The Great Mare

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Other name(s)Grant Jument, Grand'jument
GroupingGigantic white mare
Sub groupingBayard
FolkloreFolklore, Horse
The Great Mare
Creature information
Other name(s)Grant Jument, Grand'jument
GroupingGigantic white mare
Sub groupingBayard
FolkloreFolklore, Horse
Origin
CountryTraditional French oral stories
RegionFrance

The Great Mare (la Grand Mare, grant jument or grand'jument in French) was a gigantic mare that was ridden by giants in several Renaissance works. Stemming from medieval traditions inspired by Celtic mythology, she first appeared in The Grand and Priceless Chronicles of the Great and Enormous Giant Gargantua, written in 1532, in which Merlin created her from bones atop a mountain.

Rabelais was inspired by these Chronicles and built on the descriptions, meaning the mare Gargantua's mount in The Very Horrific Life of the Great Gargantua, Father of Pantagruel, which was published five years later. Incidents include the mare drowning her enemies with her urine and levelling all the trees of Beauce, transforming the region into a plain.

Gravure représentant des chevaliers en arme en attente de l'ennemi sur la colline face à eux; à leur côté, un génat en armure et sur sa droite une jument gigantesque.
Gargantua's Great Mare on the right of this engraving by Gustave Doré.

As seen in two major Renaissance literary works, the Great Mare likely arose from popular traditional stories and ancient oral folklore. Many theories exist regarding her origin, with the majority of them having been put forth by Henri Dontenville.

According to him, the original Grand Mare had a white coat, a direct reference to the ancient established presence of the white horse in French folklore.[1] She was ridden by a giant anguiped (a deity with a rooster's head and serpents for legs) in the oldest versions of her stories. The giant Gargantua is reminiscent of Gargan, a demiurge known by Celtic people. He was a builder and creator, of whom it is said marked out all of the pre-Christian pilgrimage routes and created chasms and mountains by stomping up and down on the earth. In addition to this, it is believed that he dug fords as he drank from streams and created rivers by urinating. According to Dontenville, the mare and its rider were mistakenly taken for a dragon, as is attested in the etymology of "G-R-G", a reference found in the names of the Giants of Rabelais (Grandgousier, Gargamelle and Gargantua).[2] As a result of their similarities and histories, the Great Mare and Bayard's Mare share the same narrative folklore; that of a gigantic primitive dragon who transforms landscapes with her actions.[3]

Another speculation of her origin is that the mare was the mount of the Gallic psychopomp goddess Epona.[4] This Celtic origin was referenced by Henri Dontenville, who wrote that there are several gods accompanied by:

" ... a white horse or white mare..." who would gallop from the East to West, bringing to pass springtime each year and pulling the sun along with them. This symbolic motif is also used by Jacques Duchaussoy[5] and classifies these creatures as a celestial being.

Testimonials and place-names

Grève et paysage de bord de mer.
The Atlantic coast near Sables-d'Olonne, where there are several rocks that bear the names of horses and mares of myth.

The legend of "The Great Mare" and other similar tales of white horses are present in French beliefs and toponymes related to the west coast sea. On the banks of the Loire in Tours,[1] there exists a White Horse Inn on the wharf of the Grand'Jument. A 25 by 25 meter granite monolith named "The Great Mare", exists in Montgothier, and was mined from 1800 to 1803 by Ernest Poulnln, a quarryman who also destroyed another block of granite in order to pay hommage to local legends.[6][7]

In Paul Sébillot's collections of popular traditions it is written that the sea in Poitou is referred to as "the Great White Mare". The same name is used by fishermen in Vendée.[8] In the 16th century, Noël du Fail described the sea as being "the great Margo mare, who is bridled by her tail".[9] In addition to this, off the coast of Ouessant there exists La Jument lighthouse built on the Ar Gazec reef ("the mare" in Breton).

Bernard M. Henry, of the Friends of Rabelais and La Devinière Association, noted the existence of several boulders that had been named "The Horses", "The Mare" and "The Great Mare" in Sables-d'Olonne. He wrote that he believed the existence of these toponymes and the city they belonged to inspired Rabelais to write the arrival of the Great Mare.[10] According to the French mythological society, this Great Mare made gigantic imprints that can still be seen in modern day, one within the Jura mountains, and the second in Normandie.[11]

Rabelais

Note

References

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