Irish Myth Gallery
delilahknotty
fuckwq
my commissions
garbuge
sem-pi-ter-nal
odairannies:• banshee: a female spirit in Irish mythology, usually seen as an omen of death and a me
a-z fae → f-gh
The Fomor by John Duncan
The Riders of the Sidhe by John Duncan (click to enlarge)
thewinedarksea:mythology moodboards | canolairish goddess of music and dance, and the mythical inven
stagandserpent:“The Morrígan”, the “phantom queen” of Irish myth. A sovereignty goddess associated w
edsonsdisasterbutton:Selkie. A mythological creature found in Irish folklore. Are said to live as se
James Barry (1741-1806), ‘The Education of Achilles’, 1772Source: http://collections.bri
The Education of Achilles, James Barry, ca. 1772
Irish Ogham series- Eighth feda/letter, Tinne, ‘ingot’ associated with holly, paired with pyrite
Irish Ogham series- ✧・゚:Over the halfway mark:・゚☆✧ with the eleventh feda/letter, Muin, ‘neck/back’
Nathan Anderson, ‘Dullahan - ‘Gan Ceann’ (without a head)’, 2015“The Dullahan is a
gaelfox:HeyO! This was a bit of something I’ve wanted to do for awhile. Had it in my mind to do an I
fluffy-raccoon:All the gifs about selkies
John Duncan (1866-1945), ‘The Riders of the Sidhe’, 1911“John Duncan’s The R
a-z fae →d-e
a-z fae → l-n
ceruleancynic:iammelonlordd:violentpurge09:The Irish werewolf is different from the Teutonic or Euro
thefugitivesaint:Glyn Smith, ‘The Morrígan’, 2016“The Morrígan”, the “phantom queen” of Irish myth.
f/f myths → aífe & emerrequested by @wildandwhirlingwords
Irish Ogham series- Sixth feda/letter, Uath, ‘fear’ or ‘white-thorn’ (hawthorn) paired with thomsoni
Mercury Inventing the LyreJohn Raphael Smith (British; 1751–1812) after James Barry (Irish; 1741–180
a-z fae → bi-bu
a-z myth challenge: @ibuzoo vs @thewinedarkseaf - finvarra, high king of the daoine sidhe in irish
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