Category: folklore
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Material Culture: Sod & Thatch

Turf or sod were used for seasonal housing, like transhumance shelters or semi-permanent housing for landless labourers, who worked communal lands in exchange for rent Ó Reilly 2011). These structures, which often lacked foundations, did not hold up like stone homes but ‘ethnography indicates a highly developed understanding of natural…
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Material Culture: West Room, Shrine & Foundation Sacrifices

A common feature in Irish vernacular architecture is the west room, a parlour in the west of the house, opposite the hearth. This room, which was not often utilised, contained well-honed furniture, religious items, representations of deceased and emigrated relations and pieces symbolising important rites of passage (Arensberg 1959). This…
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Fairy Belief for Approaching Difficult Aspects of Irish Society

TW: vague references to domestic abuse, sexual assault, infant death, death in childbirth and torture.
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Functions of Holy Well Belief and Practice

Holy wells are water sources associated with past or present religious devotion. They may be simple springs or have complex landscapes, including a shelter, a rag tree, an adjacent mass rock, and/or various other natural or man-made features, which serve as stations for ritual interaction. These features and the wells…
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Bealtaine Fire Festival at Hill of Uisneach – Night

As the Cailleach passes the torch to Éiru and one fire becomes all fires…
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Bealtaine Fire Festival at Hill of Uisneach – Day

such a beautiful, calming and inspiring place and time.
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Blessed Bealtaine

May Eve Lore from dúchas.ie NFC 220: 246 On May Eve some people put up a quicken berry branch on the gates and doors to keep the fairies away. More old people wouldn’t like to give a drop of milk away on May Day. They say it would be unlucky.…
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Tending the Wild – Cuid a Dó

Such an incredible time connecting with the land in Dún na nGall these last few days.
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Tending the Wild – Cuid a Haon

Spending the week 🌱🍄 Tending the Wild 🪸🌾 with @wildawakeireland – having a lovely time at @thesonghouse and out on the land and sea in #donegal 🌿
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Blackthorn & Folk Medicine Geekout

Repost from @bmorebata 🦊 🌿The wood most associated with bataireacht and the bataí, the weapons, we use is an draighean (the Blackthorn). Tho it’s not the only wood or even the oldest wood associated with shillelagh (sail éille) fighting, an draighean is the most well known.And we want to help you get…
