π Ancient Restoration
English expansion into Ireland in the 12th c. encouraged a revival in Irish 'secular paganism'. The Bards predicted the rise of a liberator.
The Irish nationalist slogan 'Tiocfaidh Γ‘r lΓ‘' (Our day will come) is a modern form of the prophetic expectation of Gaelic resistance.
Forwarded from π Ancient Restoration
1 Feb: Feastday of St Brigid (β 524), abbess & founder of Kildare, one of three patron saints of Ireland. Her devotional names - 'lilium inter spinas' (a lily amongst thorns) - Muire na nGael (Mary of the Gaels).
Forwarded from π Ancient Restoration
The enjoining of hands around symbols of fertility is impressed deeply in the Irish psyche. Whether it's the modern heart or ancient cord.
Forwarded from π Ancient Restoration
Forwarded from United Celts
February 1st is the Feast of Saint Brigid of Kildare (Cill Dara, church of the oak), one of Ireland's patron saints.
Known as "the Mary of the Gael", Brigid was born in Faughart/Fochart, north of Dundalk, County Louth to Brocca, a Pictish slave who was baptised by Saint Patrick. Brigid herself was thus born into slavery.
During her childhood, it is said she performed several miracles, such as healing and feeding the poor. One account details how she gave away all of her mother's butter store, only for it to be replaced thanks to Brigid's prayers.
Dubhthach, a chieftain of Leinster, was her father. He grew aggravated with her and took her to the King of Leinster, Crimthann mac Γnnai, to sell her. While he was in conversation, Brigid gave away his sword which was adorned with jewelry to a beggar so that he could barter it for food. Crimthann recognised that this was a holy child he had been delivered, and instead convinced Dubhthach to grant her freedom.
Known as "the Mary of the Gael", Brigid was born in Faughart/Fochart, north of Dundalk, County Louth to Brocca, a Pictish slave who was baptised by Saint Patrick. Brigid herself was thus born into slavery.
During her childhood, it is said she performed several miracles, such as healing and feeding the poor. One account details how she gave away all of her mother's butter store, only for it to be replaced thanks to Brigid's prayers.
Dubhthach, a chieftain of Leinster, was her father. He grew aggravated with her and took her to the King of Leinster, Crimthann mac Γnnai, to sell her. While he was in conversation, Brigid gave away his sword which was adorned with jewelry to a beggar so that he could barter it for food. Crimthann recognised that this was a holy child he had been delivered, and instead convinced Dubhthach to grant her freedom.
π Ancient Restoration
The Carrowmore megalithic cemetery in County Sligo is the largest in Ireland and amongst the oldest in Europe with dates going back to 4600 BC.
A pair of horses weather out the cold at Easky, County Sligo.
π Ancient Restoration
A pair of horses weather out the cold at Easky, County Sligo.
Tobernalt Holy Well in Sligo - A site of worship since the 5th century, Catholics risked their lives in Penal times to hear Mass said at this blessed well.
π Ancient Restoration
Photo
The Caves of Kesh, Sligo, Ireland.
The ancient Irish believed this place a gateway to the Otherworld and buried their dead inside to help guide them to the afterlife.
The ancient Irish believed this place a gateway to the Otherworld and buried their dead inside to help guide them to the afterlife.
π Ancient Restoration
"They stand for the honour of Ireland, As their sisters in days that are gone - They, the soldiers of the Cumann na mBan!" #loyal #sisters
April 1st 1914 Cumann na mBan was established in Wynn's Hotel, Dublin. Their chief aims were to:
Advance the cause of Irish liberty
Organise Irish women in the furtherance of that objective
The role they played was vital in achieving Irish independence.
Advance the cause of Irish liberty
Organise Irish women in the furtherance of that objective
The role they played was vital in achieving Irish independence.
π Ancient Restoration
ON THIS DAY: 20 JUNE 1631: A village in Ireland was taken into slavery by north African raiders. On that date in 1631, north African corsairs, or pirates, raided the village of Baltimore on the west Cork coast and took at least 107 of the villagers captiveβ¦
Most of those abducted were part of an English settlement which had been established in the middle of a region that was part of the Γ DrisceΓ³il clan territory. It was a part of the violent colonisation of that part of Ireland which had resulted in the victory of the English in the Nine Years War that ended with the Battle of Kinsale in 1601.
π Ancient Restoration
Most of those abducted were part of an English settlement which had been established in the middle of a region that was part of the Γ DrisceΓ³il clan territory. It was a part of the violent colonisation of that part of Ireland which had resulted in the victoryβ¦
The Sack of Baltimore, as it became known, had a significance beyond Ireland as it was one of a centuries-old series of such raids by north African slavers on coastal towns and sea-going vessels. Those abducted were part of an estimated million or more Europeans who became slaves under the Islamic Ottoman Empire and its north African allies mostly between 1550 and 1750.
π Ancient Restoration
The Sack of Baltimore, as it became known, had a significance beyond Ireland as it was one of a centuries-old series of such raids by north African slavers on coastal towns and sea-going vessels. Those abducted were part of an estimated million or more Europeansβ¦
The Baltimore captives included 33 adult women, 54 boys and girls and 20 adult men. At most three were eventually ransomed years later. The men mostly were consigned to be galley slaves, sometimes never setting foot on land again. The women and female children almost invariably were sold into sexual bondage. Adolescent males were often castrated and sometimes also raped, as is apparently still the fate of males enslaved in Afghanistan and other Islamic countries.
π Ancient Restoration
A family of survivors from the Lusitania in Cobh, Cork. RMS Lusitania was a British ocean liner that was sunk on 7 May 1915 by a German U-boat 11 miles (18 km) off the southern coast of Ireland, killing 1,198 passengers and crew.
Castletownshend, Cork in 1910.
Coloured and restored.
Coloured and restored.