- In
Irish mythology,
Fódla or Fótla (modern spelling: Fódhla,
Fodhla or Fóla),
daughter of Delbáeth and
Ernmas of the
Tuatha Dé Danann, was one of the...
-
goddesses ****ociated with Éire,
Banbha and
Fódla were Badb,
Macha and The Morrígan. Ériu,
Banba and
Fódla are also
interpreted as
goddesses of sovereignty...
- Ériu,
Banba and
Fodla, who
asked that the
island be
named after them; Ériu is the
origin of the
modern name Éire, and
Banba and
Fodla are
still sometimes...
- an
important triumvirate of
matron goddesses, with her sisters, Ériu and
Fódla.
According to Seathrún Céitinn she
worshipped Macha, who is also sometimes...
- his
father himself. His
mother was Ernmas. He had
three daughters, Banba,
Fódla, and Ériu, by his own mother. He
reigned for ten years,
before he and his...
- was
named Mac
Cecht after his god, Cecht, the ploughshare. His wife was
Fodla, one of the
three eponymous sister-goddesses of Ireland. He and his brothers...
-
Archaic Irish and
preserved in the name of the
Corcu Duibne Ériu,
Banba &
Fódla -
tutelary triumvirate of goddesses, sisters,
eponymous for
Ireland (mainly...
-
daughters include the
trinity of
eponymous Irish goddesses Ériu,
Banba and
Fódla, the
trinity of war
goddesses the Badb,
Macha and Mórrígan, and also a trinity...
- are also
named as
sisters of the
three land
goddesses Ériu, Banba, and
Fódla. The Morrígan is
described as the
envious wife of The
Dagda and a shape-shifting...
- Ériu,
Banba and
Fodla,
requested that the
island be
named after them: Ériu is the
earlier form of the
modern name Éire, and
Banba and
Fodla were
often used...