New PDF release: The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore

By Patricia Monaghan

ISBN-10: 0816045240

ISBN-13: 9780816045242

This one-volume encyclopedia at the myths and folklore of the Celtic lands - eire, Scotland, Celtic Britain, Wales, Brittany and primary France, Galicia and the smaller islands the place the Ceits lived - bargains a wide review of the weather that represent and represent Celtic mythology and folklore.

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Extra resources for The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore

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London: Constable, 1911, pp. 42 ff, 135. apple Symbolic fruit. The most magical of fruits to the Celts, the apple appears in many myths and legends. It hides in the word for the Arthurian OTHERWORLD, AVALON; it is the fruit on which the hero CONNLA of the Golden Hair was fed by his FAIRY LOVER; the soul of king CÚ ROÍ rested in an apple within the stomach of a SALMON; it was one of the goals of the fated SONS OF TUIREANN. Its significance continues into folkloric uses such as that in the British Cotswolds, where an apple tree blooming out of season meant coming death.

See also FACHAN. autumn equinox Astronomical feast. The EQUINOXES and SOLSTICES were not celebrated by the Celts, who instead celebrated the solar year’s fixed points (IMBOLC, BELTANE, LUGHNASA, SAMHAIN). But in Ireland, after the coming of the Normans and of Christianity, an equinoctial feast was celebrated on or about September 29. This feast of St. Michael the Archangel or Michaelmas was, in many regions, defined as the date on which rents and loans were repaid and contracts settled. Elected officials took and left office on Michaelmas, which was often celebrated with harvest fairs.

Ancient Celtic tribal names often incorporate an animal reference, as the Bribroci (beavers) of Britain, who may have pictured themselves as descended from an ancestral beaver goddess. ” Some Irish names are similarly suggestive of ancestral connection to animals, the McMurrows from OTTERS and the McMahons from BEARS, for instance. Such divine ancestors tended to be wild rather than domesticated animals. See also BADGER, BOAR, CAT, CATTLE, COCK, COW, CRANE, CROW, DEER, DOVE, EAGLE, EGRET, 19 EEL, FISH, FROG, HERON, OX, RAT, RAVEN, SALMON, SERPENT, SWALLOW, SWAN, WOLF, WREN.

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The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore by Patricia Monaghan


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