In one story Sionnan, grand daughter of #Manannán mac Lir, angered the #SalmonOfKnowledge by throwing stones at it. In revenge the fish summoned and asked an #Oilliphéist to attack the girl which it did and ultimately ended up in killing her. #Celtic
https://twitter.com/dublinmacker/status/1269970490099195909
#Manannan #SalmonOfKnowledge #Oillipheist #celtic
#Celtic #FaustianFriday: In one story Sionnan, grand daughter of #Manannán mac Lir, angered the #SalmonOfKnowledge by throwing stones at it. In revenge the fish summoned and asked an #Oilliphéist to attack the girl which it did and ultimately ended up in killing her.
https://twitter.com/dublinmacker/status/1269970490099195909
#celtic #FaustianFriday #Manannan #SalmonOfKnowledge #Oillipheist
„The various legends all claim #Hy-Brasil to be an island paradise, populated either by the Gods, or #druids. In #Irish #mythology, the #Otherworld was divided into two realms, that of the Sidhe in their hollow hills, and the other being the island lands ruled by #Manannán, God of the Sea. Also known as the Blessed Isles, they lay ‘beyond the ninth wave', gentle places of peace, beauty, healing and eternal life. The realm of the Sidhe, by contrast, was as full of strife as the mortal world, as any of the myths about them show us; their lives were subject to the same passions, love, hate, desire, joy, power, jealousy, battles and death as are our own.“
Source: Ali Isaac #Celtic
#hy #druids #irish #mythology #otherworld #Manannan #celtic
„The various legends all claim #Hy-Brasil to be an island paradise, populated either by the Gods, or #druids. In #Irish #mythology, the #Otherworld was divided into two realms, that of the Sidhe in their hollow hills, and the other being the island lands ruled by #Manannán, God of the Sea. Also known as the Blessed Isles, they lay ‘beyond the ninth wave', gentle places of peace, beauty, healing and eternal life. The realm of the Sidhe, by contrast, was as full of strife as the mortal world, as any of the myths about them show us; their lives were subject to the same passions, love, hate, desire, joy, power, jealousy, battles and death as are our own.“
Source: Ali Isaac #Celtic
#hy #druids #irish #mythology #otherworld #Manannan #celtic
„In #Irish #mythology, the #Otherworld islands, said to be #Manannán’s home, lie ‘beyond the ninth wave’. The ninth wave is said to be greater than any other wave before it, and is also known as the ‘Wave of Transformation’.
The Tuatha de Danann attempted to protect #Ireland from the attack of the invading Milesians by shrouding the land in fog and storms. They ordered the Milesians to go back beyond the ninth wave but the poet #Amergin countered the Danann magic, and breached the spell; supposedly, it was the ninth wave itself which broke through.
The Imramma is a sacred sea voyage in Irish mythology which takes the traveller beyond the ninth wave in search of the magical Otherworld and the Gods which inhabit it. In this way, we can see that the voyage is more a spiritual journey than a physical one, the wave of transformation perhaps bringing with it the wisdom and knowledge we all ultimately seek.“
Source: Ali Isaac
#irish #mythology #otherworld #Manannan #ireland #Amergin
„In #Irish #mythology, the #Otherworld islands, said to be #Manannán’s home, lie ‘beyond the ninth wave’. The ninth wave is said to be greater than any other wave before it, and is also known as the ‘Wave of Transformation’.
The Tuatha de Danann attempted to protect #Ireland from the attack of the invading Milesians by shrouding the land in fog and storms. They ordered the Milesians to go back beyond the ninth wave but the poet #Amergin countered the Danann magic, and breached the spell; supposedly, it was the ninth wave itself which broke through.
The Imramma is a sacred sea voyage in Irish mythology which takes the traveller beyond the ninth wave in search of the magical Otherworld and the Gods which inhabit it. In this way, we can see that the voyage is more a spiritual journey than a physical one, the wave of transformation perhaps bringing with it the wisdom and knowledge we all ultimately seek.“
Source: Ali Isaac
#irish #mythology #otherworld #Manannan #ireland #Amergin
#Manannán the Sea-God sent #Ferdia to steal princess #Tuag away from Tara. Ferdia disguised himself as a woman, and sang a sleeping spell over her, and thus managed to escape with her.
