
In years past, Ferrebeekeeper has celebrated Saint Patrick’s Day with a series of short essays about Irish folklore. We started with leprechauns and worked our way through the doom of Oisin (who could have had eternal youth and endless love), the Sluagh (evil spirits who ride the clouds), the Leannán Sídhe, the Fear Gorta, and the great Gaelic flounder (which is not even a thing, but which should be). You should read that story about Oisin–it’s really plaintive!

Anyway, this year we are going to take a break from the disquieting beauty of Irish folklore to showcase a category of obscene Medieval sculpture, the “Sheela na gig”, a sort of stylized stone hag who is portrayed holding open her legs and her cavernous womanhood (a word which I am primly using as a euphemism for “vagina”). These grotesque female figures appear throughout Northwest Europe, but are most prevalent in Ireland. Nobody knows who carved them or why. Their name doesn’t even have a coherent meaning in Gaelic. Yet they are clearly connected to fertility and to the great mother goddess of the Earth. As you can imagine, they are the focus of furious speculation by religious and cultural mavens of all sorts. However no definitive answer about the nature of the figures has ever been found…nor is such an answer ever likely to be forthcoming.

Sheela na gigs were mostly carved between the 9th and 12th centuries (AD) and seem to be affiliated with churches, portals, and Romanesque structures. Although they are located throughout central and western Europe, the greatest number of Sheela na gig figurines are located across Ireland (101 locations) and Britain (45 locations). To the prudish Victorian mind they were regarded as symbols for warding off devils (which would be affrighted by such naked womanhood?), however more modern interpretations empower the sculptures with feminist trappings of matriarchy, self-awareness, sexual strength, and shame-free corporeality. Perhaps the stuffy Victorian misogynists were the devils who needed to be scared off! Other scholars think of the Sheela na gig figurines in the vein of the pig with the bagpipes or the “Cista Mystica“–which is to say a once widespread figure which had a well-understood meaning which has become lost in the mists of long centuries (it is easy to imagine future generations looking at Hawaiian punch man, Bazooka Joe, or the Starbucks logo with similar bafflement).

Some scholars have theorized a connection with Normans–and hence with Vikings–but I see little of Freya in the images (which seem more connected to prehistoric “Venus” statues).

It is probably ill-advised to opine about such a controversial figure, but if I were forced to guess, I would suspect that the Sheela na gig is a symbol of the generative power of Mother Nature (or the godess Gaia) which is so overt as to barely be a symbol. All humans were born through bloody expulsion. We do not come into the world through a magic emerald cabbage or a portal of light. Whatever else the Sheela na gig betokens, it is a reminder of this shared heritage (which you would think would be impossible to forget…until you talk to some of the people out there).

5 comments
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March 16, 2021 at 11:23 PM
Bradford M.
Thank you, as always, for another fascinating post! And check out the amazing PJ Harvey song on this topic here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgoC15Lom-M
March 17, 2021 at 9:15 PM
Wayne
Wow! That song combines the awkwardness of ’90s adolescent romance with medieval vulva art! Thanks for the amazing link!
March 17, 2021 at 6:29 AM
K Hindall
Well . . . this is both before and after my period (I got my degree in Early Modern England, which is the Tudors and Stuarts), but if I were to hazard a guess, it would go like this. . . .
If the sheela na gigs were to ward off devils, it wasn’t by frightening them. Among their other attributes, demons were supposed to be sex crazed. So a demon, making its way along, looking for evil to do, and seeing a sheela na gig, would be distracted by what it stupidly saw as an opportunity for sex. That she’s so old wouldn’t horrify them, but it would mean that human men were less likely to be aroused by the sight.
Or it could just be the dark side of nature worship. The natural world is inherently violent, from predators to competitors for mates, so it’s impossible to truly worship nature without acknowledging this dark side as part of it.
But the sheela na gigs have always looked a bit comical to me. If they were a rather scornful way of keeping demons at bay without endangering human souls with lust, that would fit with the general feel I get from them.
March 17, 2021 at 10:04 PM
Wayne
What you wrote makes a lot of sense…and thus is quite unlike the apotropaic magical rituals referred to in the Wikipedia article which I read as I was trying to figure out what is going on with these statues. Thanks for the thoughtful commentary! I still get the feeling that anything we come up with to explain the sheela na gigs is going to be a bit of a “just so” story…and maybe that is part od their charm!
March 23, 2023 at 3:35 PM
Eternal Anglo Seax (ᛋᛠᛉ)
To the (my) left of your thicc Sheela is a six spoked symbol which is very similar to an occult symbol used by Friesian followers of the Oera Linda book. Not saying they’re connected directly, in that I don’t think the “piety” of the OLB would facilitate the earthiness of such a Goddess or hierodule.
I think of Sheela as being reminiscent of Alexandrian Baubo. Anyway. If you know the author Jean Markale, he would back you up. There’s a whole cosmic womb angle theology one can take.