The Church, Pietist Mission and The Sámi. - An Account of a Northern Norwegian Mission District in the Early Eighteenth Century.
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11666Date
2017Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Storm, DikkaAbstract
The indigenous religion of the Sámi population came under strong pressure through
the Pietist mission effort, which occurred during the first decades of the 18th century
in Denmark-Norway. This study focuses on the complex religious situation in the areas
of the Northern Norwegian counties of Nordland and Troms.
The study uses a spatial approach to map the positions of the different institutions and
participants: The Church, the missionary efforts, and perceptions of indigenous spirituality.
I am investigating this complex religious situation by reconstructing the social
network that formed its backbone, using a biographical perspective and life stories to
reveal the actors’ careers and interests, and by focusing on local knowledge.
Religious objects such as the drum, hammers, and sculptures of Sami ‘deities’ made
of tree or stone, traces as stones, mountains were seen as ‘tools’ to conduct religious
practice at many sites in the far North. This is still visible in local place-names. In the
sources, these place names were seen as obstructions to the new Christian [MG1] perspective.
The hammer, drum, and the symbols or religious iconography painted on the
drum leather offer a good overview over Sámi society and the world of their deities.
While there are few extant Sámi religious objects from which we can draw information
about Sámi indigenous spirituality, we can analyze the missionary and churchrelated
documents that discuss them. Through the process of reconstructing those
social networks and tracing the communication between institutions and the
positions and interests of the missionaries, the sources give indirect information
about a complex situation.