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Macha

Macha (Irish pronunciation: [ˈmˠaxə]) was a sovereignty goddess[1][2] of ancient Ireland associated with the province of Ulster, particularly the sites of Navan Fort (Eamhain Mhacha)[3] and Armagh (Ard Mhacha),[4] which are named after her.[5] Several figures called Macha appear in Irish mythology and folklore, all believed to derive from the same goddess. She is said to be one of three sisters known as 'the three Morrígna'. Like other sovereignty goddesses, Macha is associated with the land, fertility, kingship, war and horses.[6]

"Macha Curses the Men of Ulster", Stephen Reid's illustration from Eleanor Hull's The Boys' Cuchulainn (1904)

Proinsias Mac Cana discusses three Machas: Macha wife of Nemed, Queen Macha wife of Cimbáeth, and Macha wife of Crunnchu who caused the debility of the Ulstermen.[6] Gregory Toner discusses four, with the addition of Macha Mong Ruad.[7]

Etymology and alias edit

 
Machair east of Uig Bay, Lewis

The name is presumably derived from Proto-Celtic *makajā denoting "a plain" (genitive *makajās "of the plain").[8] In modern Scottish Gaelic, the etymologically related term machair refers to a fertile grassy plain that is maintained by continuous trampling and grazing of livestock.

In the Dindsenchas Macha is called Grian Banchure, the "Sun of Womanfolk" and is referred to as the daughter of Midir of Brí Léith.[4]

Macha, daughter of Partholón edit

A poem in the Lebor Gabála Érenn mentions Macha as one of the daughters of Partholón, leader of the first settlement of Ireland after the flood, although it records nothing about her.[9]

Macha, wife of Nemed edit

Various sources record a second Macha as the wife of Nemed, leader of the second settlement of Ireland after the flood. She was the first of Nemed's people to die in Ireland – twelve years after their arrival according to Geoffrey Keating,[10] twelve days after their arrival according to the Annals of the Four Masters.[11] It is said that the hilltop where she was buried was named after her: Ard Mhacha, "Macha's high place". The surrounding woodland was cleared by Nemed's folk and named Magh Mhacha, "Macha's plain". She is described as the daughter of red-weaponed Aed, as the raven of the raids and diffuser of all excellences.[12]

Macha, daughter of Ernmas edit

Macha, daughter of Ernmas, of the Tuatha Dé Danann, appears in many early sources. She is often mentioned together with her sisters, "Badb and Morrigu, whose name was Anand".[13] The three (with varying names) are often considered a triple goddess associated with war.[14] O'Mulconry's Glossary, a thirteenth-century compilation of glosses from medieval manuscripts preserved in the Yellow Book of Lecan, describes Macha as "one of the three morrígna" (the plural of Morrígan), and says the term Mesrad Machae, "the mast of Macha", refers to "the heads of men that have been slaughtered". A version of the same gloss in MS H.3.18 identifies Macha with Badb, calling the trio "raven women" who instigate battle.[15] Keating explicitly calls them "goddesses",[16] but medieval Irish tradition was keen to remove all trace of pre-Christian religion. Macha is said to have been killed by Balor during the battle with the Fomorians.[17][18]

Macha Mong Ruad edit

Macha Mong Ruad ("red hair"), daughter of Áed Rúad ("red fire" or "fire lord" – a name of the Dagda), was, according to medieval legend and historical tradition, the only queen in the List of High Kings of Ireland. Her father Áed rotated the kingship with his cousins Díthorba and Cimbáeth, seven years at a time. Áed died after his third stint as king, and when his turn came round again, Macha claimed the kingship. Díthorba and Cimbáeth refused to allow a woman to take the throne, and a battle ensued. Macha won, and Díthorba was killed. She won a second battle against Díthorba's sons, who fled into the wilderness of Connacht. She married Cimbáeth, with whom she shared the kingship. Macha pursued Díthorba's sons alone, disguised as a leper, and overcame each of them in turn when they tried to have sex with her, tied them up, and carried the three of them bodily to Ulster. The Ulstermen wanted to have them killed, but Macha instead enslaved them and forced them to build Emain Macha (Navan Fort near Armagh), to be the capital of the Ulaid, marking out its boundaries with her brooch (explaining the name Emain Macha as eó-muin Macha or "Macha's neck-brooch").[19] Macha ruled together with Cimbáeth for seven years, until he died of plague at Emain Macha, and then a further fourteen years on her own, until she was killed by Rechtaid Rígderg.[20][21] The Lebor Gabála synchronises her reign to that of Ptolemy I Soter (323–283 BC).[22] The chronology of Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn dates her reign to 468–461 BC, the Annals of the Four Masters to 661–654 BC.

