Blacksmith

Blacksmiths are soot-darkened men who work with fire to transform metal, drawing associations with the underworld and magic.  

Shamanism  

This has attributed blacksmiths with a number of otherwise unexpected qualities, such as the ability to heal and predict the future. At the same time, fire and magic are associated with the devil and evil, a connection that emerged later. In shamanistic cultures, the blacksmith and the shaman are intertwined. Both, for example, are “masters of fire.”  

Transformation  

The transformation that the blacksmith (and shaman) achieves through fire is, of course, central to alchemy as well. The heat consumes all that is superfluous, leaving only what is essential and enduring; forging thus has a purifying quality. Heat, in general, is a tool for transformation (see also Fire, Kitchen, Vessel, and Oven).  

Mythology  

The blacksmith is further associated with volcanoes and, as mentioned, the underworld. Dwarves and dwarf-like figures are often subterranean beings, blacksmiths, or helpers to blacksmiths. Examples include dwarves in Norse mythology, as well as dactyls and Cabiri in Greek mythology.  

The creative power of blacksmiths ties them to creation itself. It is not uncommon in mythologies for a blacksmith (or a god with blacksmith-like attributes) to forge the world.  

The Underworld  

Blacksmiths are thus linked to the underworld, to darkness and magic. The transformation they engage in within this hidden realm may allude to the transformation of the soul through heat.  

Blacksmiths were often cripples, unfit for more "manly" pursuits, a characteristic reflected in Hephaestus. This, combined with darkness, the underworld, and the forge that gives birth to metal, contributes to a connection with the mother goddess.

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