Neha Patil (Editor)

Tír na nÓg

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Otherworld

Notable characters
  
Oisín, Niamh

Tír na nÓg tirnanogstudiocomwpcontentuploads201206oisi

T r na n g live in concert from the round room at the mansion house dublin ireland


In Irish mythology and folklore, Tír na nÓg ([tʲiːɾˠ n̪ˠə ˈn̪ˠoːɡ]; "Land of the Young") or Tír na hÓige ("Land of Youth") is one of the names for the Otherworld, or perhaps for a part of it. It is depicted as a supernatural realm of everlasting youth, beauty, health, abundance and joy. Its inhabitants are the Tuatha Dé Danann, the gods of pre-Christian Ireland. In the echtrae (adventure) and immram (voyage) tales, various Irish mythical heroes visit Tír na nÓg after a voyage or an invitation from one of its residents. They reach it by entering ancient burial mounds or caves, or by going under water or across the sea.

Contents

Other Old Irish names for the Otherworld include Tír Tairngire ("Land of Promise/Promised Land"), Tír fo Thuinn ("Land under the Wave"), Mag Mell ("Plain of Delight/Delightful Plain"), Ildathach ("Multicoloured place"), and Emain Ablach (the Isle of Apple Trees).

Celtic woman t r na n g audio ft oonagh


Tradition

Tír na nÓg is best known from the tale of Oisín and Niamh. In the tale, Oisín (a human hero) and Niamh (a woman of the Otherworld) fall in love. She brings him to Tír na nÓg on a magical horse that can travel over water. After spending what seems to be three years there, Oisín becomes homesick and wants to return to Ireland. Niamh reluctantly lets him return on the magical horse, but warns him never to touch the ground. When he returns, he finds that 300 years have passed in Ireland. Oisín falls from the horse. He instantly becomes elderly, as the years catch up with him, and he quickly dies of old age.

"A leannan sidhe," a beautiful fairy sweetheart, "can lure you against your will into Tir-na-nOg," wrote Patrick Harpur.

In the 1997 movie Titanic, towards the end, as the water fills the ship, an Irish mother (played by Jeanette Goldstein) can be seen telling the tale to her two children as they fall asleep in their bed.

Similar tales

This story of Oisín and Niamh bears a striking similarity to many other tales, including the Japanese tale of Urashima Tarō. Francis Hindes Groome recorded another such tale in his Gypsy Folk Tales. Another version concerns King Herla, a legendary king of the ancient Britons, who visited the Otherworld, only to return some two hundred years later after the lands had been settled by the Anglo-Saxons. The "Seven Sleepers of Ephesus", a group of Christian youths who hid inside a cave outside the city of Ephesus around 250 AD, purportedly awoke approximately 180 years later during the reign of Theodosius II.

  • Heaven
  • Valhalla
  • Nirvana
  • References

    Tír na nÓg Wikipedia


    Similar Topics