Dublin celebrates ‘paper-thin’ idea of pagan goddess Brigit

Share This Article:

A Dominican scholar has questioned the “erasure” of St Brigid in favour of a pagan deity “who might never even have been venerated in Ireland” by Dublin City Council (DCC).

DCC are currently promoting a city-wide celebration of “women past and present inspired by the Celtic goddess Brigit”, from Friday January 31 – February 3.

Fr Conor McDonough OP, who is a PhD student at the University of Galway working on biblical exegesis in early medieval Ireland, highlighted on social media: “The erasure of the historical Brigit continues apace [by DCC]. She existed, she was a nun, she was powerful, and prayerful, and deeply consequential in her own time and beyond. Why marginalise her in favour of a deity who might never even have been venerated in Ireland?”

Fr McDonough previously said: “It’s really quite incredible how this paper-thin theory became so widely accepted. We know almost nothing about the pagan divinity identified as Brigid in the 10th-century text,Sanas Cormaic.Brigid there is described as a goddess worshipped by poets, while her sister, also Brigid, is a goddess of medics, and another sister, Brigid again, is a goddess of blacksmiths. That’s it; that’s all we know. We don’t know whether there was really a cult of Brigit(s) in pre-Christian Ireland, all we have is this very late report, written at a time when Irish intellectuals were actively fabricating elements of the pagan Irish past.” 

Subscription Banner

Top TOPICS

Unsurprisingly, quite a few Lent related items featured in the media last week. The News

When I was in college, back in the days when the earth’s crust was still

Dear Editor, Garry O’Sullivan makes valuable points concerning the accountability of deceased clerical sexual abusers

Bishop Niall Coll’s recent remarks mark a significant moment in the lead-up to the upcoming