The #druid carried her to the mouth of the River Bann, and set her down on the sand whilst he went to get a boat in which to take her to Manannán’s land. Tuag was still sleeping. As the tide rose, a great wave washed over the Tonn and carried her out to sea, where she was sadly drowned.
Source: Ali Isaac
#Celtic #FairyTaleTuesday
https://twitter.com/irishspiritmag/status/1523999308600823808
#Manannan #ferdia #tuag #druid #celtic #FairyTaleTuesday
#Celtic #MythologyMonday: In one story #Sionnan, grand daughter of #Manannán mac Lir, angered the #SalmonOfKnowledge by throwing stones at it. In revenge the fish summoned and asked an #Oilliphéist to attack the girl which it did and ultimately ended up in killing her.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oilliphéist
https://twitter.com/dublinmacker/status/1269970490099195909
#celtic #mythologymonday #sionnan #Manannan #SalmonOfKnowledge #Oillipheist
The mighty #Irish warrior #CúChulainn fell in love with #Fand, but her husband #Manannan retrieved her by placing his cloak of invisibility between Fand and CúChulainn, thus magically erasing their memory of each other.`
William Shakespeare in his creation of Titania drew inspiration from the folkloric figure of #fairy queens like Fand.`
Sources: Patricia Monaghan `Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore` and
https://www.ireland-information.com/irish-mythology/manannan-irish-legend.html
---
RT @ElsaMc1878
#FolkloreThursday In Irish myth Manannán ruled the IsleOfMan with his wife Fand. He used a #cloak of invisibility to protect his land. When …
https://twitter.com/ElsaMc1878/status/1354716317471936515
#irish #cuchulainn #fand #Manannan #fairy #celtic #mythology #folklore #folklorethursday #cloak
#Celtic #FolkloreSunday #ShakespeareSunday: The mighty #Irish warrior #CúChulainn fell in love with #Fand, but her husband #Manannan retrieved her by placing his cloak of invisibility between Fand and CúChulainn, thus magically erasing their memory of each other.`
Shakespeare
1/2
---
RT @ElsaMc1878
#FolkloreThursday In Irish myth Manannán ruled the IsleOfMan with his wife Fand. He used a #cloak of invisibility to protect his land. When …
https://twitter.com/ElsaMc1878/status/1354716317471936515
#celtic #FolkloreSunday #shakespearesunday #irish #cuchulainn #fand #Manannan #folklorethursday #cloak
The 'Féth Fíada', cloak of invisibility, was `capable of changing to every kind of colour, and when #Manannan was angry would make a thunderous sound when the cloak flapped`.
Source: https://www.isleofman.com/welcome/history/mythology-and-folklore/manannan-mac-lir/
#Celtic
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #FolkloreSunday #ShakespeareSunday: `#Áine was so beautiful that anyone who saw her naked went insane, so she always wore …
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1650120618916864000
#Manannan #celtic #FolkloreSunday #shakespearesunday #aine
#Celtic #FolkloreSunday: The 'Féth Fíada', cloak of invisibility, was `capable of changing to every kind of colour, and when #Manannan was angry would make a thunderous sound when the cloak flapped`.
Source: https://www.isleofman.com/welcome/history/mythology-and-folklore/manannan-mac-lir/
1/2
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #FolkloreSunday #ShakespeareSunday: `#Áine was so beautiful that anyone who saw her naked went insane, so she always wore …
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1650120618916864000
#celtic #FolkloreSunday #Manannan #shakespearesunday #aine
`One of the many #Eithnes was drowned in the stream of Bearramhain while she was pregnant by the #mythical King #Conchobhar mac Nessa. Their son Furbaidhe was cut from her womb and the river was called Inny (an Eithne in #Irish) after her. Another poem offers a slightly different story. It tells that Eithne, the wife of Conchobhar, was drowned by Lugaid, while expecting Furbaidhe, in a river which now bears her name.`
Source: https://hal.science/hal-03275671/document
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #WyrdWednesday: `The lovely #Tuag had caught the eye of the god of the sea, #Manannán Mac Lir. As his emissary his bard Fer Í disguised hims…
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1646158127534882816
#eithnes #mythical #conchobhar #irish #celtic #WyrdWednesday #tuag #Manannan
#Celtic #WyrdWednesday: `One of the many #Eithnes was drowned in the stream of Bearramhain while she was pregnant by the #mythical King #Conchobhar mac Nessa. Their son Furbaidhe was cut from her womb and the river was called Inny (an Eithne in #Irish) after her. Another
