en

Helen Susan Swift

  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    Marcellinius claimed that 'a whole troop of foreigners would not be able to withstand a single Gaul if he called his wife to his assistance.'
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    Marriage among the Celts was easy, and divorce so simple that weddings may have been an annual event.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    ten different forms of marriage in the Celtic world, from a conveniently casual sexual bond to permanent union.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    A woman of might and assertion was an equal partner in life's adventures.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    her husband had slept with another woman, a Celtic wife could legally kill her love rival provided she committed the deed in hot blood.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    says the 8th century saga of Etain, the most attractive woman in Ireland.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    both genders accepted and joyed in the differences of the other. Women enjoyed equal legal standing with men; they possessed property and in widowhood they became owners of their husband's goods. Women could lead the tribe as Queen or even war leader.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    goddesses such as the Morrigan, or Great Queen, and Danann, the queen of other gods were at the apex of the Celtic pantheon.
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    The original Saint Brigit was a Gaelic goddess, daughter of the Dagda, patroness of poets. Legend says that Brigit was also the goddess of fire, and only women of noble birth could attend the holy fires at her temples. These women were known as the 'daughters of fire.'
  • Tamarahas quoted10 months ago
    it is always better not to anger a Scotswoman. It was no real wonder that Eigg was also known as the 'island of the big women.'
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