The Ancients - Irish Mythology
Episode Date: July 24, 2025Epic heroes, sacred rivers & ancient gods – this is Irish mythology as you’ve never heard it. From Newgrange to the Hill of Tara, Ireland’s myths are rooted firmly in its prehistoric past.In tod...ay's episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Anthony Murphy to explore the rich tapestry of Irish mythology – stories of divine battles, magical beings, and legendary landscapes. Discover how ancient sites are entwined with tales passed down through centuries and how stories featuring giants, all-seeing eyes and even a 'salmon of knowledge' were preserved by Christian monks in medieval manuscripts. This is your gateway to the epic, otherworldly world of Ireland’s ancient lore.MOREPrehistoric Ireland: Newgrange:https://open.spotify.com/episode/5zcgcrW1h1pZpirb1hhmLVThe First Irish:https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-ancients/id1520403988?i=1000554323114Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan and the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.LIVE SHOW: Buy tickets for The Ancients at the London Podcast Festival here: https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/the-ancients-2/Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
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Hey guys, Tristan here and I have an exciting announcement.
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so book yourself a seat now at www.kingsplace.co.uk forward slash what's on
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The team and I cannot wait to see you there.
Hey guys, I hope you're doing well.
Welcome to this episode of The Ancients, all about the amazing topic that is Irish mythology.
This is extraordinary.
I love learning about all these stories that you're going to hear in the interview and
how they're linked to certain ancient Irish
prehistoric sites. I also love the fact that J.R.R. Tolkien's Eye of Sauron from
Lord of the Rings may well have been inspired by a particular supernatural
creature from Irish mythology called Baelor and if that doesn't whet your
appetite then I don't know what will. Our guest is a man who's been researching,
studying Irish mythology for decades. He's a brilliant storyteller, his name is appetite then I don't know what will. Our guest is a man who's been researching, studying
Irish mythology for decades. He's a brilliant storyteller. His name is Anthony Murphy. Such
a privilege to get him on the podcast and I hope you guys enjoy. Let's go. Irish mythology, an incredibly rich corpus of tales written down by Christian monks in
medieval times but with its roots in Ireland's ancient past.
It is mythology that includes stories of supernatural beings and creatures, of divine battles and
scandals, of sacred rivers and epic heroes.
Stories strongly linked to some of Ireland's most important prehistoric monuments and landscapes,
like the 5000 year old passage tomb at Newgrange and the Hill of Tara. Irish mythology is rich
and diverse, full of tales that have gripped people for centuries and remain as popular as ever. This is an introduction to the fascinating, rich world of Irish mythology
and its links to Ireland's prehistoric past, with our guest, Anthony Murphy.
Anthony, it is such a pleasure to have you on the podcast today. Great to see you again,
although not in person this time.
Yeah, we spent some time together along the Boyne.
Was that last year?
And it was.
Yeah.
I very much enjoyed that and enjoyed watching the result of that.
Well, you were part of our documentary on prehistoric islands on Brunabóinne and the
links not only your discovery of this extraordinary ancient henge and many other monuments like Dronehenge, but also the links to Irish mythology
of that extraordinary prehistoric site. I'm sure we'll be covering that in today's chat.
But Anthony, with Irish mythology, I had no idea just how rich a corpus of literature,
of different stories you had available that there was an Irish mythology.
We can't cover all of it, but there's so much to explore.
Yeah.
And I think this is something that even Irish people are only coming to grips with in recent
years.
Like, you know, a generation ago, when I was being educated, we were taught classical studies
in secondary school and, you know, we learned all about what we learned Homer and Virgil and the Iliad and the Odyssey.
And we learned about the Greek and Roman gods and goddesses.
But I suppose in a way, when I left school, I didn't realize that Ireland had a body of mythology that would easily rival the classical
world and have spent the intervening years trying to catch up on that serious deficiency
in my knowledge.
So you know, it is truly vast.
There are stories, you know, from, well, I suppose they've been categorized into different cycles, as it were.
But we're very lucky because an awful lot of what we have in terms of mythology, the stuff that was written down,
it mostly survives because of Christian monks in the Middle Ages.
And without that, I think an awful lot of what we have today wouldn't have survived and then separate to that.
There's an enormous body of folklore and folk traditions which have survived orally not just into the twentieth century.
century. But you know, in parts of Ireland, there are stories still being told in the 21st century that are certainly centuries old, if not a lot longer than that.
And just to give a sense of the rich, diverse stories that you have from mythology, and some
of them no doubt we'll cover today. Anthony, I mean, so you've got stories of saints, of kings,
of warriors, of heroes, of supernatural races races and mythological creatures as well.
It's a diverse range of topics and stories within this mythology.
Yeah. I've often said that if you were to become a mythologist, whether an academic one or like
myself, you know, a non-academic scholar, you could choose a specialty. You could choose a specialty you could specialize in a particular area of Irish myth and
Devote probably your entire life or your entire career to that one branch of mythology
so for instance our
Origin myth is given to us by the monks in a sort of convoluted form a book called
Laura Gawala Aaron the book of the takings
of Ireland, commonly known as the book of invasions. And in that we have this sequence
of imagined events beginning at an unknown time, you know, beginning in biblical terms
with the creation of the world and the great flood and all of that. And there's enough in Laragawala runs to six volumes.
The scholarly translation of it runs to six volumes.
So there in that story, it's not a story, it's just a sequence of stories.
In that series of stories, one could embed oneself and go down a very, very deep rabbit hole and not emerge for another 10 or 20 years.
But so the scholars, I mean, I'm talking about the academic scholars, have for a long time recognized four distinct cycles.
Now, a caveat to trying to put various myths and legends into cycles is that they are not tightly defined.
They're not very well defined in time, most of them, and they often stray one into the
other so that you get the old gods of what is called the mythological cycle, what is
envisioned or imagined to be the first of the cycles.
You often get the old gods straying into the later cycles, coming back, you know, as it were.
So if the mythological cycle, we then have the the Ulster cycle of tales, which includes you mentioned the great saga
at Toinbough Cugna, the cattle raid of Cooley, which is one of Ireland's probably greatest stories in terms of its breath and its size.