Marie-Louise Sjoestedt writes of this figure: "In the person of this second Macha we discover a new aspect of the local goddess, that of the warrior and dominator; and this is combined with the sexual aspect in a specific manner which reappears in other myths, the male partner or partners being dominated by the female."[23]

Macha, wife of Cruinniuc edit

Macha, daughter of Sainrith mac Imbaith, was the wife of Cruinniuc, an Ulster farmer. Some time after the death of Cruinniuc's first wife, Macha appears at his house. Without speaking, she begins keeping the house and acting as his wife. Soon she becomes pregnant by him. As long as they were together Cruinniuc's wealth grew. When he leaves to attend a festival organised by the king of Ulster, she warns him that she will only stay with him so long as he does not speak of her to anyone, and he promises to say nothing. However, during a chariot race, he boasts that his wife can run faster than the king's horses. The king orders Cruinniuc be held on pain of death unless he can make good on his claim. Although she is heavily pregnant, Macha is brought to the gathering and the king forces her to race the horses. She wins the race, but then cries out in pain as she gives birth to twins on the finish line; a boy named Fír ("True") and a girl named Fial ("Modest").[4] For disrespecting and humiliating her, she curses the men of Ulster to be overcome with weakness—as weak "as a woman in childbirth"—at the time of their greatest need. This weakness would last for five days and the curse would last for nine generations. Thereafter, the place where Macha gave birth would be called Emain Macha, or "Macha's twins".[24][25]

This tale, The Debility of the Ulstermen (Noínden Ulad) explains the meaning of the name Emain Macha, and explains why none of the Ulstermen but the semi-divine hero Cúchulainn could resist the invasion of Ulster in the Táin Bó Cuailnge (Cattle Raid of Cooley).[5][25] It shows that Macha, as goddess of the land and sovereignty, can be vengeful if disrespected,[2] and how the rule of a bad king leads to disaster.[26]

This Macha is particularly associated with horses—it is perhaps significant that twin colts were born on the same day as Cúchulainn, and that one of his chariot-horses was called Liath Macha or "Macha's Grey"—and she is often compared with the Welsh mythological figure Rhiannon.[5]

Relationships of the Machas edit

Macha is named as the wife of Nemed, son of Agnoman, or alternately as the wife of Crund, son of Agnoman, which may indicate an identity of Nemed with Crund. Macha is also named as the daughter of Midir and Aed the Red.[4]

