Denmark’s Council for Independent Research (DFF) will contribute some 2.5 million kroner (US$428,000) into funding research on a fictional troll – an underground being which exists in popular myth on the island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea.
The troll in question – Krølle Bølle – is the national troll of
the island. He has had fans since 1946, when his legend was
devised by writer Ludvig Mahler. However, a prior legend told of
an underground being, upon which Bølle might have been based.
Lars Christian Kofoed Rømer, the researcher who has been granted
the funding, wants to explore the impact of the folk tale on the
physical environment of the island. He previously studied ghosts,
focusing two years of work on them before moving onto trolls.
Nine PhD projects of the same cost will be funded.
“It should not be a discussion about whether the underground
exists or not, but a story about how we are attached to a
place,” Rømer told Danish broadcasting service DrDk.
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Krølle Bølle merchandise has been a favorite among tourists on
the island, and its image is just as prevalent among locals as
the Little Mermaid is in Copenhagen.
The island’s tourism website calls Krølle Bølle the 'national
troll of Bornholm.' He apparently comes out every night to take
part in exciting adventures.
“It can be creatures – most people are familiar with Krølle
Bølle, a popularized version of natural being – and there can be
special places in the nature that have unique vibes,” Rømer
said.
The Local Denmark approached DFF's chairman of the board, Peter
Munk Christiansen, for comment but he did not speak about
specific projects. However, he told Politiken that DFF has a
broad definition of what constitutes a useful study.
“At DFF we believe that humanistic research should be funded
on equal footing with all other research areas and we actually
support that area more than we support societal research. We
profess a pluralism and broad coverage – we don't just pursue
things that are the most popular right now,” Christiansen
said.