It's not quite Homer's Iliad, but you know, it would be sort of the Irish equivalent.
Then we have the Fin cycle, the cycle of tales relating to Fin and the Fianna, the warrior band of Ireland.
And then, of course, we have the Kingna, the warrior band of Ireland.
And then, of course, we have the Kings and the King's cycle.
And we know, of course, from history that there were actual
historical high kings and kings of Ireland.
But as I say, trying to neatly fit them into boxes
is something that academic scholars like to do.
But in fact, you find that they're not necessarily neatly constrained in that.
So for instance, one example of that is in Toinbó Cúilinge, which we're told
belongs to the Ulster cycle of tales.
We have some of the Toa de Danann featured within that story.
You know, a very good example of that is C and the great warrior the hero of the tale the protagonist of the tour one of the he meets his supernatural father.
Who is lou samaldon or lou mccathlin and lou we would know from the mythological cycle the two of the down and this is something that could become an obsession of sorts, you know,
and those who have tried quite admirably, I might add, and I'm talking about, you know, university scholars, professors and great minds of the 20th and 21st century.
They have tried admirably, you know, to pick those apart.
you know to pick those apart but i suppose if you think more generally in terms of mythology and the meaning of purpose of it.
I would tend myself to lean towards a young and you know i can be less as in joseph campbell. of some of the functions and interpretations and meaning of myths.
And then, of course, there's the fact that myths, which ostensibly look like stories,
pure mythology, oftentimes have historical references in them.
Right.
And some of those historical references, historians have gone back in time and said,
that's actually a fact. You know, so in the myth, we get glimpses as it were into a reality, a real lived existence of a people of the past.
So just before we carry on, I suppose, a major, major caveat.
caveat, and it's something that anybody who tries to study Irish mythology must get a clear view of straight away, is the fact that nothing was written down in Ireland until
Christian monks basically not invented but brought writing to Ireland in around the sixth
century AD. And in fact, in terms of Irish mythology,
what survives in manuscripts, about 300 of them
in libraries and private collections in Ireland
and Britain and on the continent of Europe,
what survives is probably a fraction
of what was there originally.
But our greatest difficulty is, I believe,
in the 21st century is trying to disentangle
what is clearly heavily influenced by that ecclesiastical hand and the mindset of the Christian scribe who is in some cases writing down an incredibly pagan as it were.
And I put that word in quotes.
It's a word I do not use in my own writing because it's such a pejorative word
when it's used from a religious standpoint.
But they were writing down what were ostensibly pagan myths.
And that would have been extremely challenging and testing because remember
that an ecclesiastical scribe who professes a faith in one God and his son,
Jesus Christ, and who does his best to honor as it were and obey the 10 commandments is
in flagrant breach of the first commandment.
Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
When he attempts to write, for instance, about the two of the Danon, which is
where it gets complicated because well, complicated nuance might be the word
because the scribes tried to demonize the two of the Danon.
In some cases, they said that there were fallen angels and in some cases they
tried to make out that they're mortal human beings who live mortal existences, who are born, who live and who die and who pass away.
And you can see there are quite deliberate and really obvious insertions into the myths where the scribe talks about the one true God or where the scribe tries to make out,
for instance, in the famous story connected with Newgrange, Altran Tia Gaavather, which
is the the fosterage of the house of the two drinking vessels in which one of the major
figures of that myth, who is clearly a Tuadda Danann goddess meets Saint Patrick in the latter part of the story,
is baptized by Saint Patrick, is removed from her old community, and basically dies in his
arms having professed the faith, you know? And for me, it's like, that's a tale of two
halves. The first part of that is, I believe, a pure view into the past. The second is a sort of a contrivance
made to, as it were, to baptise this Day-Damond figurehead.
So it sounds like, yes, although the medieval link is so clear in the fact that these myths,
as you say, they're written down in medieval times and not all at the same time. I'm guessing
it's over different centuries and you've got different Christian writers writing down these
stories and these figures, you know, trying to, you know, reconcile, you know, their beliefs,
but also to bring in the stories that to our day down and you mentioned St. Patrick there
so that the Christian angle that you need to understand and you can see with some elements
of certain myths. But Anthony, how we get the ancient
prehistoric Ireland link here, is it clear then that actually much of this mythology
is older than medieval times and may well have a historical basis in Ireland's prehistoric past?
AC That's a very good question and the immediate answer from my point of view is yes.
So I suppose one of the advantages of not being an academically trained scholar in this discipline is having a sort of a wider, a wider view and a more holistic view.
Having studied, you know, archaeology and prehistory.
And then, you know, looking at the detail of the stories,
I'll give you what I believe to be the best example of that,
of the fact that, yes, there is information about the ancient past.
I could give you several, but I'll try to give you a quick.
Yeah, I know we could be here all day.
I'll give you a quick example. In the stories of Brunabonia, for instance,
which I know we're going to talk about in more detail.
There are references to incest.
There are references to a king at doubt who makes love with his sister.
And this causes a spell that she has
cast on the sun to make it stand still in the sky to fail.
They spoil the magic by committing incest. Five years ago in 2020, genetic scientists
who've been studying ancient DNA from Trinity College in Dublin revealed that a man buried
inside the chamber of Mugrange, which is the sister monument of Doubt, inside the chamber of new grain churches the sister monument of doubt was the product of first degree incestuous union.
That is parents were probably brother and sister most likely brother and sister if not father and daughter or mother and son but most likely brother and sister.
I'm so right there in the middle of brunib, we have something that 21st century science has
actually proven to be true.
I then consider the solar event at Newgrange, which many of your viewers
will know about, but some of them may not.
Newgrange, a little bit like Stonehenge.
Stonehenge is famous for its summer solstice alignment.
Newgrange here in the Boyne Valley is famous for its winter solstice
sunrise alignment.
New Grange was blocked up for four thousand years and nobody knew for four thousand years
or they may have known, but nobody could see an entrance because the cairn had collapsed,
as it were, had slipped out over the edge and buried everything.
And that entrance was not revealed again until the late 17th century, 1699, actually.
And it was only in 1967 when the roof box was finally cleared out and restored, that
the sun was able to shine into Newgrange again.