See also edit

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ Ó hÓgáin, Dáithí (1991). Myth, Legend & Romance: An encyclopaedia of the Irish folk tradition. New York: Prentice Hall. pp. 284–285.
  2. ^ a b Green, Miranda (1997). Celtic Goddesses: Warriors, Virgins and Mothers. London: British Museum Pressl. p. 77. ISBN 9780714123127.
  3. ^ Toner (2010), p. 86.
  4. ^ a b c d Stokes, Whitley, ed. (1870), "The Rennes Dindsenchas", Revue celtique, 16: 44–46. "94. Ard Macha".
  5. ^ a b c Koch, John T. Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO, 2006. p. 1231
  6. ^ a b Mac Cana, Prionsias. "The Goddesses of the Insular Celts". Celtic Mythology. Hamlyn, 1970.
  7. ^ Toner (2010), p. 81.
  8. ^ Proto-Celtic lexicon 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Lebor Gabála Érenn §38
  10. ^ Keating, Foras Feasa ar Éirinn 1.7
  11. ^ Annals of the Four Masters M2850
  12. ^ The Metrical Dindsenchas "Ard Macha"
  13. ^ Lebor Gabála Érenn §62, 64 15 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ James MacKillop, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology, Oxford University Press, 1998, pp. 281–282
  15. ^ Angelique Gulermovich Epstein, War Goddess: The Morrígan and her Germano-Celtic Counterparts, September 1998, pp. 49–52.
  16. ^ Geoffrey Keating, Foras Feasa ar Éirinn 1.11
  17. ^ Lebor Gabála Érenn §60, 62, 64 15 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Whitley Stokes (ed & trans), The Second Battle of Moytura, p. 101
  19. ^ Eugene O'Curry, Lectures on the Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History, 1861, Appendix No. XXXVIII
  20. ^ Geoffrey Keating, Foras Feasa ar Éirinn 1.27-1.28
  21. ^ Annals of the Four Masters M4532-4546
  22. ^ R. A. Stewart Macalister (ed. & trans.), Lebor Gabála Érenn: The Book of the Taking of Ireland Part V, Irish Texts Society, 1956, pp. 263–267
  23. ^ Sjoestedt, Marie-Louise (1982). Gods and Heroes of the Celts. Translated by Myles Dillon (2nd ed.). Berkeley, CA: Turtle Island Foundation. pp. 28–9. ISBN 0-913666-52-1.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  25. ^ a b Hull, Vernam, tr., ed. (1968), "Noínden Ulad: The debility of the Ulidians", Celtica, 8: 1–42{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  26. ^ Fee, Christopher and Leeming, David. The Goddess: Myths of the Great Mother. Reaktion Books, 2016.
Bibliography
  • Toner, Gregory (2010). "Macha and the Invention of Myth". Ériu. 60: 81–109. doi:10.1353/eri.2010.0007. JSTOR 41417580. S2CID 245847281.
Further reading
  • Tatár, Maria Magdolna. "The Cult of Macha in Eastern Europe". In: The Journal of the Indo-European Studies (JIES) Volume 35, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2007. pp. 323–344.
Preceded by
Cimbáeth
and Macha
High Queen of Ireland
(Alone)

