ANGUS OF THE BRUGH, also OENGUS
OF THE BRUIG God of youth, son of the Dagda. In Ireland,
Angus is the counterpart of Cupid. Angus' kisses turn into singing
birds, and the music he plays irresistibly draws all who hear.
ARIANRHOD "Silver
Wheel," "High Fruitful Mother." One of the Three
Virgins of Britain, her palace is Caer Arianrhod, the Celtic name
for the Aurora Borealis.
BADB A goddess of war.
One of a triad of war goddesses known collectively as the Morrigan.
Bird-shaped and crimson-mouthed, Badb uses her magic to decide
battles. Badb lusts after men and is often seen at fords washing
the armor and weapons of men about to die in combat.
BRIGHID, also BRIGIT Goddess
of healing and craftsmanship, especially metalwork. Also a patron
of learning and poetry. In Wales she is Caridwen, who possesses
the cauldron of knowledge and inspiration. The Celts so loved
Brighid that they could not abandon her even when they became
Christians, and so made Brighid a Christian saint.
CARIDWEN also HEN WEN; in Wales,
BRIGHID "White Grain," "Old White One."
Corn goddess. Mother of Taliesen, greatest and wisest of all the
bards, and therefore a patron of poets. The "white goddess"
of Robert Graves. Caridwen lives among the stars in the land of
Caer Sidi. Caridwen is connected with wolves, and some claim her
cult dates to the neolithic era.
CERNUNNOS Horned god of
virility. Cernunnos wears the torc (neck-ring) and is ever in
the company of a ram-headed serpent and a stag. Extremely popular
among the Celts, the Druids encouraged the worship of Cernunnos,
attempting to replace the plethora of local deities and spirits
with a national religion. The Celts were so enamored of Cernunnos
that his cult was a serious obstacle to the spread of Christianity.
DAGDA Earth and father
god. Dagda possesses a bottomless cauldron of plenty and rules
the seasons with the music of his harp. With his mighty club Dagda
can slay nine men with a single blow, and with its small end he
can bring them back to life. On the day of the New Year, Dagda
mates with the raven goddess of the Morrigan who while making
love straddles a river with one foot on each bank. A slightly
comical figure.
DANU Mother goddess, an
aspect of the Great Mother. Another of a triad of war goddesses
known collectively as the Morrigan. Connected with the moon goddess
Aine of Knockaine, who protects crops and cattle. Most importantly,
the mother of the Tuatha de' Danann, the tribe of the gods.
DIAN CECHT A healer. At
the second battle of Moytura, Dian Cecht murdered his own son
whose skill in healing endangered his father's reputation. The
Judgments of Dian Cecht, an ancient Irish legal tract, lays down
the obligations to the ill and injured. An aggressor must pay
for curing anyone he has injured, and the severity of any wound,
even the smallest, is measured in grains of corn.
DIS PATER Originally a
god of death and the underworld, later the chief god of the Gauls.
The Gauls believed, as their Druids taught, that Dis Pater is
the ancestor of all the Gauls.
DONN Irish counterpart
to Dis Pater. Donn sends storms and wrecks ships, but he protects
crops and cattle as well. Donn's descendants come to his island
after death.
EPONA Horse goddess. Usually
portrayed as riding a mare, sometimes with a foal. Roman legionnaires,
deeply impressed with Celtic horsemanship, took up the worship
of Epona themselves and eventually imported her cult to Rome itself.
ESUS A god of the Gauls
"whose shrines make men shudder," according to a Roman
poet. Human sacrifices to Esus were hanged and run through with
a sword. For unknown reasons, Esus is usually portrayed as a woodcutter.
GOVANNON The smith god.
The weapons Govannon makes are unfailing in their aim and deadliness,
the armor unfailing in its protection. Also a healer. Those who
attend the feast of Govannon and drink of the god's sacred cup
need no longer fear old age and infirmity.
LUG, also LUGH, LLEU A
sun god and a hero god, young, strong, radiant with hair of gold,
master of all arts, skills and crafts. One day Lug arrived at
the court of the Dagda and demanded to be admitted to the company
of the gods. The gatekeeper asked him what he could do. For every
skill or art Lug named, the gatekeeper replied that there was
already one among the company who had mastered it. Lug at last
pointed out that they had no one who had mastered them all, and
so gained a place among the deities, eventually leading them to
victory in the second battle of Moytura against the Formorian
invaders. (The Formorians were a race of monsters who challenged
the gods for supremacy in the first and second battles of Moytura.)
The Romans identified Lug with Mercury. The most popular and widely
worshipped of the Celtic gods, Lug's name in its various forms
was taken by the cities of Lyons, Loudun, Laon, Leon, Lieden,
Leignitz, Carlisle and Vienna.
MACHA "Crow."
The third of the triad of war goddesses known as the Morrigan,
Macha feeds on the heads of slain enemies. Macha often dominates
her male lovers through cunning or simple brute strength.
MEDB "Drunk Woman."
A goddess of war, not one of the Morrigan. Where the Morrigan
use magic, Medb wields a weapon herself. The sight of Medb blinds
enemies, and she runs faster than the fastest horse. A bawdy girl,
Medb needs thirty men a day to satisfy her sexual appetite.
MORRIGAN, THE, also MORRIGU MORRIGAN
A war goddess, forerunner of the Arthurian Morgan La Fey. Like
Odin, fickle and unfaithful, not to be trusted. A hag with a demonic
laugh, the Morrigan appears as a grotesque apparition to men about
to die in battle. Her name is also used for a triad of war goddesses,
who are often thought of as different aspects of the Morrigan.
NEMAIN "Panic."
A war goddess.
NUADHU also NUD, NODENS, LUD
"Nuadhu of the silver arm." God of healing and water;
his name suggests "wealth-bringer" and "cloud-maker."
At the first battle of Moytura, Nuadhu lost an arm, and Dian Cecht
replaced it with a new one made out of silver. Because of this,
Nuadhu was obliged to turn leadership of the Tuatha de' Dannan
over to Lug. People came to be healed at Nuadhu's temple at Lydney,
and small votive limbs made of silver have been found there.
OGMIOS, also OGMA "Sun
Face." A hero god like Hercules, a god of eloquence, language,
genius. Generally portrayed as an old man dressed in a lion skin.
From his tongue hang fine gold chains attached to the ears of
his eager followers.
SUCELLUS Guardian of forests,
patron of agriculture. His consort is Nantosvelta, whose name
suggests brooks and streams. Sometimes considered synonymous with
Cernunnos or Daghda.
TUATHA DE' DANANN The
divine tribes and people descended from the goddess Danu. Skilled
in druidry and magic, the Tuatha de' Danann possess four talismans
of great power: the stone of Fal which shrieked under the true
heir to the throne; the spear of Lug which made victory certain;
the sword of Nuadhu which slays all enemies; and the ever full
cauldron of Daghda from which no man ever goes away hungry.
The preceding information was compiled and is copyrighted
1994 by D.W. Owens. Distribution is allowed if credit is given.
Likewise, all validity, spelling, and authenticity of information
rests on the author's shoulders and not ours. Enjoy!
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