摘要:Curious discoveries were made during renovation work of two Eastern Finnish churches in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Several tens ofminiature wooden coffins with the remains of a frog inside were found under the church floors. However, after the immediate media buzz had blown over, these finds were soon largely forgotten. The ethnologist U. T. Sirelius was the first scholar to briefly mention these finds in his article about Finnish magic objects published in 1906.1He explained that the frog coffins were a part of fishing magic aimed at stealing the luck of the catch from more fortunate fishermen. He also published a drawing of one of the frog coffins that had been found. The few later mentions have been similarly brief, and often simply repeat this notion.