LGE 4th/3rd century BC
FFE 468–461 BC
AFM 661–654 BC
Succeeded by

macha, other, uses, disambiguation, irish, pronunciation, ˈmˠaxə, sovereignty, goddess, ancient, ireland, associated, with, province, ulster, particularly, sites, navan, fort, eamhain, mhacha, armagh, mhacha, which, named, after, several, figures, called, appe. For other uses see Macha disambiguation Macha Irish pronunciation ˈmˠaxe was a sovereignty goddess 1 2 of ancient Ireland associated with the province of Ulster particularly the sites of Navan Fort Eamhain Mhacha 3 and Armagh Ard Mhacha 4 which are named after her 5 Several figures called Macha appear in Irish mythology and folklore all believed to derive from the same goddess She is said to be one of three sisters known as the three Morrigna Like other sovereignty goddesses Macha is associated with the land fertility kingship war and horses 6 Macha Curses the Men of Ulster Stephen Reid s illustration from Eleanor Hull s The Boys Cuchulainn 1904 Proinsias Mac Cana discusses three Machas Macha wife of Nemed Queen Macha wife of Cimbaeth and Macha wife of Crunnchu who caused the debility of the Ulstermen 6 Gregory Toner discusses four with the addition of Macha Mong Ruad 7 Contents 1 Etymology and alias 2 Macha daughter of Partholon 3 Macha wife of Nemed 4 Macha daughter of Ernmas 5 Macha Mong Ruad 6 Macha wife of Cruinniuc 7 Relationships of the Machas 8 See also 9 ReferencesEtymology and alias edit nbsp Machair east of Uig Bay LewisThe name is presumably derived from Proto Celtic makaja denoting a plain genitive makajas of the plain 8 In modern Scottish Gaelic the etymologically related term machair refers to a fertile grassy plain that is maintained by continuous trampling and grazing of livestock In the Dindsenchas Macha is called Grian Banchure the Sun of Womanfolk and is referred to as the daughter of Midir of Bri Leith 4 Macha daughter of Partholon editA poem in the Lebor Gabala Erenn mentions Macha as one of the daughters of Partholon leader of the first settlement of Ireland after the flood although it records nothing about her 9 Macha wife of Nemed editVarious sources record a second Macha as the wife of Nemed leader of the second settlement of Ireland after the flood She was the first of Nemed s people to die in Ireland twelve years after their arrival according to Geoffrey Keating 10 twelve days after their arrival according to the Annals of the Four Masters 11 It is said that the hilltop where she was buried was named after her Ard Mhacha Macha s high place The surrounding woodland was cleared by Nemed s folk and named Magh Mhacha Macha s plain She is described as the daughter of red weaponed Aed as the raven of the raids and diffuser of all excellences 12 Macha daughter of Ernmas editMacha daughter of Ernmas of the Tuatha De Danann appears in many early sources She is often mentioned together with her sisters Badb and Morrigu whose name was Anand 13 The three with varying names are often considered a triple goddess associated with war 14 O Mulconry s Glossary a thirteenth century compilation of glosses from medieval manuscripts preserved in the Yellow Book of Lecan describes Macha as one of the three morrigna the plural of Morrigan and says the term Mesrad Machae the mast of Macha refers to the heads of men that have been slaughtered A version of the same gloss in MS H 3 18 identifies Macha with Badb calling the trio raven women who instigate battle 15 Keating explicitly calls them goddesses 16 but medieval Irish tradition was keen to remove all trace of pre Christian religion Macha is said to have been killed by Balor during the battle with the Fomorians 17 18 Macha Mong Ruad editMacha Mong Ruad red hair daughter of Aed Ruad red fire or fire lord a name of the Dagda was according to medieval legend and historical tradition the only queen in the List of High Kings of Ireland Her father Aed rotated the kingship with his cousins Dithorba and Cimbaeth seven years at a time Aed died after his third stint as king and when his turn came round again Macha claimed the kingship Dithorba and Cimbaeth refused to allow a woman to take the throne and a battle ensued Macha won and Dithorba was killed She won a second battle against Dithorba s sons who fled into the wilderness of Connacht She married Cimbaeth with whom she shared the kingship Macha pursued Dithorba s sons alone disguised as a leper and overcame each of them in turn when they tried to have sex with her tied them up and carried the three of them bodily to Ulster The Ulstermen wanted to have them killed but Macha instead enslaved them and forced them to build Emain Macha Navan Fort near Armagh to be the capital of the Ulaid marking out its boundaries with her brooch explaining the name Emain Macha as eo muin Macha or Macha s neck brooch 19 Macha ruled together with Cimbaeth for seven years until he died of plague at Emain Macha and then a further fourteen years on her own until she was killed by Rechtaid Rigderg 20 21 The Lebor Gabala synchronises her reign to that of Ptolemy I Soter 323 283 BC 22 The chronology of Keating s Foras Feasa ar Eirinn dates her reign to 468 461 BC the Annals of the Four Masters to 661 654 BC Marie Louise Sjoestedt writes of this figure In the person of this second Macha we discover a new aspect of the local goddess that of the warrior