Saint Bridgt Festival February 1st 2024

6 months ago
30

Brendan McCreanor playing the ulian pipes.
IrishCentral
BACK
DEATH NOTICES
IRISH HERITAGE TREE
SHOP
Best of Ireland Shopping
Store Locator
Buy Irish
NEWS
Northern Ireland
Crime
Politics
Business
Opinion
Community
ROOTS
History
Genealogy
Boyne Valley
Great Hunger
Easter Rising
The Kennedys
Titanic
CULTURE
IrishCentral Storytellers
Entertainment
Food & Drink
Education
Craic
Events
Movies
Music
TRAVEL
Ireland of the Welcomes
Explore Ireland
Video
Top Destinations
Travel Tips
Ireland's Top Hotels
Dream homes
NEWSLETTERS

The Celtic and Catholic traditions of St. Brigid and her cross
Brigid - the Celtic goddess and Catholic saint - wields immense power in both the Irish mythological and religious imagination.
Brendan Patrick Keane
@IrishCentral
Jan 29, 2024
Ireland\'s Saint Brigid merges both Catholic and Celtic traditions
Ireland's Saint Brigid merges both Catholic and Celtic traditions GETTY
St. Brigid's Day, February 1, is when Ireland remembers the Celtic goddess Brigid and her immense power in both the Irish mythological and religious imagination.

The goddess Brigid was the daughter of the Dagda and one of the Tuatha Dé Danann before she was melded with the Christian saint of the same name in the Middle Ages.

In ancient Celtic tradition, the holiday of Imbolc is observed on February 1 or 2 as a day to celebrate Bríd transforming from a cailleach ("witch") into a maiden who collects kindling to make a fire in the winter that will warm the spring and make her young again.

READ MORE
Everything you need to know about St. Brigid, Ireland's female patron saint
The holiday is understood through the stories of the incredible Brighid. She was the inventor of the mourning songs called caoineadh or "keening." Legend has it that she keens to mourn the death of her son Ruadán and so invents the art form. Brighid's caoineadh is like the Tibetan ritual of ushering souls to nirvana in the Book of the Dead.

The meaning behind St. Brigid's Cross
St. Brigid's Cross. (Getty Images)2Gallery
St. Brigid's Cross. (Getty Images)

The Irish tradition of making crosses on Imbolc or Lá Fhéile Bhríde (St. Brigid's Day) is remembered by most Irish people as a Christian ritual.

The spiral of the Brighid cross invokes the North Star and the pattern that the Big Dipper makes in the sky over the course of a year. As the night sky turns around the North Star, the Big Dipper turns through the seasonal year like the hand of a clock.

ADVERTISING

Brigid is the fire-keeper of that flame of life that mothers tend to so that we don't die in the winter, and so the lines of the family are not broken by the trauma of the cold months. In the winter, Brighid becomes the cailleach, the woman in agedness, and on Imbolc, she collected the kindling of the fires that get her to the spring of regeneration.

Christian interpretation in Ireland makes Brigid into a nun, and children occupy themselves by taking bits of straw and weaving this potential-kindling into the shape of spiraling Brigid's crosses.

St. Brigid is said to have invented the cross herself while attending a sickbed and picking up rushes from the floor to craft them into a sacred cross.

Taking up the tradition in its many forms focuses the mind in the meditation of craft, and connects our winter minds mad at the cold to the great wheel that turns and is slowly bringing us into the spring of renewal.

READ MORE
How Brigid went from a Celtic goddess to Catholic saint
What does it mean to be an Irish woman? Our community responds ahead of Brigid's Day

Loading comments...