- The
Voyage of Bran (Old Irish:
Immram Brain [maic
Febail],
meaning "The
Voyage of Bran [son of
Febail]") is a
medieval seventh- or eighth-century Irish...
- Morn, the last King of the
Picts in
Robert E. Howard's
fiction Bran mac
Febail, the
protagonist of
Immram Brain (The
Voyage of Bran), a tale from Irish...
-
branch of the
sacred apple-tree
bearing blossoms"
encountered by Bran mac
Febail in the
narrative The
Voyage of Bran,
though golden apple fruits are not...
-
white blossoms, is the
incident which sends the
eponymous hero Bran mac
Febail on a
journey to the Otherworld. A
magical silver branch with
three golden...
-
which referred to the Foyle. The
Irish name is An Feabhal,
which refers to
Febail,
father of the
mythical Bran. The
River Foyle is also the fastest-flowing...
-
Luaine ('The
Wooing of Luan') In the
Cycles of the Kings:
Immram Brain maic
Febail ('The
Voyage of Bran son of Febal'),[page needed][better source needed]...
- in
Domain ["The Four-Quarters of the World"],
incomplete Imram Brain mac
Febail ["The
Voyage of Bran son of Febal"], a
fantastic voyage tale, incomplete...
-
Mount Brandon. Some
sources link the name with the
voyages of Bran mac
Febail, however, this is
considered less likely. The
quickest and
easiest route...
-
contention in
absolute definition exists in the case of "Immram
Brain maic
Febail".
Despite the
naming this tale is
considered to form part of the Echtrae...
- 12th-century The
Voyage of Bran in the Old
Irish Book of the Dun Cow, Bran mac
Febail is
visited by a
mysterious woman urging him to sail to the Land of Women...