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Every Christmas Eve, Icelandic families check one thing: did everyone get new clothes? This isn't vanity – it's survival tradition from the legend of Jólakötturinn, the Yule Cat. The Yule Cat is a house-sized feline from Icelandic folklore that hunts during Christmas season. Unlike Krampus who punishes naughty children, the Yule Cat only cares about one thing: new clothing. No new clothes before Christmas = you become prey. This tradition has roots in medieval Iceland's wool industry. During brutal winters, having new wool clothing meant survival. The Yule Cat gave communities a way to ensure everyone – especially the poor – received warm clothes before winter killed them. The monster was the enforcement mechanism. What we cover: First recorded mentions from 1862 folklore collections How the 1932 poem by Jóhannes úr Kötlum standardized the legend Why the tradition connected to wool processing deadlines Modern Iceland's relationship with the Yule Cat How climate anxiety gave the legend new relevance First mentioned in Jón Árnason's 1862 folklore collection, the Yule Cat became Iceland's most recognizable Christmas figure through Jóhannes úr Kötlum's 1932 poem. Björk even recorded a version in 1987. The legend isn't just about a scary cat – it's about collective responsibility, economic survival disguised as supernatural terror, and how communities used fear to ensure no one froze to death. Related videos: The real Krampus Was Way Worse Than Santa - • The real Krampus Was Way Worse Than Santa 6 Christmas Demons - • 6 Christmas Demons Far Worse Than Krampus ... Sources: Íslenzkar þjóðsögur og æfintýri (Jón Árnason, 1862) Jólin koma (Jóhannes úr Kötlum, 1932) #Mythology #Folklore #Documentary