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Tailtiu

 

Tailltiu, Tailte

Name for one of the three great fairs of early Ireland and the Fir Bolg queen there commemorated. Although much of Tailtiu's character is fixed in the pseudo-history Lebor Gabála [Book of Invasions], she is apparently a much older figure and may be of divine origin. She is sometimes described as being the daughter of the ‘king of Spain’, but she may also be the child of the earth, e.g. Mag Mór [great plain]. Married to the last great Fir Bolg king, Eochaid mac Eirc, who named his palace after her, she was also the foster-mother of the great hero Lug Lámfhota. She led her people in the clearing of the forest, which by implication becomes all of Brega or what is today Co. Meath, some of Ireland's best farmland. Some commentators see in this identification evidence that she was originally a kind of earth goddess. But the work of clearing proves so onerous as to break her heart, in the words of the text. On her deathbed she asks that funeral games be held annually on the cleared ground. Lug leads the first games of horse-racing and martial arts at the time of Lughnasa (1 August), singing a lamentation.

Coextensive with the modern hamlet of Teltown, between Navan and Kells, the Tailtiu assembly or fair [Old Irish Óenach Tailten; Modern Irish Aonach Tailteann] was celebrated intermittently from ancient times, and continued to be held even as late as about 1770; it was revived in the 20th century but then fell into abeyance again. In its early form Tailtiu was the principal assembly of the Uí Néill federation, but presiding at the fair became the prerogative of the king of Tara. Participants came from all parts of Ireland and also from Scotland, making Tailtiu the equal of Tara, Tlachtga, and Uisnech. The Tailtiu óenach was thought an optimal time to be married. The fair also was the occasion of the ‘Teltown marriage’, a chance espousal for a year and a day that could be ended simply by having the couple stand back to back, one facing north, the other south, and walk away from one another.

Important events taking place at Tailtiu unrelated to the óenach include Éremón and the Milesians' victory over the Tuatha Dé Danann, and the deaths of Banba, Ériu, and Fódla. It was also described as the burial-place of the Ulaid.

Bibliography

  • Máire Mac Neill, The Festival of Lughnasa (Oxford, 1962), 311–38
  • Daniel A. Binchy, “‘The Fair at Tailtiu and the Feast of Tara’”, Ériu, 18 (1958), 113–38; Thomas H. Nally, The Aonach Tailteann and the Tailteann Games (Dublin, 1922); T. J. Westropp, “‘Marriages of the Gods and the Sanctuary of Tailltiu’”, Folk-Lore, 31 (1920), 109–41
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Tailtiu (Old Irish pronunciation: [ˈtalʲtʲu]; also written Tailltiu, Taillte) is the name of a presumed goddess from Irish mythology. Telltown (also known as Taillten) in County Meath, was named for her.

In Irish mythology

According to the Book of Invasions, Tailtiu was the daughter of the king of Spain and the wife of Eochaid mac Eirc, last Fir Bolg High King of Ireland, who named his capital after her (Telltown, between Navan and Kells). She survived the invasion of the Tuatha Dé Danann and became the foster mother of Lugh.[1]

Tailtiu is said to have died of exhaustion after clearing the plains of Ireland for agriculture. Lugh established a harvest festival and funeral games, Áenach Tailteann, in her honour, which continued to be celebrated as late as the 18th century.[1]

In Irish history

The first Áenach Tailteann, later the Taillten Fair, was held at Telltown. Historically, the Áenach Tailteann was a time for contests of strength and skill, and a favored time for contracting marriages and winter lodgings. A peace was declared at the festival, and religious celebrations were also held. Aspects of the festival survive in the celebrations of Lughnasadh, and were revived as the Telltown Games for a period in the twentieth century.[1]

A similar Lughnasadh festival was held at Carmun (whose exact location is under dispute). Carmun is also believed to have been a goddess of the Celts, perhaps one with a similar story as Tailtiu.[1]

In historical times the town of Tailtiu was where the principal assembly of the early Uí Néill dynasties was held.

From the Locus Project at CELT, Tailte had one or two raths [residence(s)] in Munster:

  • ráith canann: a ráith of queen Tailte, LL 201; cf. Rathcannon tl., Co. Limerick
  • ráith con: rath of queen Tailte, LL 201; in Tuath Tailten, UM 165b, Lec. 514, Stowe D ii 2, 656; cf. Rathcon, in dry. and d. Cashel, Tax

Rathcanann and Rath Con may or may not be identical.

References

  1. ^ a b c d MacKillop, James (1998) A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-280120-1 pp.309-10, 395-6, 76, 20

 
 
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Copyrights:

Celtic Mythology. A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Copyright © James MacKillop 1998, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tailtiu" Read more