Riddles (Finnic)


The corpus of traditional riddles from the Finnic-speaking world is fairly unitary, though eastern Finnish-speaking regions show particular influence of Russian Orthodox Christianity and Slavonic riddle culture. The Finnish for 'riddle' is arvoitus, related to the verb arvata.
Riddles provide some of the first surviving evidence for Finnic literature. Finnic riddles are noteworthy in relation to the rest of the world's oral riddle canon for their original imagery, their abundance of sexual riddles, and the interesting collision of influences from east and west; along with the attestation in some regions of an elaborate riddle-game.
The archives of the Finnish Literature Society contain texts of 117,300 Finnish-language riddles collected from oral tradition, some of which are in Kalevala metre; meanwhile, the Estonian Folklore Archives contain around 130,000 older traditional riddles, along with about 45,000 other riddle-type folklore, such as conundra, initial letter puzzles, droodles, etc.

Form

Most traditional Finnish and Estonian riddles consist of a simple pair of statements, like 'kraatari menee läpi kylän, eikä sanoo hyvää huomenta', whose answer is 'needle and thread without an end knot' ; the common 'isä vielä syntymässä, kuin lapset laajalle liikkuu', to which the answer is 'fire and sparks' ; or the Estonian 'Üks hani, neli nina?', to which the answer is 'padi'. Very few include an explicit question like 'what is the thing that...?' They are generally set apart from everyday language by distinctive syntactic tendencies.
Many riddles are in Kalevala metre, such as this example of the internationally popular 'Ox-Team Riddle' collected in Loimaa in 1891:
At times riddles allude to traditional mythology, mostly through passing reference to people, beings or places, and to other poetic genres such as elegy or charms.

Early attestations

Records of riddles provide some of the earliest evidence for Finnish-language literature: the first grammar of Finnish, Linguae Finnicae brevis institutio by Eskil Petraeus included eight illustrative riddles, including 'caxi cullaista cuckoi ylitze orren tappelewat', the answer to which is 'eyes and nose', and 'Pidempi pitke puuta | matalambi maan ruoho', to which the answer is 'a road'. Later, in 1783, Cristfried Ganander published 378 riddles under the title Aenigmata Fennica, Suomalaiset Arwotuxet Wastausten kansa, arguing that 'one can see from these riddles that the Finnish people think and describe as accurately as any other nation, and that their brains are no worse than others'. And from these riddles we also learn of the richness and aptness of the Finnish language in explaining all manner of things'.

Social contexts

Riddles were a common form of entertainment for the whole household in the Finnish-speaking world into the 1910s and 1920s, but new entertainments, the obsolescence of the traditional riddle stock caused by changing material and economic norms, the increasing unfashionability of Kalevala-metre, and changes to family structures associated with urbanisation, led to their demise as a mainstream form of entertainment. Riddles were generally learned by heart, and often their solutions too, such that guessing a riddle was not always strictly a test of wits.
Much of the Finnish region also attests to a distinctive riddle game, alluded to already in Ganander's 1783 collection,
in which the unsuccessful guesser is sent to a place called Hyvölä, Himola, Hymylä, Huikkola or Hölmölä.... The participants may agree among themselves after how many unsuccessful guesses one must leave for that place "to get some wits".... The course of the game appears in actual fact to have been such that the unsuccessful participant was dressed into funny clothing and was sent into the courtyard, vestibule, or kitchen corner. A part of the players can now pretend to be Hymylä folk who discuss the coming of the stranger and answer his questions. At his destination the guesser is... offered the most repulsive foods and left-overs. He is made to wash himself, e.g., in a tar barrel and dry himself with feathers... The next act of the farce is once again in the home living room: the stranger has returned and recounts his journey. This scene apparently depends much upon the respondent's inventiveness, and he can compensate for his earlier failure by making his listeners laugh at his new inventions.

Sexual riddles were not generally presented at household evening gatherings, but rather at gatherings along the lines of age, gender, or occupation. Examples of sexual riddles include 'kaks partasuuta miestä vetelee yhteistä sikaaria', to which the answer is 'naiminen' and 'kaksi tikkaa takoo yhden ämmän persieen', to which the answer is 'huhmar ja kaksi puista petkeltä'.

Mythic references in riddles

Though not particularly common, riddles that refer to figures of traditional Finnic mythology have excited considerable interest among scholars. This riddle is an example:
The answer is 'rain', but might once have been 'fishing net'. The poem alludes to the traditional god of the underworld, Tuoni, and recalls Finnish elegiac verse.
The following riddles require knowledge of the images and cosmology of Kalevala-poetry, particularly the healing incantations called synnyt:

Major editions

Finnish riddles have received some, but not very extensive study.