And archaeologists who anybody with an expertise on Newgrange archaeologically who have studied
it will all say the same thing that Newgrange had been blocked up since about the late Neolithic or the early
Bronze Age for around about 4000 years.
And yet in the 20th century, in the 60s, before the roof box was cleared out,
the archaeologist Michael J.
O'Kelly, who's excavating Newgrange, is being told by the locals,
do you know that the sun shines in there once a year?
Even though they couldn't have witnessed it, it was impossible for them to have seen it.
And according to archaeologists, it hadn't been seen for 4,000 years.
And then look at the Denkianicus and look at the stories pertaining to Brunibonia.
And in there, you will see that the Dogda, who's the builder of Newgrange, the king of the two of the
Dan and the chief of the gods, the one who controls the weather and the harvest, he's like a sky god
or a sun god, he desires Bowen, the goddess, and by the way Bruna Bowen is named after her as is the
Bowen river, he desires her and they make love inside Newgrange. But in order to do so, and this is the exact translation of the Irish,
they make the sun stand still in the sky.
And so in that, and I've written about this, there's a lengthy article about it on the Mythical Ireland website.
You have basically the sun god meeting with the Earth goddess.
And it's all very sort of organic and symbolic in that new
Grange is very womb like and swollen belly like, you know, you've got the sun,
that shaft of light, you know, entering that monument.
And in that process, the new sun god is born, Angus Oogh.
The child, the divine child, who when his mother was asked,
why is he called Angus the young, Angus Oogh?
She said, well, because young is the son who was conceived
and born in the same day because of the magic
that they had wrought at the time of his conception,
that Dagda and Bowen slept together inside New
Grange. The child was conceived and he was born before nightfall on the same day. And so I just
believe that remember that that story, that story was written down in the Middle Ages.
Most of what survives in terms of Irish mythological material, not, you know, there's plenty of ecclesiastical material, you know, prayer books and the gospels and all of that.
But in terms of just the Irish mythological material, most of that was written between the 12th and the 15th centuries AD.
So, I mean, we're not even talking a thousand years ago. We're talking between 500 and 800 years ago. Now, the critical
thing here is that as those stories were being written down, nobody knew that Newgrange had a
chamber. Nobody knew that the sun used to shine in there, or at least nobody could see it in the
era in which the stories were written down. So the only possible plausible explanation for that is that either it's a fantastic
coincidence, which I think is nonsense, or in the Middle Ages, there's a memory there
of something that happened with Newgrange, not just centuries, but millennia previously.
Yeah, yes, centuries, but millennia previously. Yeah, exactly. Given that Newgrange is built some 5000 years ago in the Stone Age. And
also there, I'm going to butcher the pronunciation of it, but the Dundasenkas. Anthony, can you
say the name correctly for me and then I'll continue my question?
So, an acceptable Dinhianicus is how we would say it. Dynianicus. But if you want to just say Dyn Shenicus, Dynianicus.
Dynianicus.
Yeah.
Okay.
Dynianicus is a remarkable collection of lore pertaining to eminent places.
It's exactly what it means.
Dynianicus.
Shenicus is lore or folklore or lore would be a better word and dinned sacred places, important, eminent places.
And so it's basically a collection pertaining to old monuments and places where important things happened in the past.
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Right, time to slide out of here and avoid the bedpan. Well, you hit the nail on the head there because I was going to say, if that's what these
stories are, it seems that there are these
extraordinary prehistoric sites like you've mentioned Brunabhoyne, Newgrange, Passage Tomb,
Nouth and Douth. I've also got the Hill of Tara in my notes as well but there are actual places
and sites and landscapes in Ireland that we know held huge significance and importance to Stone Age,
Stone Age populations in Ireland, Bronze Age, Iron Age, and so on, that are strongly linked
with stories from Irish mythology.
And I think that's an extraordinary part of Ireland's mythology.
Yeah.
And I agree an extraordinary part and a very important part.
So something that again, non scholars, people who have just read some stuff on the Internet or read a few books may not be aware of is
Denshanicus was obviously extremely important for this reason.
Denshanicus material is found in at least 12 manuscripts.
Now, just to compare, for instance, the story of the salmon of knowledge, which which we may get time to talk about, which happened at Bruno Bona, by the way, in the bend of the point that episode is only written in one manuscript, or at least it only survives in one manuscript.
is found in so many of the manuscripts indicates how important it was that it was an extremely critical part of the corpus of material and I suppose the cosmological worldview of the
people who wanted it written down and when I say the people who wanted it written down, it's important for
your viewers and listeners to understand that, you know, the Enchanicus was written down
by people who were mostly Christian scribes.
Now there were lay scribes, but it's a monastic environment in which these stories are being
written down. Why did Christian monks labor long and hard on
hold stone slabs writing under candlelight for long hours of the day? Why did they exert all
this labor writing down what was ostensibly pagan mythology and the answer is this and this is the briefest explanation i can give for it but it is important.
That the reason is because.
What is an affiliation relationship with the pagan kings the monastic communities could never have thrived in Ireland.
It was with the say so of the local or provincial or even the high king that the the monasteries could become established in the first place.
They needed land to farm and and for their ecclesiastical structures, their churches and, of course, their their buildings and the places where they lived and in return for that, the King said, well, hey, we just want you to write down our law.
And that included, I suppose, well, it what it included was a justification of that King's right to rule, which would include, for instance, genealogies, a lot of genealogical
material, you know, at affirming the king's descendancy, usually from the first Malaysian
high king and the Malaysians are mostly mythological, I believe part historical,
and Eremon was the first Malaysian king. And there's this major effort on behalf of the genealogists to to contrive in some
cases a family tree that linked that king back to Eremon, you know,
and then the Denshanicus, because if a king, a Tara is a great example.
The Hill of Tara, where the Over King,
Ardrenaherin, the Over King or the High King of Ireland ruled from.
You've got a monumental landscape there.
It's an archaeological landscape containing monuments from as long ago as the the Neolithic.
And so in the early medieval period, when we know there were actual kings who really existed,
and they're pointing to these monuments and saying, here is the story of these monuments.
And this helps to legitimize his power because he's saying basically our ancestors have been buried here for not just decades and
generations, but for centuries and possibly thousands of years. So it's against that backdrop
that you get an insight into why it was that Christian scribes were writing this material
down. And it's really crucial to understand that, to get a flavor of what was involved.
