This article deals with the existence in medieval Irish literature, and to a lesser extent in medieval Welsh literature, of two parallel developments in the use of references to fish and aquatic or marine animals. The first is the symbolic use, often analysed as the result of the evolution of mythological accounts, such as in the legend of Taliesin. The second, lesser studied, is the descriptive use, which represents direct experience, or perhaps even to some degree social and cultural attitudes to fishing in these countries in the Middle Ages, as in the Irish poetry of the Agallamh na Senórach “Colloquy of the ancients” collection, for instance. The purpose of this article isto show that the symbolic or the mythological is but one aspect o...
Abstract: Overview over the early medieval Irish saga literature. Transmission: Oral and literary tr...
This study traces the cultural interplay between Irish and Old English literary landscapes. Combinin...
The author offers a study of the "Celtic bestiary" which is understood here as the sum of the reel s...
This article deals with the existence in medieval Irish literature, and to a lesser extent in mediev...
Cet article traite de l’existence dans la littérature irlandaise, et dans une moindre mesure dans la...
This research takes the sea and its creatures as the common focus for an investigation of a series o...
In the Middle Ages Ireland's extensive and now famous literature was unknown outside the Gaelic-spea...
In this essay some ten of miracles relating to fishing and to the sea in Central and Southern Europe...
While various legends are known in Ireland, in Brittany and in Galicia about miraculous sea-voyages ...
The author presents three poems and three brief glosses by Irish authors that were written about the...
Fish is one of the most abundant wild foods available to a small island nation. Certain species of s...
This chapter was financed by Portuguese national funds via Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, I.P...
379 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Scholars have long noted diff...
TITLE: The Wrath of the Water and Its Relationship with Geasa in the Celtic Mythology AUTHOR: Kristý...
International audienceThis paper explores the tradition of Celtic river-goddesses in Ireland, Britai...
Abstract: Overview over the early medieval Irish saga literature. Transmission: Oral and literary tr...
This study traces the cultural interplay between Irish and Old English literary landscapes. Combinin...
The author offers a study of the "Celtic bestiary" which is understood here as the sum of the reel s...
This article deals with the existence in medieval Irish literature, and to a lesser extent in mediev...
Cet article traite de l’existence dans la littérature irlandaise, et dans une moindre mesure dans la...
This research takes the sea and its creatures as the common focus for an investigation of a series o...
In the Middle Ages Ireland's extensive and now famous literature was unknown outside the Gaelic-spea...
In this essay some ten of miracles relating to fishing and to the sea in Central and Southern Europe...
While various legends are known in Ireland, in Brittany and in Galicia about miraculous sea-voyages ...
The author presents three poems and three brief glosses by Irish authors that were written about the...
Fish is one of the most abundant wild foods available to a small island nation. Certain species of s...
This chapter was financed by Portuguese national funds via Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, I.P...
379 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Scholars have long noted diff...
TITLE: The Wrath of the Water and Its Relationship with Geasa in the Celtic Mythology AUTHOR: Kristý...
International audienceThis paper explores the tradition of Celtic river-goddesses in Ireland, Britai...
Abstract: Overview over the early medieval Irish saga literature. Transmission: Oral and literary tr...
This study traces the cultural interplay between Irish and Old English literary landscapes. Combinin...
The author offers a study of the "Celtic bestiary" which is understood here as the sum of the reel s...