📖 Ancient Restoration
Connemara snow scene by J.P. Rooney http://www.jprooneyartstudio.com/m/-/galleries/the-shop-index
‘Old Dublin - Marrowbone Lane’ by Joseph Malachy Kavanagh (1836-1918)
📖 Ancient Restoration
‘Old Dublin - Marrowbone Lane’ by Joseph Malachy Kavanagh (1836-1918)
‘A Green Island Garden Under Snow, Antrim’ by the renowned Irish artist Frank Egginton (1908-1990)
📖 Ancient Restoration
‘A Green Island Garden Under Snow, Antrim’ by the renowned Irish artist Frank Egginton (1908-1990)
‘The Delegates’ by Mildred Anne Butler (1858-1941) an Irish artist, who worked in watercolour and oil of landscape, genre and animal subjects.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Elizabeth Magill, 'Greyscale'
'The Snow Faerie' by Jim FitzPatrick, known for more comic styled illustrations.
📖 Ancient Restoration
The inhabitants of the Sídhe look like humans but are different. They are superior: immortal, more beautiful & possess supernatural powers.
Gaoithe sídhe, or fairy wind, is a sudden wind gust or whirlwind thought to have been caused by the faeries.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Gaoithe sídhe, or fairy wind, is a sudden wind gust or whirlwind thought to have been caused by the faeries.
The Cailleach is the Irish goddess of winter, the cold, wind and tempests. She was called "the old gloomy woman" or envisioned as a crane with sticks in her beak that forecast storms. Snow that fell in late spring was often attributed to her.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Queen Maeve's Cairn, the enormous neolithic monument on the summit of Knocknarea mountain in County #Sligo.
In mythology Síd-mounds are imagined as centres of fairy power & commerce, they have their own farmland & craftsmen, much like a ringfort.
📖 Ancient Restoration
In mythology Síd-mounds are imagined as centres of fairy power & commerce, they have their own farmland & craftsmen, much like a ringfort.
On the inside, the fairy-mound radiates a mysterious golden light; crystal chairs sparkle, & music plays for the sídhe lord & his retainers.
📖 Ancient Restoration
On the inside, the fairy-mound radiates a mysterious golden light; crystal chairs sparkle, & music plays for the sídhe lord & his retainers.
The interference of the fairy-kind in worldly affairs is based on a desire to 'rekindle human glory' - They dwell on the heroic within man.
📖 Ancient Restoration
The interference of the fairy-kind in worldly affairs is based on a desire to 'rekindle human glory' - They dwell on the heroic within man.
Summit cairn on Sugarloaf Hill, Co Tipperary.
In the distance is Slievenamon, mound of the god Midir, which is also crowned by a cairn.
In the distance is Slievenamon, mound of the god Midir, which is also crowned by a cairn.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Summit cairn on Sugarloaf Hill, Co Tipperary. In the distance is Slievenamon, mound of the god Midir, which is also crowned by a cairn.
In early Irish literature, the fairy/sídhe have many names: 'god-men' (fir dé), 'god-kindreds' (cenéla dé), & 'god-peoples' (tuatha dé).
📖 Ancient Restoration
In early Irish literature, the fairy/sídhe have many names: 'god-men' (fir dé), 'god-kindreds' (cenéla dé), & 'god-peoples' (tuatha dé).
Three Irish words used to describe fairy:
Scál - An uncanny being, sometimes a god who passes on supernatural information.
Airdrech - A battlefield spirit, an omen, a prophetic sign.
Síabair - A spectral being who distorts & shape-shifts, takes on illusory appearances.
Scál - An uncanny being, sometimes a god who passes on supernatural information.
Airdrech - A battlefield spirit, an omen, a prophetic sign.
Síabair - A spectral being who distorts & shape-shifts, takes on illusory appearances.
The Rock of Cashel in County Tipperary.
Reputedly the site of the conversion of Aenghus the King of Munster by St. Patrick in the 5th century AD. #StPatricksDay ☘
Reputedly the site of the conversion of Aenghus the King of Munster by St. Patrick in the 5th century AD. #StPatricksDay ☘
📖 Ancient Restoration
The Rock of Cashel in County Tipperary. Reputedly the site of the conversion of Aenghus the King of Munster by St. Patrick in the 5th century AD. #StPatricksDay ☘
St Patrick baptises king Óengus in Cashel but stabs his crozier through his foot! [St Patrick's Church, Columbus, Ohio]
📖 Ancient Restoration
St Patrick baptises king Óengus in Cashel but stabs his crozier through his foot! [St Patrick's Church, Columbus, Ohio]
The shamrock as a strange three-leaved plant in Gerald of Wales' "Topographia Hibernica" (1188 AD): These images are the first depiction of the shamrock as a national symbol of Ireland, drawn by the Normans.