Dynshenicus, I suppose from an academic scholarship point of view,
Dynshenicus is funny because with many of the stories, there are almost always two
explanations as to how the place got its name.
It's either this or it's that.
as to how the place got its name. It's either this or it's that. And the two are very, very different and sort of seem to argue with each other. That has led modern scholars, I'm talking specifically
course about academic scholars, that has led the modern scholars to say, well, this is, you know,
this is, this is a contrivance. Some of it looks a little bit kitsch and, you know, it loses vitality.
It loses credibility because it says, well, it's either this or that.
And the two stories are very different.
But I suppose what I've been doing for the past 25 years or so is I've been looking
into some of those stories, not all of them.
There's so much material.
I've been looking into those stories that pertain particularly to Bruna Bona.
And I've been finding glimpses of a true history of the place.
You know, that despite this contradiction, as it were,
that these stories appear to sort of contradict each other in there,
in the detail, I believe, is information about the past.
A good friend of mine said recently is remember, Anthony, that in the Middle Ages,
this is what they were writing down.
This was a principal component of the mythos, the worldview of the people who were relating this to the scribes, you know, the
bards, as it were, the ones, the olives, the poets, the ones who knew this material by heart, who
would never even think about writing it down for them in a way that was anathema. But of course,
the scribe needs to have had a reference point, where are they getting this information from to write it down in the first place?
There's a bard standing or sitting beside them relating this material.
And the bard in the Middle Ages is saying, well, here are all the monuments of Brunabonia.
Here are their names and here is the origin story for each of them.
And in the Middle Ages, we've got this collection of stories telling us all about the various monuments that were then visible at Brunabonia and the stories behind them.
Some of them pertaining to gods and goddesses, some of them pertaining to heroes, some of them pertaining to animals and even mythological creatures. creatures and yet fast fast forward to the 19th and particularly the 20th century.
And we've removed all that.
And we're now producing maps of Brunabonia that have mound A and mound B and standing
stone C and letters on all the monuments, completely depriving them of that mythological
import. But if you were to go back in time, travel back to the Middle Ages and have a
bard stand at Newgrange looking down across the various still standing monuments, that bard would
be able to tell you the name of each of them and the story pertaining to each of them.
Will Barron And also, of course, you know, with natural
landscapes as well, you mentioned also the River Boyne and I think the River Shannon is similar as well that there's mythology connected
to these rivers, hence why they're considered the most sacred rivers in Ireland as well.
So hopefully we'll get to that and you mentioned earlier the Salmon of Knowledge, so I'm definitely
going to get to that later in this chat.
But you've also highlighted something which I love doing on the ancients with various
kinds of mythology and various stories that have survived is exploring myths and then exploring whether there is historical
basis or some slivers of prehistoric remembering in the stories. And you've already highlighted
there these big monuments and how they are linked to certain mythological tales. One
tale I'd like us to really explore now, Anthony, if you don't mind,
because you mentioned near the beginning the Tuad-e-Dannan. Can we therefore go to,
in the mythology, the creation story of Ireland and how we get to these people of the Tuad-e-Dannan,
but also people who you also mentioned in passing, the Milesians, who ultimately
the kings of Ireland claim descent from. So I know it's a multi-volume story of how you get there, but would you mind giving us an
overview of what the mythology tells us about how we get to these godlike creatures, the Tuad-e-Dannan,
and then ultimately the Milesians? Will Barron Yeah, so the Tuad-e- the Danann are, I suppose, one one aspect or one chapter in the story of Lauer
Gawala, the book of invasions. And the idea is very to summarize very briefly is that the history
of Ireland, according to what was written by the monks, remember they're using part of this is real
Irish mythological tradition.
And part of it, of course, is contrived history.
They imagined that Irish history began with the great flood of Noah, that Noah's
granddaughter was refused entry onto the ark and it was told by her grandfather to
come to a place where there was no sin, where there were no people living, because
that land would have no sin in it and would not be subject to God's
vengeance or God's justice, as it were, with the coming flood.
And that's how it begins.
She comes to Ireland.
Now, there are six distinct arrivals, according to Laura Gowalla,
one of which is the two of the Danon.
Now, the two of the Danon.
And this is, I suppose, a peculiarity, as it were, if you
think that these are gods and goddesses, a peculiarity is that they don't emerge from
the land.
They're not created here.
They don't come out of the earth as much as they're given this distinct arrival.
Now, remember that always, always be very careful when you're reading Irish
mythology, because you have to you have to always remember there's a Christian monk writing this
down. And the Christian monk, of course, if you're standing talking to a bard who only speaks what
was then early or middle Irish, you know, and that bird has never seen writing before.
Doesn't know how to write his own name.
You know, he's he's not going to know that the monk is kind of changing things as he's writing it down.
But we're told that the two of the Danann had studied
the occult and mysterious arts in the Northern Isles of the world.
And they had arrived into Ireland in a fleet of ships.
And that Ireland was already occupied by a race of beings called the Fur Vogue,
which has been translated as the bag men.
I know.
The bag men.
men. I know. The bag men.
Yes.
Don't think a Martin Scorsese movie.
Oh, we could go down so many rabbit holes.
But the fur vulture basically occupy Ireland and in order to sort of take it over,
the two of the Dan and have to go to war with the fur vulture, which they do.
And they defeat them.
Now, as they arrive in Ireland, just to clear up something
you'll see on the Internet and social media, you'll see all these remarkable claims that the two of the Daman were aliens
because they came down from the sky.
They were said to have descended from the sky.
But Laura Gowala has a very distinct reason for that impression.
It is because when they arrived, they burned their ships because they were so brave, you
see, that any idea that they would retreat in the face of an enemy was anathema to them.
Cowardice, complete cowardice.
If you want to take the island, burn the boats kind of thing.
Yeah.
To utterly prevent any notion of them being afraid, they burned their ships, meaning they
had no exit
should they face a despicable enemy. And the cloud of smoke billowed over Ireland
for three days and Larraghe Walla very specifically tells us that this led to
the impression that they had descended from the sky. They brought four
mysterious sacred objects or what have been described as talismans with them.
