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Topic: Partholons


In the News (Tue 2 Dec 08)

  
  Partholon - free-definition   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The Partholonians were named after their leader Partholon, son of Sera, who was the king of Greece.
Partholon had lost his left eye in the attack on his parents.
Saying: O Partholon, is it possible for a woman to be near honey, or a child next to new milk, or a cat smell fresh meat, or a workman see sharp tools, or a man and woman be close in private, without meddling the one with the other?
www.free-definition.com /Partholons.html   (352 words)

  
 The People of Ancient Ireland
The first invaders of Ireland were a people called Partholons who arrived on the Island with a mere 25 men and 24 women warriors and led by the king Partholon.
The Partholons were after power but they were unable to defeat the powerful Formorians and eventually were destroyed by a plague created by the Formorians.
Partholon’s eldest son named Rudraidhe is considered the founder of the royal line of old Ulster.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/celtic_myths/115226   (999 words)

  
 Magog, Scythians, and Ireland
Partholon came with Dealgnaid, his wife, and their three sons, Rudhruidhe, Slangha, and Laighlinne, with their wives, and a host of about a thousand.
The reason Partholon fled to Ireland is that in battling with his brother over the kingdom he killed his Father and mother.
About 30 years after Partholons group was destroyed by the plague Neimheadh son of Agnoman, son of Pamp, son of Tat, son of Seara, son of Srú, son of Easrú, son of Framant, son of Fathacht, son of Magog, son of Japheth, son of Noah came to settle in Ireland.
www.biblefacts.org /myth/Ireland.html   (738 words)

  
 Irish History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
It is said that when Partholon went hunting and fishing one day, he left his wife and Toba his henchman to guard the island.
Partholon arrived in Ireland with, as part of his retinue, seven labourers, two plough men, two plough irons and four oxen and introduced agriculture into Ireland.
Partholon was described by the ancients as the "chief of every craft".
www.odyssy.net /users/erica/wicca/irish.htm   (2045 words)

  
 Fomorians
In Irish-Celtic mythology, the Fomorians are a race of demonic giants, ancient occupants of Ireland (or sometimes mentioned as a mythical, prehistoric people who raided and pillaged Ireland from the sea).
The first to invade Ireland were the Partholons, but after many battles the Fomorians afflicted them all with plague.
After them came the Nemeds, who in their very first battle were defeated and enslaved.
www.pantheon.org /articles/f/fomorians.html   (205 words)

  
 [No title]
Although sometimes considered to be an early faerie race, the Formorians are usually portrayed as demons or sea monsters, where their patron goddess is Domnu, whose name means "The Deep" in reference to their banishment into the sea.
The first invaders of Ireland were the Partholons, led by their king Partholan.
Partholan came to the island with a force of only 25 men and 24 women warriors, leaving even his wife Dealgnaid (Dalny) behind (she had an affair with his servant Togda while he was gone).
www.geocities.com /Area51/Vault/6990/formor.html   (1824 words)

  
 Celtic & Vedic Culture
This Celtic myth is about a race of Gods before the people of Danu called the Partholons, who also fought with the Fomors.
The Partholons fought against a Fomor surnamed Cichol (or Cenchos) the Footless.
It is with Cichol that comparisons with Vrtra have been drawn because of them both being of fantastic proportions and having a "Footless and handless" (RG 1, 32:7) serpent/dragon appearance.
www.geocities.com /indianpaganism/celticvedic.html   (4356 words)

  
 Clannada na Gadelica - Gaelic Traditionalist Resource Site   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The sacrifice of a king is is thought by many to be evidenced in an obscure statement in the Leabhar Gebhala Erenn, where Partholon had gone on a hunt, during which time his wife had taken another lover.
Hence, we see perhaps where the killing of the dog by Partholon was a fulfilling of a role by the dog, that once Partholon himself would have filled.
What should also be apparent here, with Partholons hunt, and the dog being associated with the hunt, is that perhaps the Great Hunt was a pan-Celtic idea, having a home even here in the Goidelic worldview.
www.clannada.org /theology_sacralkingship.php   (2981 words)

  
 Celtic Myths
However, the Fomors lived mainly in the sea.
The first outside race to invade Ireland was the race of the Partholon; very little is known of them.
After 300 years of struggle against the Fomors, the Partholons died of an epidemic.
www.empathys.co.uk /211.html   (1054 words)

  
 Celtic Mythology
But during Partholon’s reign the ground was tilled and farmed and seven new lakes were formed.
Three centuries later Partholon’s people, now numbering five thousand, are said to have been wiped out by an epidemic.
Notice the first race to inhabit Ireland, the Partholons, made their successes in the practice of agriculture.
www.cliftonunitarian.com /toddstalks/celticmythology.htm   (2722 words)

  
 Maui Celtic - A Celtic Jewellery / Bagpiping Source on Maui, Hawaii
Only one of her tribe, Fintan, the White Ancient, survived the deluge.
The Partholons arrived next, and battled the Fomorian warlike residents, winning possession of the island for 300 years, until destroyed by plague.
Next were the Nemedians (possibly of Greek or Scythian origin), who beat the Fomorians several times, but were decimated by plague, and were finally were defeated by their foes.
mauiceltic.com /ireland.htm   (1322 words)

  
 Ireland People Welcome Volunteers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Some claim that the mythical tribe of the Fomorians inhabited Ireland long before any other peoples.
Many scholars agree that the first outside people to move to Ireland's interior were the Partholons, who are said to have struggled 300 years against the Fomors, and then died of an epidemic.
Later came colonizers from Spain or Greece called the Fir Bolgs (Erainn).
www.globalvolunteers.org /1main/ireland/irelandpeople.htm   (898 words)

  
 Junction Issue 5   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
But in these two countries, they had to face different invadors.
Partholons, the first invaders of Ireland, often fought against Fomorians but never defeated them : they finally died from the plague.
Then came the Nemeds, who lost their first battle.
www.up.univ-mrs.fr /~wjafa/BackIssues/Issue05.html   (5024 words)

  
 Razors Under the Skin
They ruled the land and held it against all comers.
All invaders they vanquished, like the sly Partholons and their king the Father-Slayer or enslaved, like the mighty Nemeds.
Both were rebellious children of Fomor and both tried its power in vain.
www.comicfic.net /hfp2003/doqz.htm   (12805 words)

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