf. They are called Fankel, Fank in some parts of Austria where they are considered to be "wild folk" of either sex, but less monstrous.
Nomenclature
The singular term is Fangga, Fanggin, or Fängge. Plural terms are Fanggen, we Fänggen, Wildfangg, Wildfanggen or Wildfängl, wilde Weiber.Fängge in the broad sense refers to a nature spirit, either gigantic or dwarfish, in Bavaria, Liechtenstein, Tyrol, as well as in Switzerland, in the Canton of Grisons and Canton of St. Gallen. They are considered the Tyrolean equivalent of the generic "wild women".
The Fängge is a giantess as tall as a tree, according to the lore of Tyrol and the Bavarian Alps.
The Fankerl is a type of bearded dwarf with flashy red eyes living on the Pfreimd River according to the lore of the Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, and it is counted as a type of Fängge. It is noted that Fankerl is a word for the 'devil' across Bavaria into Austria, and since the term Fankerl term Fanken also occurs as a diminutive of Fan 'devil' in Nordic languages, so Alfred Bäschlin notes that the term applied to a folkloric spirit is probably usage in the secondary and marginal sense of the word.
The Waldfänken, the mythical wood-dwellers of Switzerland, also resemble dwarves, with superhuman strength. The term Fänken is glossed in Swiss dialect as Mannli ; thus they are also called Wildmannli, though this term appears to denote the men-folk, while terms such as Waldfänken or Holzmüzen were reserved for the women-folk. Cf. lore around the village of Furna, below.
The variants Fankel, Fank in the lore of Tyrol and Vorarlberg, Austria has the female Fanka, Fanga in company. This Fankel said to denote "wild folk" turned devil, as happens with various creatures of pagan belief.
There are also the Fengge of Vorarlberg, which are described as less sinister, or smaller-sized yet powerful.
General description
As already stated, Fängge or Fangga in the conventional lore of Tyrol and the Bavarian Alps is that of a hideously ugly giant ogress of great strength. The terrifying giantess is as tall as an average tree. Its body is entirely hairy or bristled. Her head hair is black, strewn with strands of beard lichen and coarsely hang down her back. She is the female counterpart of the male giant of the region, who is also grown over with lichen and moss.The Fängges gaping mouth reaches from ear to ear, and her voices are deep as a man's. Her eyes are black, but sometimes glows or flashes like lightning. She wears a jackets made from tree bark, and apron/skirt made from wildcat pelts, or shaggy skirts made from fox or other animal pelt.
The life of the Fänggen is bound to the trees of the forest, with a special affinity to large and old trees. If such a tree is felled or dies, then the respective Fangga has to die. If the whole forest is logged, the Fänggen disappear altogether. The Fängge being a personification of giant trees, each Fängge individual bears a proper name like a human: e.g., Stutzfärche, Stutzferche or Stutzforche, Rauhrinde, Rohrinta or Rohrinde, Hochrinta or Hoachrinta, and Stuzza-Muzza, Stutzemutze or Stutzamutza. These names which vary occur in the folktale regarding a Fängge-girl hired as housemaid.
The Fänggen are man-eaters, preferring the flesh of children, but they will also eat adult persons. They also steal children as well as women who just gave birth. They further exchange newborn unbaptized children for changelings.
Fänggen are always female, their husbands being the Waldriesen, wilde Männer or Waldmänner. Those giants are a danger to their own offspring, though, which is why the Fänggen give their daughters away to human farms for them to serve there as maids. Such a Fangga-maid will never take on the Christian faith and will return to the woods as soon as she hears that one of her kind has died.
As already noted, some local notions of this wild woman is regarded as dwarfish, whether the Waldfänken of Switzerland, or Fengge of Austria. However, rather than there being regional differences as to the conception of size, one explanation offered is that even where the giant waldmuter carrying a whole fir-tree as a staff had been part of folklore, the stature of the being was diminished as time passed on, becoming a wilde fänkenmannli barely 3 feet tall, also swapping their forest dwellings for cave-holes.