And they are the sword of Nuadhu. Nuadhu, as it happens, was their first king or leader.
Nuadhu, Arrogant love, which translates as Nuadhu of the silver arm.
Now there's a very long, I could potentially spend an hour telling you that story,
but I'll summarize it in the battle against the fur Volog. He had his arm chopped off,
which meant he had to he had to abdicate the kingship because a king could only rule if he
was pure of body and mind and had no blemishes. And the healer of the two of the Danon, Dion Kect
made him a silver arm. The first mention in mythology, I healer of the two of the Danon, Deon, made him a silver arm.
The first mention in mythology, I believe anywhere in the world of prosthetics.
Prosthetics. Yeah.
And if you're thinking Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader, you're on the right track,
because apparently that myth inspired that whole episode in Star Wars, where
Luke has his arm chopped off by his father and then has a robotic arm fitted in its place.
That's entirely based, apparently, on the story of Nwadu.
Then the other weapon was the Spear of Lu.
So the characteristics of these weapons were that they would never miss their mark.
The Sword of Nwadu, when brought into battle, would guarantee success.
The Spear of Lu.
Lu was another of the great luminaries previously mentioned of the two of the
Danann, known under various epithets, Lu Samaldonach, Lu the many gifted.
He came to Tara while Nuadhu was celebrating, returning to the throne.
We don't use the word throne in Ireland.
We don't have marble thrones.
It's not that kind of kingship.
He, you know, Nuadu has been able to retake the kingship
because he's got a new arm and he's no longer blemished.
And Lou comes to Tara at that time announcing his gifts.
And Lou is the one who basically takes over from Nuadu
in the preparations for the next war against the Fomorians, the evil sort of pirate giant cyclopean race that has
occupied Ireland since the earliest times and to have forever been the enemy of the
Tuat Adhanim.
So that spear was said to have never missed its mark.
You brought that into battle and you threw it, it would kill an enemy full stop,
no matter how badly you threw it.
through it, it would kill an enemy full stop, no matter how badly it threw it.
The third object was the dog does cauldron, the own dry.
It's called, which I think is very funny in Ireland.
Well, I think we've got a wicked sense of humor about some things. We call it the own dry instead of just calling it the wet.
You know, the belief was that the cauldron would provide food and drink in unending measure.
No matter how much you gorged from it in terms of eating and drinking, it was always full.
And for me, that's deeply fascinating because remember what I said earlier, Dogda, who is the later the king of the Two of the Danon.
There were only a few built Newgrangeange owned Newgrange and, you know,
was clearly some sort of a sun slash sky God. You know, for me, he belongs, his memory belongs to the
Neolithic, that period of time in which farming arrived into Ireland and into Britain, you know,
in the same era when we have the first cattle and goats and sheep,
and when we have the first crop husbandry, that yes, an agricultural community, depending on,
you know, the weather and in Ireland, you know, the reason we're so green is because we get a lot
of rain, but we need the right mixture of sun and rain for the crops to grow out to their full
potential and to ripen. And of course, it makes sense to me that their sky God would have this cauldron of
plenty because that's what you're hoping for from the harvest that in bringing
farming, you have a reliable source of food that enables you to settle, that
enables you to evolve from this hunter gatherer lifestyle that
has been in existence, well in Ireland since the ice age, but in Britain and in Europe,
across the Paleolithic for maybe 200,000 years, all of a sudden you've got this source of food
that you can grow locally, and you've got cows and you can get milk from them and then, you know, when they expire, you eat their meat and everybody's happy.
And the last object, Leofoil, the so-called stone of destiny at the Hill of Tara.
But the explanation that is clearly given in Laragawala is not that it is the stone of
destiny. Of course, it's the destiny in a way. It was said, its principal property was that it was said to have screamed under the rightful
candidate for kingship. So if the community of Tara at various times in the past, and I believe
the kingship right at Tara goes all the way back, not just into prehistory, but to the Neolithic. That's my own belief. Can I prove it?
Of course I can't.
But this stone was said to be lia foe, that foil F.A.
Fada I.L. and according to Nara Gowala, it was consistent.
It was a compound word consisting of two separate words, foe, oil, the under stone,
because of the fact that when the king stepped on her or they handed it for
kingship stepped on it, it would roar or scream. So that all in Tara could hear it.
Leading to today, the actual stone which stands on a monument called on for the royal enclosure or
the royal seat at that visitors to Leoofoil, you'll see them
touching it and hoping that they will hear the scream and that they will be announced
as the new High King of Ireland.
Yes.
Anyone gets to Tora, don't kick it too hard though, okay?
Please be aware that it is an actual monument.
But yes, great story.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
So they're the four objects.
And I suppose they're the sort of mystical beginnings of the Danons who remain mystical.
There's an aspect to the two of the Danon.
Sometimes they appear very human, of course, but there's an aspect to them that's very full of mystique and intrigue because, you know, when the Malaysians come.
Because, you know, when the Malaysians come, and this is the battle then that is referred to by modern scholars as the conquest of the gods by mortals, which is a lens through which the ecclesiastical scribes of the Middle Ages were very uncomfortable with.
For then, it was very much, we need to make these mortal so that whatever happens, for instance, in the Battle of Tultu,
which is the critical battle between the Malaysians and the Dua of the Danon, the Malaysians win.
But the real question is, how do mortal men beat or defeat gods and goddesses in a battle?
And when you look into the nuances of Laragawala and other tales and some folklore you will find that in fact what
has happened is they haven't been mortally wounded and dropped dead, their corpses littering the
battlefield. It is a different type of defeat. They agree with the Malaysians upon defeat that
we are now going to retreat into the She. Now that word word is spelt in Middle Irish S, I father, D.
Father for your non Irish viewers would be like an axon, you know, in French.
She, it looks like Sid with a father on the eye, but it's pronounced she like she
for a woman, which is interesting, but there's no adequate translation of that word into modern English.
You will often see that translated in especially in 19th and 20th century translations.
You'll often see it translated as a fairy mount.
But that's inadequate because the fairies, of course, are much later
survival of earlier beliefs and deities.