1/2
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #WyrdWednesday: `The lovely #Tuag had caught the eye of the god of the sea, #Manannán Mac Lir. As his emissary his bard Fer Í disguised hims…
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1646158127534882816
#celtic #WyrdWednesday #eithnes #mythical #conchobhar #irish #tuag #Manannan
`The lovely #Tuag had caught the eye of the god of the sea, #Manannán Mac Lir. As his emissary his bard Fer Í disguised himself a woman and crept into the chambers of #Tuag, where the dwarf sang a lullaby so potent that she fell into a dreamless sleep. Continuing to sing to the girl, Fer Í hoisted her onto his shoulders and carried her away. Later, exhausted from carrying her strong body on his small shoulders, he set her down while he rested. Unfortunately, he chose his resting place poorly, for the waters of the Bann River rose and carried Tuag away, drowning her. She may be the goddess of the Bann River. Its estuary, Tuag Inber, bears her name.`
Source: P. Monaghan `Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore`
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #WyrdWednesday: This is the creation myth of the River #Shannon: `The grand-daughter of #Lir, god of the sea, #Sinann, decided to visit …
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1646137109680472066
#tuag #Manannan #celtic #mythology #folklore #WyrdWednesday #shannon #Lir #sinann
#Celtic #WyrdWednesday: `The lovely #Tuag had caught the eye of the god of the sea, #Manannán Mac Lir. As his emissary his bard Fer Í disguised himself a woman and crept into the chambers of #Tuag, where the dwarf sang a lullaby so potent that she fell into a dreamless sleep.
1/3
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #WyrdWednesday: This is the creation myth of the River #Shannon: `The grand-daughter of #Lir, god of the sea, #Sinann, decided to visit …
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1646137109680472066
#celtic #WyrdWednesday #tuag #Manannan #shannon #Lir #sinann
It ist said that #Manannan mac Lir, taking in the shape of a mortal called Oirbsiu, was killed by Uillen Red Edge at the battle of Cuillen. Loch #Corrib rose where his blood spilled, bringing his mortal flesh back into the watery, immortal world that is his realm. Credit @EithneMassey `Legendary #Ireland`
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #MythologyMonday: #Manannán Mac Lir possessed the incredible 'Féth Fíada', the cloak of invisibility that he would use to protect the #Isleo…
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1521162096293015552
#Manannan #Corrib #ireland #celtic #mythologymonday #isleo
In the Fianna legends we meet up with #Aonbharr as the horse of the 'Gille Decair', the Bad Servant, who is #Manannan himself in disguise. The Gille Decair himself is the only one who can control his horse, for rather than dominating it as the master, he is in fact its servant, the servant of the #Goddess.
Source: http://socrates.freeshell.org/Animals.html
---
RT @jimfitzpatrick
#Lughnasadh all month as Lugh rides the skies on his powerful steed Aonbharr of the Flowing Mane, beheading his enemies and driving out the…
https://twitter.com/jimfitzpatrick/status/1025054089707757568
#Aonbharr #Manannan #goddess #lughnasadh
#Manannán mac Lir sometimes appears in literature as a human figure, a sailor who never was lost at sea because of his uncanny celestial navigational skills. He is thus described in the works of the #Irish scribe Cormac.
Source: P. Monaghan `Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore`
---
RT @P_J_Richards
🌊🌫️🌊In Irish myth Manannán mac Lir was a king of the Otherworld and a God of the sea - said to be the first ruler of the Isle of Man, which he would protect by cloaki…
https://twitter.com/P_J_Richards/status/1439975680184360962
#Manannan #irish #celtic #mythology #folklore
#Fionn Mac Cumhaill met a huge guy in a dark forest, with legs like ship masts and nail shoes like boats. #ManannanMacLir had transformed and wrapped himself entirely in a gray cloak splattered with several pounds of dirt. After a victorious race of 90 miles, he made himself a preliminary form of muesli from berries and grain.
Source: Sylvia Botheroyd `#Irland`
---
RT @NeuKelte
#Celtic #MythologyMonday: #Manannán Mac Lir possessed the incredible 'Féth Fíada', the cloak of invisibility that he would use to protect the #I…
https://twitter.com/NeuKelte/status/1521162096293015552
#Fionn #ManannanMacLir #irland #celtic #mythologymonday #Manannan #i