In an 18th century commentary on the Swiss Waldfänken back in the days when the hamlet of Furna only had a few settlements, the wild folk dwelled nearby in the Valley of Davos. These Waldfänken were human-like but thicker and shorter and covered with hair except for the eyes. They lived there until driven away by the church bells of Furna. In this Swiss account, the men-folk were called wilde Männlin while the women were called Waldfänken or Holzmüzen. And extraordinarily, these women had sagging breasts "so long that she can throw them over her shoulders", which have been compared to the wild woman with drooping breasts described in the Arthurian Romance Wigalois.
The chamois are the livestock herds of the Fänggen which is why the Fänggen are hostile to chamois-hunters. In one tale, a Fangga visits a hunter who stayed at a huntsman's hut with the chamois he gunned down, and she threatens to tear him to pieces for killing one of their cows. When the hunter counters he will shoot her, she retracts her threat, but shows the man their stable where one stall is left empty, and the man decided never to take another chamois again. Similar legends about protection of the chamois is ascribed to the Salige Frau or the wilde Fräulein.
Folktales and legends
A tale tells of a maid of great strength but unknown identity hired by a peasant in Fließ. The maid refused to learn anything of Christianity. Once the peasant was coming home from the Imst market, and passed through the Bannwald when he heard a loud cry addressing him: "Yoke-bearer", "tell Stutzamutza, Hoachrinta is dead". When he reported this back home, the maid cried "Mother, mother!" and bolted off towards the forest. Later reports arrived that she was stealing and devouring children, inheriting the role of her mother. A variant where the Fangge's forest is described as lying between Landeck and Ladis on the bank of the Inn River, a local shepherd from Urgen hamlet takes in a girl as maid, similar development ensues, two local men bring news to "Tell Stutz-Färche that Rohrinde is dead". These tales are recognized as paralleling the "Death of Pan" motif.The Fangga of the Nassereith forest in Tyrol was reputed to be the size of a medium-sized tree, and preyed on young boys. She would sniff the boys as if taking a pinch of snuff up her up her nose. or kill them cruelly by rubbing the boys against prickly-branched trees, until they were grated into dust. Wilhelm Mannhardt compared this to the Bohemian Forest folklore of the Zutodekitzeln, which can be explained as the natural phenomenon of whirlwind.
In another legend, a Fangga came to a peasant's home in Paznaun, Tirol, and abducted a new mother who just delivered a baby, tearing her to pieces. The Fangga then assumed a spot in the kitchen, trying to take a place of the dead mother, though she tricked the daughter, the ugly woman with a shaggy bearded could not pass herself off to the husband.
The story of a peasant who pretended his name was "Saltton" to escape the Fangga is a story of the Polyphemus type. A peasant of Arzl in while out hunting for firewood gets captured and was about to be eaten, but suggests he would taste better cooked than raw. While the Fangga was trying to split a log apart with her hands, he removed the wedge so that it snapped shut trapping her hand. She made an outcry shouting that Saltton was responsible for her misery, to which the would-be helper only replied "Saltton, salt g'litten ".
According to the lore of Hinterstein, Oberallgäu, Bavaria, a hairy and rough male Wildfängl lived in the mountain slopes of the and was hostile to the local folk, causing much mischief. The woodcutters were working at the local Erzstieg trail near Erzberg mountain, with the Erzbach stream nearby forming a ravine. They saw the Wildfängl and bribed him with gifts, and connived him into sticking his hand in a wedged split log, then made it snap shut. The Wildfängl howled in agony but the lumberjacks mercilessly cut the huge tree down and tumbled it down the ravine, the victim and all. The Wildfängl was not seen again.
There is also the legend of the Tirolean Fangga named Langtüttin. From one breast flowed milk, but from the other breast flowed venom. She forcibly insists on breastfeeding the boy and cooking for him, detaining him a few days, but the boy makes a getaway, taking advantage of the presence of a cross which she is unable to go beyond. Oversized breasts are discussed as generally symbolic of vegetative divinities.