The Lady of the Mountain is the female incarnation of Iceland.
History in Iceland
The personification of a nation as a woman was widespread in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Europe. The earliest image of Iceland personified as a woman seems to have appeared first in association with the poem Ofsjónir við jarðarför Lovísu drottningar 1752 by Eggert Ólafsson, but this image does not survive. The word fjallkonan is attested for the first time in the poem Eldgamla Ísafold by Bjarni Thorarensen from the first decade of the nineteenth century. From that moment onwards the Lady of the Mountain became a well-known symbol in Icelandic poetry. An image of Lady of the Mountain was published in the last volume of an English translation of Icelandic folk-tales by Eiríkur Magnússon and G. E. J. Powell, Icelandic Legends, Collected by Jón Arnason. It is the work of the German painterJohann Baptist Zwecker, who drew it to specifications provided by Eiríkur. Eiríkur described the picture in a letter to Jón Sigurðsson thus: Also very popular is the image designed by Benedikt Gröndal on a memorial card of the national holiday in 1874. Since the establishment of the Icelandic republic in 1944 it has been traditional for a woman to play the role of the Lady of the Mountain during the national holiday celebrations. The woman chosen for the role will typically be a well-known actress or an otherwise notable individual, she is dressed in skautbúningur and presents herself to read a single poem. The idea of the Lady of the Mountain as motherland was a counterweight to the idea of the Danish King as 'father' in nineteenth-century Iceland under Danish rule, and after independence in 1944 became one of the images through which feminism and the idea of powerful women, such as Iceland's first female presidentVigdís Finnbogadóttir, were made to seem a natural part of Icelandic culture.
History in Canada
The image of the Lady of the Mountain has also been prominent among Vestur Íslendingar in Canada. A woman dressed as the Lady of the Mountain first appeared at the Iceland Days in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada in 1924. There too, the Lady of the Mountain has been deployed to promote feminism.