-
meaning "the folk of the
goddess Danu"), also
known by the
earlier name
Tuath Dé ("tribe of the gods"), are a
supernatural race in
Irish mythology. Many...
-
Túath (plural túatha) is the Old
Irish term for the
basic political and
jurisdictional unit of
Gaelic Ireland.
Túath can
refer to both a
geographical territory...
- one of the
Tuath Dé, or a king's
right to rule is
affirmed by an
encounter with an
otherworldly woman (see
sovereignty goddess). The
Tuath Dé can also...
- Loch
Tuath (Scottish Gaelic: Loch-a-
Tuath) is a sea loch in the
Inner Hebrides,
Scotland that
separates the Isle of Mull and the
island of Ulva. Loch Tuath...
- to Greece.
Those who went into the
north became the
Tuatha Dé
Danann (or
Tuath Dé), the main
pagan gods of Ireland.
Those who went to
Greece became the...
-
North Uist (Scottish Gaelic:
Uibhist a
Tuath; Scots:
North Uise) is an
island and
community in the
Outer Hebrides of Scotland. In
Donald Munro's A Description...
-
North Ayrshire (Scottish Gaelic:
Siorrachd Àir a
Tuath,
pronounced [ˈʃirˠəxk aːɾʲ ə ˈt̪ʰuə]) is one of 32
council areas in Scotland. The
council area...
- [ˈnûːrˌʂøːn], Nynorsk: Nordsjøen, Scots:
North Sea and
Scottish Gaelic: An Cuan a
Tuath. A 1482
recreation of a map from Ptolemy's
Geography showing the "Oce****...
-
Lanarkshire (Scots:
North Lanrikshire;
Scottish Gaelic:
Siorrachd Lannraig a
Tuath) is one of the 32
council areas of Scotland. It
borders the north-east of...
- present" and "March of the Celts" "echoes from the past". "Deireadh an
Tuath",
which translates from
Irish as "End of the Tribe",
refers to past spirits...