Fuck Yeah Celtic Mythology

Jun 15 2012
birdsofrhiannon:

In the tale Oisín in Tir na nÓg, Oisin is visited by a fairy woman called Níamh Chinn Óir (Niamh of the Golden Hair, one of the daughters of Manannán Mac Lir, a god of the sea) who announces she loves him and takes him away to Tir na nÓg (“the land of the young”). Their union produces Oisín’s famous son, Oscar, and a daughter, Plor na mBan (“Flower of Women”). After what seems to him to be three years Oisín decides to return to Ireland, but 300 years have passed there. Niamh gives him her white horse, Embarr, and warns him not to dismount, because if his feet touch the ground those 300 years will catch up with him and he will become old and withered. Oisín returns home and finds the hill of Almu, Fionn’s home, abandoned and in disrepair. Later, while trying to help some men who were building a road in Gleann na Smól lift a stone out of the way onto a wagon, his girth breaks and he falls to the ground, becoming an old man just as Niamh had forewarned. The horse returns to Tir na nÓg. In some versions of the story, just before he dies Oisín is visited by Saint Patrick. Oisín tells the saint about what happened and dies.
§ illustration: Oisin and Niamh of the Golden Hair by P.J. Lynch

birdsofrhiannon:

In the tale Oisín in Tir na nÓg, Oisin is visited by a fairy woman called Níamh Chinn Óir (Niamh of the Golden Hair, one of the daughters of Manannán Mac Lir, a god of the sea) who announces she loves him and takes him away to Tir na nÓg (“the land of the young”). Their union produces Oisín’s famous son, Oscar, and a daughter, Plor na mBan (“Flower of Women”). After what seems to him to be three years Oisín decides to return to Ireland, but 300 years have passed there. Niamh gives him her white horse, Embarr, and warns him not to dismount, because if his feet touch the ground those 300 years will catch up with him and he will become old and withered. Oisín returns home and finds the hill of Almu, Fionn’s home, abandoned and in disrepair. Later, while trying to help some men who were building a road in Gleann na Smól lift a stone out of the way onto a wagon, his girth breaks and he falls to the ground, becoming an old man just as Niamh had forewarned. The horse returns to Tir na nÓg. In some versions of the story, just before he dies Oisín is visited by Saint Patrick. Oisín tells the saint about what happened and dies.

§ illustration: Oisin and Niamh of the Golden Hair by P.J. Lynch

113 notes

  1. vandrare reblogged this from julienc
  2. primordialgoulash reblogged this from julienc
  3. julienc reblogged this from tremblingcolors
  4. tremblingcolors reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon
  5. celticart reblogged this from fuckyeahcelticmythology
  6. dmorgenstern reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon
  7. sockfaerie reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon and added:
    ]]>
  8. sunspeaker reblogged this from novas-grimoire
  9. dobharcu reblogged this from fuckyeahcelticmythology
  10. hemingweigh reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon
  11. lionfeathers reblogged this from fuckyeahcelticmythology
  12. nninfae reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon
  13. annaoutonn reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon and added:
    Oisin and Niamh of the Golden Hair - P.J. Lynch
  14. ultron-syphilis reblogged this from sclez and added:
    The one thing I got from this story when I was younger was that Niamh Chinn Óir was a magical brainwashing bitch
  15. sclez reblogged this from cousinnick and added:
    One of my favourites!
  16. darkgreenmagic reblogged this from cousinnick
  17. pigili reblogged this from irish-history
  18. red-bottomosity reblogged this from birdsofrhiannon
  19. primalheart reblogged this from fuckyeahcelticmythology
  20. hobbitcami reblogged this from lythy
  21. chasing-isis reblogged this from fuckyeahcelticmythology
  22. internationalrager reblogged this from earthmagick
  23. luz-sonriente reblogged this from sovereigneriu
Page 1 of 1