The Oldest Known God of this Civilization


  1. Elswet
  2. LadyKelien
  3. Elswet

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Top 1.   Aug 4, 2004 8:27 PM

» Elswet - The Goddess Danu was the mother Goddess of the Tuatha Dé Danann.

She is particularly associated with the province of Munster with its fertile soil and was known as Anu in those parts. The Tuatha Dé Danann were all descended from her. The goddess Danu can be found under many names from Dana, Anu to her Welsh equivalent Don. She is the ancient Irish mother- goddess and was considered to be the goddess of rivers, wells, magic, prosperity, fertility (her totem animal being the mare) and wisdom as well as being a moon goddess.

However she was also, being part of the Morrigan, a goddess of strife and war and, as many Celtic gods and goddess, she was a balance between ‘good’ and ‘evil’.

Some scholars believe that Anu was the primary Earth Goddess and Danu was only the name given to her by the nineteenth century writers. However the nineeenth century writers were so popular that now most people would know of the Tuatha De Danann and the Goddess Danu. The most ancient God on Celtic record. Although the older evidences of Danu have been dated to 10,000 B.C.E, written evidence of this most ancient Celtic God is found in the Irish Lebor Gabala, and dates to about 1000 C.E.. Dana is the mother of the Tuatha De Danann,who later dwindled to the Daoine Sidhe, the Sidhe-folk of Ireland. She was praised as the mother of the Gods, who is beyond all other Gods of this world.

The Name Dana means wisdom,or teacher, as in the English word don, or giving, as in the root of the word donate. Well,lest look first at the Tuatha De Danann, this name means "Children of Dana".

Today,the Irish people, through their veneration for the good St.Bridget, render homage to the divine mother of the people who bear her name Dana--who are the ever-living invisible Faery-People of modern Ireland. The Recorded mythology and literature of ancient Ireland have, very faithfully, perserved a clear picture of the Tuatha De Danann, and their Goddess Dana.Danu is recorded as being the Mother of the Dananns. Her name is usually associated with the Danube.There is also some speculation that in Proto-Celtic periods, the name Danu had been connected with the River Don, in Russia. Don is the Welsh goddess who is equivalent to the Irish Dana, and it seems likely tat she was an immigrant from Ireland, for the children of Don correspond Closely in character and Functions to the Children of Dana. Don is also connected with the River Don in Scotland.
There is a Possible link between the name Dana/Danu, the name Dione, as goddess name in Greece, and the goddess name, Diana, as known by the Romans.A major theme linked to the goddess of the Celtic Pantheon is the association to a particular body of water, usually a river,but at times a spring, lake, or the ocean.

The Divine Ancestress of the Celtic Boii tribe was known as Boann, and linked with the River Boyne in Ireland. Sequanna, a goddess of France, became linked with the River Shannon of Ireland.Linking their goddesses with various bodies of water in turn appears to have linked the Celtic reverence for the goddess as The Great Mare, for the white breakers of the ocean were described in Irish legend as the white mane of the Morrigan's head. If we ponder how the sea and horse draw a parallel in the Celts' mind, we may see a connection in the double use of the word mare. It means sea in Latin and Russian, and is the root of the english word marine. At the same time it was used to designate a female horse. Both meanings of mare may have been derived from the same initial INdo-European source word, possibly the Sanskirt mah meaning mighty.

This word may also be the foundation of the goddess names: Morrigan and Morgan--the roots gan, gin, and gen meaning birth, as in genesis and begin. This interesting connection between the two words may suggest that the origin of the Pantheon was not in Ireland itself, but came from across the sea,and that the symbol of the first God, Dana, may very well have been that of a horse.As an aspect of the Irish goddess worth noting is their wonderful and magickal ability to shape-change,not only as creatures, but also switching from an ugly Hag-state to that of a beautiful woman. The Morrigan becomes and eel, a wolf, a heifer, a raven, and serveral other diverse images of a mortal woman. Macha and the Cailleach Bera take the form of horses, and the Badb takes the form of Royston crows, and also alternating between Hag-state and a young woman. In addition to these powers, there is the martial prowess of Celtic Goddesses, who often acted as ambassadors in battles and rivalries between the Celtic tribes, sitting in on peace councils when disputes were discussed. There is the less documented image of the goddess among the Celts as the figure of the Goddess of Victory, as well as the mother of some of the gods, such as Tailltiu, the step-mother of Lugh, and the goddesses of healing, poetry, and fate.

Pray to the Goddess Danu for a respect for diversity for as she could shape change to suit the situation so she respected the youth in herself as well as the crone or the aged self. In the U.S. youth is worshipped and glorified we can learn much by meditating on this Goddess for she knew the power of the virgin, mother and crone and could find them all in herself. She was the Mother of the Gods.

-- posted by Elswet


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Top 2.   Aug 5, 2004 2:42 AM

» LadyKelien - Re: The Goddess Danu was the mother Goddess of the Tuatha Dé Dan

In response to message posted by Elswet:

Thank you for posting this. It was very well written.

-- posted by LadyKelien


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Top 3.   Oct 30, 2004 6:23 PM

» Elswet - Re: Well Written

In response to Re: The Goddess Danu was the mother Goddess of the Tuatha Dé Dan posted by LadyKelien:

Why, thank you, and you're very welcome.

-- posted by Elswet


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