- Ériu
In
Irish mythology , Ériu (IPA|/ˈeːrʲu/), daughter ofErnmas of theTuatha Dé Danann , was the eponymous matrongoddess ofIreland . Her husband wasMac Gréine (‘Son of the Sun’). ["Lebor Gabála Érenn ". Online translation at [http://www.ancienttexts.org/library/celtic/ctexts/lebor4.html#62 www.ancienttexts.org] ] She was the mother ofBres by PrinceElatha of theFomorians .The English name for Ireland comes from the name Ériu and the Germanic (Old Norse or Anglo-Saxon) word "land".
Role and mythic portrayal
With her sisters,
Banba andFodla , she was part of an important triumvirate of goddesses. When the Milesians arrived from Spain each of the three sisters asked that her name be given to the country. This was granted to them, although Ériu (Éire ) became the chief name in use (Banba and Fodla are still sometimes used as poetic names for Ireland, much asAlbion is forGreat Britain ).Ériu, Banba and Fodhla are interpreted as goddesses of sovereignty. [ [http://www.taroscopes.com/astro-theology/astrotheology2.html Astro-Theology and Sidereal Mythology] ]
According to Seathrún Céitinn the three goddesses of Éire, Banbha and Fódhla were Badhbh,
Macha and Móirríoghan (respectively?). [Seathrún Céitinn, "Foras Feasa ar Érinn". [http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T100054/index.html CELT online translation] .] Like Ériu, Badb is also sometimes named as a daughter of Ernmas; the two goddesses may possibly therefore be seen as equivalent.Fact|date=October 2007Name and etymology
The
University of Wales ' reconstructed Proto-Celtic lexicon gives *"Φīwerjon-" (nominative singular "Φīwerjō") as the Proto-Celtic etymology of this name. [ [http://www.wales.ac.uk/documents/external/cawcs/pcl-moe.pdf Proto-Celtic—English lexicon] ] This Celtic form implies Proto-Indo-European *piHwerjon-, likely related to the adjectival stem *piHwer- "fat" (cf.Sanskrit pīvan, f. pīvarī and by-form pīvara, "fat, full, abounding") hence meaning "fat land" or "land of abundance", applied at an early date to the island ofIreland . The Proto-Celtic form became *īweriū [Mallory, J.P. and D.Q. Adams, ed. "Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture." London: Fitzroy Dearborn Pub., 1997, p. 194] in Q-Celtic (Proto-Goidelic). From a similar or somewhat later form were also borrowed Greek polytonic|Ἰέρνη "I [w] ernē" and polytonic|Ἰουερνία "Iouernia"; the latter form was converted intoLatin "Hibernia ".References
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