and dominator and this is combined with the sexual aspect in a specific manner which reappears in other myths the male partner or partners being dominated by the female 23 Macha wife of Cruinniuc editMacha daughter of Sainrith mac Imbaith was the wife of Cruinniuc an Ulster farmer Some time after the death of Cruinniuc s first wife Macha appears at his house Without speaking she begins keeping the house and acting as his wife Soon she becomes pregnant by him As long as they were together Cruinniuc s wealth grew When he leaves to attend a festival organised by the king of Ulster she warns him that she will only stay with him so long as he does not speak of her to anyone and he promises to say nothing However during a chariot race he boasts that his wife can run faster than the king s horses The king orders Cruinniuc be held on pain of death unless he can make good on his claim Although she is heavily pregnant Macha is brought to the gathering and the king forces her to race the horses She wins the race but then cries out in pain as she gives birth to twins on the finish line a boy named Fir True and a girl named Fial Modest 4 For disrespecting and humiliating her she curses the men of Ulster to be overcome with weakness as weak as a woman in childbirth at the time of their greatest need This weakness would last for five days and the curse would last for nine generations Thereafter the place where Macha gave birth would be called Emain Macha or Macha s twins 24 25 This tale The Debility of the Ulstermen Noinden Ulad explains the meaning of the name Emain Macha and explains why none of the Ulstermen but the semi divine hero Cuchulainn could resist the invasion of Ulster in the Tain Bo Cuailnge Cattle Raid of Cooley 5 25 It shows that Macha as goddess of the land and sovereignty can be vengeful if disrespected 2 and how the rule of a bad king leads to disaster 26 This Macha is particularly associated with horses it is perhaps significant that twin colts were born on the same day as Cuchulainn and that one of his chariot horses was called Liath Macha or Macha s Grey and she is often compared with the Welsh mythological figure Rhiannon 5 Relationships of the Machas editMacha is named as the wife of Nemed son of Agnoman or alternately as the wife of Crund son of Agnoman which may indicate an identity of Nemed with Crund Macha is also named as the daughter of Midir and Aed the Red 4 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Macha Cliodna Grian MongfindReferences editCitations o hogain Daithi 1991 Myth Legend amp Romance An encyclopaedia of the Irish folk tradition New York Prentice Hall pp 284 285 a b Green Miranda 1997 Celtic Goddesses Warriors Virgins and Mothers London British Museum Pressl p 77 ISBN 9780714123127 Toner 2010 p 86 a b c d Stokes Whitley ed 1870 The Rennes Dindsenchas Revue celtique 16 44 46 94 Ard Macha a b c Koch John T Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO 2006 p 1231 a b Mac Cana Prionsias The Goddesses of the Insular Celts Celtic Mythology Hamlyn 1970 Toner 2010 p 81 Proto Celtic lexicon Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Lebor Gabala Erenn 38 Keating Foras Feasa ar Eirinn 1 7 Annals of the Four Masters M2850 The Metrical Dindsenchas Ard Macha Lebor Gabala Erenn 62 64 Archived 15 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine James MacKillop Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford University Press 1998 pp 281 282 Angelique Gulermovich Epstein War Goddess The Morrigan and her Germano Celtic Counterparts September 1998 pp 49 52 Geoffrey Keating Foras Feasa ar Eirinn 1 11 Lebor Gabala Erenn 60 62 64 Archived 15 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine Whitley Stokes ed amp trans The Second Battle of Moytura p 101 Eugene O Curry Lectures on the Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History 1861 Appendix No XXXVIII Geoffrey Keating Foras Feasa ar Eirinn 1 27 1 28 Annals of the Four Masters M4532 4546 R A Stewart Macalister ed amp trans Lebor Gabala Erenn The Book of the Taking of Ireland Part V Irish Texts Society 1956 pp 263 267 Sjoestedt Marie Louise 1982 Gods and Heroes of the Celts Translated by Myles Dillon 2nd ed Berkeley CA Turtle Island Foundation pp 28 9 ISBN 0 913666 52 1 The Debility of the Ulstermen Archived from the original on 26 December 2013 Retrieved 20 October 2007 a b Hull Vernam tr ed 1968 Noinden Ulad The debility of the Ulidians Celtica 8 1 42 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Fee Christopher and Leeming David The Goddess Myths of the Great Mother Reaktion Books 2016 BibliographyToner Gregory 2010 Macha and the Invention of Myth Eriu 60 81 109 doi 10 1353 eri 2010 0007 JSTOR 41417580 S2CID 245847281 Further readingTatar Maria Magdolna The Cult of Macha in Eastern Europe In The Journal of the Indo European Studies JIES Volume 35 Number 3 amp 4 Fall Winter 2007 pp 323 344 Preceded byCimbaethand Macha High Queen of Ireland Alone LGE 4th 3rd century BCFFE 468 461 BCAFM 661 654 BC Succeeded byRechtaid Rigderg nbsp This page or section lists people that share the same given name If an internal link led you here you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Macha amp oldid 1164008855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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