📖 Ancient Restoration – Telegram
📖 Ancient Restoration
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Celtic Pagan heritage and Irish Christian culture.

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📖 Ancient Restoration
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'Meeting On The Turret Stairs' - Frederic William Burton, 1864

#ValentinesDay
Mother and children drawing water from a holy well in northern Ireland, 1888.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Playtime at a country school, Co Monaghan, Ireland. 1900.
School in Connemara, Co Galway, 1892 - These children are being shown Froebel’s “first gift", a ball on a string. Froebel’s gifts were coloured shapes designed to teach children through touch and play
📖 Ancient Restoration
School in Connemara, Co Galway, 1892 - These children are being shown Froebel’s “first gift", a ball on a string. Froebel’s gifts were coloured shapes designed to teach children through touch and play
Earl Street, Mullingar, Co Westmeath. 1900.

Interesting how the lady dressed in a shawl and bowler hat resembles the women of the high Andes. (Lawrence Collection, NLI)
The province name of Leinster comes from the word 'Laigin', referring to a tribe of Gauls who settled the region in 600 BC. The latter part of the word (-ster) comes from Old Norse 'staðr' - meaning place, city, or town.

Leinster - [Laigin-staðr]
📖 Ancient Restoration
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The Gaelic name for Dublin is ‘Baile Átha Cliath’ which translates as ‘town of the hurdle ford’, a denoscription of the bank of wooden forts built up on the river Liffey by the Vikings. An earlier name for Dublin is Dubh Linn (Irish) or Dyflin (Norse), meaning 'black pool'.
📖 Ancient Restoration
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County Wicklow gets its name from the Cauci tribe who originated beyond the Rhine - They called the land 'Wick'. The Vikings added the word ‘-lo’, to this, which means ‘meadow,’ thereby creating the name ‘Bay of the river meadows.’
📖 Ancient Restoration
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County Louth is named after Lugh, a god, hero, and king of the ancient Irish. Historically, the placename has had various spellings: 'Lugmad', 'Lughmhaigh', & 'Lughmhadh'. Lú is the modern simplified form.

[Castle Roche, Dundalk]
📖 Ancient Restoration
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County Wexford was called 'Waesfjord' by the Vikings - meaning 'fjord of the mud-flats'. Its Irish name 'Loch Garman' refers to a legendary warrior called Garman Garbh, who was drowned at the river Slaney by a wicked enchantress.

[Pikemen of Wexford, 1798 Memorial]
📖 Ancient Restoration
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11 February: Feast of St Gobnait, 6th c. Irish patron saint of bees and beekeepers. Her connection to bees began when an angel told her to find her “resurrection place” - Important as in Celtic mythology the soul departed the body as a bee or a butterfly.

Mistake in deletion.