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Anders Poulsen or Poala-Ánde (in Northern Sámi; died 1692), was a North Sami noaidi, who was the last victim of the many Vardø witch trials, which took place between 1621 and 1692. [1] In Sámi form his name was Poala-Ánde. Anders Poulsen's Sámi drum.
The drum of Anders Paulsen (left) and the Bindal drum (right) represent variations in Sami drums, their shape, decoration and history. Paulsen's drum was confiscated in Vadsø in 1691, while the Bindal drum was bought by a museum official in 1925; Vadsø Municipality and Bindal Municipality being in opposite corners of the Sami world. Paulsens ...
Bodhrán, Riddle drum A crowdy-crawn is a wooden hoop covered with sheepskin used as a percussion instrument in western Cornwall at least as early as 1880. [ 1 ] It is similar to the Irish bodhrán . [ 2 ]
This is the oldest skretch of the sami drum described in the manuscript; possibly drawn by Thomas von Westen.There is also a newer, more styled drawing.. The Nærøy manuscript (Norwegian: Nærøymanuskriptet), originally Relation anlangende Find-Lappernis saa-vel i Norrlandene og Finmarken som udi Nummedalen, Snaasen og Selbye deres Afguderie og’ Satans Dyrkelse, som Tid efter anden ere ...
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Depiction of Horagalles from a Sami shaman drum found in Norway. The drum symbols were copied by the Christian priest Thomas von Westen in the 18th century. [8] The two hammers of the thunder god depicted as a blue cross on a late 18th-century shaman drum from Porsanger Municipality, Western Finnmark, Norway, described by the Christian missionary Knud Leem.
The Sami were forcibly converted to Christianity and shamanistic practices forbidden. [1] Sami spirituality brings unearthliness—the spiritual world—to the Sami. The shaman is the intermediary between this world and the spiritual. Some Sami shamans have Noaidi drums, and at least one such drum with a Mano Moon symbol has been discovered. [3]
Fadno is a reed instrument and domestic flute of the Sami people of Scandinavia, made from Angelica archangelica. [citation needed] The instrument features a reed and three to six (generally four) fingerholes [1] and appears to have no parallels among the surrounding Scandinavian peoples.