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Encyclopedia > Sucellos

The Dagda is an important god of Irish mythology. His name means "The Good God", (Old Irish- "deagh dia"; Mod. Irish- "dea-Dia") not good in a moral sense, but good at everything, or all-powerful. The Dagda is a father-figure (he is also known as Eochaid Ollathair, or Eochaid All-Father) and a protector of the tribe. In some texts his father is Elatha, in others his mother is Ethlinn.


Irish tales depict the Dagda as a figure of immense power, armed with a magic club and associated with a cauldron. The club was supposed to be able to kill nine men with one blow; with the handle he could return the slain to life. The cauldron was bottomless, capable of feeding an army. He also possessed a richly ornamented magic harp made of oak which, when the Dagda played it, put the seasons in their correct order; other accounts tell of the harp being used to command the order of battle. He possessed two pigs which could be cooked and eaten, but would remain whole, alive and undiminished, and ever-laden fruit trees.


The Dagda was moreover the High King of the Tuatha Dé Danann, the supernatural beings who inhabited Ireland prior to the coming of the Celts. His lover was Boann and his wife was Breg. Prior to the battle with the Fomorians, he coupled with the goddess of war, the Morrigan, on Samhain in exchange for a plan of battle.


Despite his great power and prestige, the Dagda is sometimes depicted as oafish and crude, even comical, wearing a short, rough tunic that barely covers his rump, dragging his great penis on the ground.


The Dagda had an affair with Boann, wife of Nechtan. In order to hide their affair, Dagda made the sun stand still for nine months; therefore their son, Aengus, was conceived, gestated and born in one day. He, along with Boann, helped Aengus search for his love.


The Dagda was also the father of Bodb Dearg, Cermait, Midir, Aine and Brigit. He was the brother or father of Ogma, who is probably related to the Gaulish god Ogmios; Ogmios, depicted as an old man with a club, is one of the closest Gaulish parallels to the Dagda. Another Gaulish god who may be related to the Dagda is Sucellos, the striker, depicted with a hammer and cup.


He is credited with a seventy or eighty-year reign (depending on source) over the Tuatha Dé Danann, before dying at the Brú na Bóinne (Newgrange), finally succumbing to poison administered by Cethlenn during the first battle of Magh Tuiredh.


The Cerne Abbas giant, a famous outline of an ithyphallic giant with a club cut into the chalky soil at Cerne Abbas, in Dorset, England, was probably produced in Roman times, but may represent the Dagda.



Preceded by:
Lug
High King of Ireland
70 or 80 years
Succeeded by:
Delbáeth



External links

Cerne Abbas giant (http://www.sacredsites.com/europe/england/cerne_giant.html)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Hierarch Sucellos (766 words)
Sucellos was a Pan-Celtic, grail father of abundance, fertility, protection, and prosperity.
The patron of agriculture, dogs, trees, forests, ravens, and woodland magic, Sucellos was often depicted carrying a grail cup cauldron and a hammer mallet, or a beer barrel suspended from a pole.
The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Sucellos and the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation are the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge at Tinicum, which is located in Tinicum Township by the Philadelphia International Airport in Philadelphia and Delaware counties in Pennsylvania, U.S.A.; as well as, the Carnac Megaliths, South Brittany, France.
Sucellos (77 words)
Often he holds a cup and a purse in his hand, which denotes a fertility god.
Sucellos is occasionally confused with the popular vegetation god Silvanus.
Article "Sucellos" created on 25 August 1997; last modified on 25 August 1997 (Revision 1).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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