The best translation I've seen is Otherworld Mount,
because now what happens is the two of the Danann retreat into the She-Mounds and occupy the
subsurface land, as it were, realm that is co-existent with this one. It's very much,
we're sharing the same realm in a way, but the Malaysians are given the surface
territory of Ireland. And the Malaysian story is fascinating because they come from Spain. They're
eight brothers who are the sons of the King of Spain. And they come to take Ireland from the
Tuatha Danann. And as I said, much, much later, kings try to say, well, we're descended from them because it was the first Malaysian high King, Eremon, whose wife Tia had chosen Tara as the place from which they would reign.
And you've got this effort because they were clearly heroic in that they had defeated the gods.
But here's the catch.
And it's a very major catch.
The gods and goddesses of the Toad of Danann never really went away.
They weren't killed.
They didn't die.
They are ever living.
And in the folk beliefs of recent centuries in Ireland, we have these prophecies
that they're going to come out of the She-Mounds again at the end of time or some great tumultuous
end times battle or some time of great struggle for Ireland and will bring glory to Ireland.
So this belief that it's a little bit like those tales that you find in Britain and in other parts
of Europe, the ones that we call King Under Mountain, a little bit like the dead army in Lord
of the Rings, especially in the movie,
not so much in the book, but this idea that Aragorn is able to rouse this sleeping army.
And we've got these stories in especially the early 20th century, which have probably
survived orally for generations and centuries before about enchanted armies of sleeping warriors in monuments, subsurface, you know,
in subterranean areas beneath the hills and monuments of Ireland.
And it's against that backdrop that you begin to realize why it is that there is so much mystique
and intrigue and modern day interest in the Two of the Daman.
So it's not, you mentioned the She-Mounds there and I immediately thought, so could
the She-Mounds of Irish mythology be a reference to the great Stone Age Neolithic
mounds like Newgrange and the like that you see in Ireland today?
Or do we think that there's the link there?
No, it's not a question.
It's absolutely the case.
It is absolutely the case.
So for instance, many of your viewers and listeners may not know this, but Newgrange is a 12th century name, 12th century AD.
It is not the original name of that monument.
It derived the name Newgrange from the Cistercians who established a very major monastery called Meliphant Abbey in the year 1142 AD, just a few miles away,
called Meliphant Abbey in the year 1142 AD, just a few miles away, and were granted by the local king,
Donnaca O'Carroll, who said, yeah, sure, you can come in and, you know, set up your monastery and farm the land.
I'll give you loads of land. Gave them tons and tons of land.
And because they're a French order, they established what are called Granges, Granges in French.
And there are four townlands in the immediate
vicinity of New Grange. New Grange is the name of a townland. It's the name of a unit of land,
as it were, around New Grange. That is 12th century in origin, just before the Anglo-Norman
invasion of Ireland. The old name of the monument is Sheed in Broga, Shee on Vrew. So literally,
we have in the name of the original name of the monument.
We have that word she.
So we've got one tale from the Middle Ages where, you know, a guy goes to New
Grange, Gillilugam goes to New Grange to talk to Angus, you know, who's said to
haunt the monument every year at Samhain.
Samhain, of course, an incredibly superstitious
and important moment as it were in the annual calendar. I love that idea that people are
going to Newgrange in the middle ages to talk to the gods, you know, the gods and goddesses
of the Toad of Danon, indefatigable, undefeatable, live in the mythological memory and mindset.
They never died.
They were never vanquished.
They're always there.
And of course that survives in a way into modern and, you know, our late medieval belief
in the fairies and the fairies really we should look at as diminished forms of those gods
and goddesses. They had should look at as diminished forms of those gods and goddesses.
They had just become small as it were.
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Right, time to slide out here and avoid the bedpan.
Of course, you get later on, the fairy forts, aren't there? We went to Rathghal, which has got a Bronze Age story, but also a medieval story, and I think they're called fairy forts.
But I digress because I don't think we can talk about that in this chat. One more question about that, the Tuode Danann before
we move on to the Fina and heroes of Irish mythology, Anthony, is you mentioned Lord
of the Rings earlier. And of course you do ask me to get the Tuode Danann versus the
Malaysians, the mortals. But before that, and you mentioned them in passing, how the
Tuode Danann almost have what is the Irish equivalent of the ancient Greek Gigantamachi,
the fight between the Greek gods and the giants, the Irish Tuat-i-Dannan and the Fomorian giants.
And can you explain to me a little bit about this link to the Eye of Sauron, of all things,
with the Fomorians and their leader. Yeah. So the leader of the Fomorians, an individual called Balor, Balor of the Baleful Eye, also
known as Balor of the Stout Blows. That's B-A-L-O-R. And so the principal aspect of
Balor is his very distinctive, fearsome, abominable appearance.
He's got one great eye in the center of his forehead.
So we're thinking Cyclops, but his eye is so huge that he requires seven warriors to
open it, to open his great eyelid.
One aspect of his baleful or destructive eye is that according to how much he opens it,
the result of that is varying levels of damage and burning and death.
And so we're specifically told that in fact, there are seven stages to that opening.
And that in the first stage, it starts to get very warm and the second stage you know.
Very hot and things start to weather in the third you know plants are dying in the fourth and it gets to the seventh word literally everything is a blaze everything's on fire.
this sounds like some of what we find in classical mythology, which has led modern scholars, I think, too much to suggest that a lot of this is borrowed from classical mythology. And of course,
the Jungian viewpoint on this is that similar themes emerge from the human unconscious in various
disparate parts of the world. Another aspect is that it's a little bit like Medusa, you know,
if he opens his eye and you're looking at him, you turn to stone.
And we have a story of the famous cow and calf of Balor, which were stolen and
brought down along the coast from his Ulster stronghold towards the Lensner
stronghold and one in order to in order to sort of lay the suspicions of the cattle,
the thief makes the cow walk ahead of its calf.
And unfortunately, they get to a certain point when they cross the river, boy, and the the calf.
Am I right about that? It's one or the other.
Anyway, you know, the calf is ahead of the cow.
When they cross the river, boy, the calf strays behind the cow.
The cow turns around to see where the calf is and suddenly sees, oh, we're very far away
from Ulster and our home.
And the cow lets out a scream.
