
In the deep forests of Norway, there is an old legend whispered by hunters and priests alike — the story of Ingrid Eilertsen, known in church records from 1846 as “The Widow of Nordmarka.”
She lived alone in a cabin far from the village. Locals said her husband drowned one winter when the lake froze overnight, trapping his body beneath the glassy surface. When they found her the next morning, Ingrid was standing barefoot on the ice, her hands pressed against it, whispering to something below. The ice never melted that spring.
Soon, villagers began finding strange patterns frozen into their windows — spirals and flowers that grew thicker the longer they stared. The priest who visited her home reported frost blooming from within the walls.
Ingrid was accused of witchcraft. They said she could freeze a man’s breath midair, that her grief had turned her blood to ice. But when a mob went to arrest her, they found only snow where the cabin had stood — no tracks, no body, only an unnatural chill in the air.
Years later, travelers claimed to see a woman wandering the frozen lakes, her hair white, her dress moving like mist. They called her the Ice Widow, protector of the lost.
When Frozen was written centuries later, its creators found a single line in a Norwegian folktale archive:
“She was not wicked — only colder than love could bear.”



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