And in order to see what's going on, Ballard opens his great eye.
And in that moment, the cow and the calf are turned to stone, which is the origin
myth of two islands there.
It's one.
It's considered one island, but they are two separate islands called Rockabill
off the coast of County Dublin, visible from the mouth of the River Boyne.
I should add.
And that's the origin story that these two rocks, the large one is the cow
which is to the south and the smaller one which is the calf is to the north reflecting the story.
And lo and behold in 1999, the first year I began my own researches in earnest along with local
artist Richard Moore, we discovered at Bal Trey, at the mouth of the river Boyne,
overlooking the Irish Sea, that there are standing stones there and one of them is aligned
to Rockabill. And at Rockabill, in the Neolithic, the winter solstice would have risen directly
behind the islands. And there, I believe, we had the astronomical origins of the story where the sun would appear to rise
directly behind the two rocks.
And that's Balor opening his baleful eye and describes why it was that in the story, everything
went, this is exactly how it is related in early 20th century folklore in Scerry's, a
village looking directly across at the islands.
The woman, I think, was Mary Halligan in, I think, 1904. It's the first decade or two of the
1900s. She says that this is the story pertaining to them, you know, that, you know,
Ballard opened his eye and that they are now as they were then the cow to the south and the calf to the north and that they were turned to stone when Balor opened his eye.
But all went well until they crossed the Boin.
And that to me is pointing that the Boin is an important part of the story.
And when you position yourself at those very ancient standing stones,
a lot of standing stones in Ireland are believed to date to the Bronze Age.
But in this case, I think we can firmly push these back to the Neolithic because they're made of exactly the same stone as Newgrange is built out of.
And for me, they're like a way marker of the journey from Cloragh head
carrying the giant stones of Newgrange and standing there on winter solstice.
The sun, this baleful eye of
Ballor appears to rise behind the islands. And when you'd see Lord of the Rings and you see the eye
of Ballor, I remember reading Lord of the Rings 30 years ago and I think, wow.
The Eye of Sauron.
Oh, okay. Sorry. The Eye of Sauron. Yes. It's very difficult to get a picture of that.
Well, it's not difficult, but we all concoct different, you know, when we see a
movie finally of a book, Gandalf looks a little bit different than we had imagined
him, you know, and Aragorn, you know, because they're portrayed by actors.
But here, I believe we have a very good representation of the baleful eye of Balor,
as that is something you definitely did not want to see.
Angus Anthony is absolutely extraordinary. As we hinted
at at the beginning, we were never going to be able to cover all the various strands of Irish
mythology in just one hour. And I do feel with the cattle raid of Guli like this Iliad equivalent will probably have to save that one for another day and probably also myths associated snakes and so on with with St. Patrick and St. Bridget.
However I did say earlier we should talk about you know how Irish mythology isn't just the supernatural gods and these amazing creatures extraordinary extraordinary creatures and giants as well,
but also these heroes and these warriors too. This feels a nice way to get into what we were
talking about earlier in passing, which is this extraordinary salmon of knowledge in the River
Boyne and it's linked to one particular hero. Anthony, almost to finish this interview,
can you tell us about this story and how it relates to
one of these particular well-known heroes of Irish mythology?
Anthony Bregman Yeah, the salmon of knowledge. And it's,
you know, in the only written version of it, it's a very brief tale. It only occupies, you know,
what we would consider a couple of paragraphs in modern parlance, that there is a wise old druid, his name is Phinegas.
And Phinegas is waiting along the banks of the river Boyne at Brunabonia, by the way,
in sight of the great monuments of Newgrange and Nouth because of the famed salmon of knowledge,
which has been prophesied would come to that place, a place known as Lin Fiech,
which is an Irish name meaning Fiech's Pool or Fiech's Pool. That's how he's waiting there.
And he spent seven years waiting because he knows that if he eats that fish, he will gain
all of the mysterious arcane knowledge basically of the universe.
I mean, that's probably my own way of putting it.
He will gain suddenly three major sort of talents is not even a good word,
but but but boons and become the wisest person who ever walked the surface of the earth.
The thing is that on the day the fish arrives, a young boy happens upon the druid.
His name is Jevna, which is an Irish word that means certainty.
And I, nobody, as far as I know, has ever tried to explain that.
And my explanation for it is Jevna
certainty is because of the certainty that he would become a great hero and a great warrior and a great cult figure.
Jevna asks the Druid, what are you doing?
And he says, well, I'm waiting for the Salmon of Knowledge.
The Salmon comes along, the Druid catches it.
And Jevna says, the Druid, well, can I help you?
And the Druid says, yeah, you can.
Will you cook the fish for me?
And the boy says, yes, of course, Master.
Suddenly he's his master.
And, you know, the boy is told to cook the fish, but very strictly informed
or very strictly warned, do not eat any of it.
The boy agrees, puts the fish on a spit, turns it over the fire.
And everything's going well.
But as everybody who's ever cooked in that way knows,
it's very hard to cook a fish on a spit
without it blistering and he wanted to present to his master the perfect cooked fish. A blister rose
up on the surface of the fish and Jevna thinking oh I can't present it to him like this it must be
perfect pressed down on the blister with his thumb. And of course, he burnt his thumb and immediately he put his thumb in his mouth.
And at that moment, he gains all the knowledge of the salmon of knowledge
and he becomes intimately wise in this.
I think we're seeing a rite of passage or what you might call it.
What is it? A threshold or transformation myth,
you know, where the young innocent boy suddenly becomes the wisest, you know, he goes back when the
cook is when the when the fish is cooked, he brings the salmon back to his master
and Finnegas immediately can tell that there's something has changed.
It says, is everything OK?
And the boy says, yeah, yeah, it's fine.
Here's your fish. But I should tell you that there was a blister and I pressed down on my thumb
and I sucked my thumb.
And of course, at this moment,
Finnegas realizes that he has lost out on the chance that all of the arcane and
secret knowledge of the fish has passed to the boy.
And he says to Jevna, he says, what did you tell me your name was?
And Jevna says, I'm Jevna.
to Jevna. He says, what did you tell me your name was?
And Jevna says, I'm Jevna.
And Finnegan says, no, you are the Finn.
And Finn is a word in Irish that means brightness.
It means it can mean whiteness and fair.
Like it's often said that Finn was called
Finn because of his fair hair, because of the episode in which she dived into a lake to rescue a woman's ring, but she had tricked him and put old age on him and the silvery hair.
But it's an interesting one that that should be the case, because if you think
about it, the sucking of the thumb is something we associated with infancy,
you know, with babies and toddlers, they suck their thumb.
Right. But in that image, we've got both the baby and then that sudden transformation.
You know, the child is no longer a child.
The child suddenly has this wise old head on its shoulders.
So it's on it's it's only natural that sometime later we should find that he's
referred to the Finn because the silvery hair, because no matter what age he was,
even when he was young, he had silvery hair like an old man,
because he had the wisdom of an old man, you know.
And look, there's so much I could tell you about the Salmon of Knowledge.
Just a couple of very brief things. The salmon, as you know, is speckled. It has spots on its back.
According to Irish folk tradition, the more spots that a salmon has, the wiser it is. Because of the tradition that goes all the way back to the formation of the
Boyne, that the salmon actually spent its infancy years in the well that known as
the Well of Sagish, the well from which the Boyne River was said to have been
born. That's where it grew up and it ate these hazelnuts that dropped down out of
nine sacred hazel trees that grew over the well and it ate these hazelnuts that dropped down out of nine sacred hazel trees that grew over
the well and it ate these to gain all its knowledge. The other thing is that one of the
descriptions of the dog in medieval Irish mythology, and I'm saying medieval, that's when
it was written down, he is called the King of Linfek. I think that's fascinating that the chief of the Tuatha Dalen
should be referred to as the King of Linfeyrk, the source of all of the arcane spiritual mystical
scientific knowledge of yourself, the world and the universe. An extraordinary transformation. Angus And Anthony, almost as a teaser for
potential future episodes on more parts of Irish mythology, is this Finn character, is this the same
Finn that will be the hero who's associated with those warriors, the Fina and the story?
I think there's one story where he makes the Giant's Causeway to cross over to fight a giant,
hence the name the Giant's Causeway., this is his transformation with the salmon of knowledge
into becoming this very well known hero of Irish mythology.
Yeah. And even the scholars who've looked at that story will say Finn,
Agus Finn, Agus means wise Finn.
And it's like they're basically two versions of the same thing.
By the way, we're seeing a repeating theme here in the mythology of New
Grange, Dagda is eventually sort of transplanted by his son Angus Oga at New
Grange. Angus becomes the new owner of New Grange by tricking his father out of
the monument. And it's a little bit like that.
I suppose if you think about it in terms of Mircea Iliadi and this idea of the eternal return,
that one thing that ancient cultures liked to think about was the resetting or the reimagining of the cosmological origins.
And that often involves the replacement of a wise old deity with a youthful version,
which is what we hope happens every year with the sun, I believe, is the old dying sun is replaced with a vibrant new hope to to use another Star Wars term new hope.
Oh, look, you know, we have in this short conversation literally scratched the surface.
We could spend years talking and never get to the true depth and the true bottom of all this.
But how fascinating is it to explore it and, and to, to reimagine and bring it
back to life, to revivify, to, to breathe life into those old stories and, you
know, to give them some relevance in the 21st century.
And Anthony, absolutely.
And you've done such incredible work on this, as you say, well, as I've already mentioned, we haven't even really scratched the Castle Raid of Cooley or
St. Patrick, St. Brigid and so on. And so many more of these stories. There's also
this extraordinary creature, the Martyr, which I know you do a lot of work around as well.
So we'll have to save those for another day. It almost feels like Irish mythology could be
a series in its own right. Anthony, last but certainly not least, tell us you've written
books about this,
of course, you also have your website too. So, you know, give us a bit of background into all
the work that where people can find your work and learn more about these myths.
Yeah, well, the thing to say is, I'm not difficult to find. So mythical Ireland is the name of my
website that's been in existence for 25 years now mythical Ireland.com or dot IE will work as well.
for 25 years now, mythical Ireland dot com or dot IE will work as well.
So that is a very substantial resource.
You could spend many a day reading the material on that website alone.
I run a YouTube channel. Again, mythical Ireland is the key.
YouTube dot com at mythical Ireland or forward slash mythical Ireland.
If you're on a browser, there are in total 1500 videos, but I do a weekly live stream, which in the pandemic began as a daily live stream called Live Irish Myths.
So if you're interested in Irish myth and legend and folklore, Monday nights, 8pm Irish time is when that's on.
Join, please, the free newsletter and the email newsletter on the website.
the free newsletter and the email newsletter on the website.
If you're interested in supporting Mythical Ireland, please become a paying patron because I couple of years ago finally decided that I was going to try
and actually make a living from doing this work because it wasn't possible
to have a career and to try and squeeze the two in.
And then in terms of the books, I've written 10 books, mostly nonfiction,
some fiction, probably the best one to start with is the one called Mythical Ireland, New Light on the Ancient Past.
It happens to be my bestseller and I think for good reason,
because it provides a great overview into what we've been talking about.
So it looks at archaeology and prehistory and the history of Ireland.
It looks at the myths and legends.
It looks at the astronomical alignments and tries to tie them all together.
So that'd be a great place to start.
If you want a signed copy, you can order my books from the Mythical Ireland website
and I will send you a signed copy.
I'm also a tour guide.
I run tours, some public and I'm a private guide as well.
If you want to hire me as a private guide.
And so especially during the summer season,
if you're in Ireland or you're coming to Ireland, look out for my tours in which we talk
about just these topics, you know, an exploration of archaeology,
myth and astronomy and how they all come together.
Stars, stones and stories.
Well, I see that's quite a pitch, quite a resume.
You have the leading expert on Irish mythology.
And it just goes to me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come on the podcast today.
Being an absolute pleasure Tristan, thank you very much for having me.
Well there you go, there was Anthony Murphy introducing you to the extraordinarily rich
world of Irish mythology and its links to Ireland's prehistoric past. I hope you guys
enjoyed the episode and
hopefully we'll like more episodes on Irish mythology on other epic tales like the cattle
raid of Cooley in the future. Thank you for listening to this episode of The Ancients.
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