Irish Land-connectedness with Manchán Magan

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  • čas přidán 28. 03. 2023
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Komentáře • 35

  • @marykayryan7891
    @marykayryan7891 Před rokem +25

    I once cut down a fairy tree, thinking it would be OK because, to all appearances, it was dead. It was leaning out over a 10 foot embankment and we cut it on the side that should have caused it to fall down the embankment. In fact. it jumped backwards upward and then fell in the opposite direction (going absolutely against gravity) and knocked me down and pinned me to the driveway. If there had not happened to be a pothole in the drive that I fell into, it would have snapped my spine. It was a fairly large-ish tree. Moral of story? Do NOT mess with fairy trees no matter what!

  • @keldaoen
    @keldaoen Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great conversation and I'll check out his work!
    I was (briefly, a few weeks) at the County Wicklow months-long demonstration to protect the ancient woodland habitat from road expansion. We'd have fun conversations about if we were protecting the Tuatha de Danann or were them? (like that's what the legends meant very tangibly, there are some kind of creatures who make this home and will protect it). There were lots of cat and mouse games, taunting, hidden tunnels and canopy pathways, when loggers and authorities came. Fairy stuff.

  • @skyking8420
    @skyking8420 Před 2 dny

    Wonderful video! Quick point to add, when asking a Seneca women (Iroquois) how to say the word Sky in her language, she said she could give me 20 words right off the bat and that there were still dozens more

  • @elauadeinsf
    @elauadeinsf Před měsícem

    I wrote a lot of those Gaeltacht words down as I'm Irish, left the Irish speaking area very young and do not know them, thank you so much it was a truly great conversation and I subscribed to you, naturally.

  • @TonyAarvik
    @TonyAarvik Před rokem +6

    Themes like this is a treasure we MUST preserve!

  • @Mattiniord
    @Mattiniord Před rokem +6

    Inspiring topic! I know the saamis have several ways to describe landscape, snow etc.
    But I remember growing up in Tornedalen and even in the swedish speaking parts of north Sweden it truly felt that people were more connected to the land.
    People still made sure they left a stick on "offerkast" because you did. They would not say they believed in Vittra but better safe than sorry.
    Also, when I came south the landscape felt so empty and powerless. Oh, there were elf stories and such but they seemed so relatively powerless, mostly just able to do mischief. The Vittras seemed to be so much more and something you had to watch out for.
    They also felt like another people. Not small but big as humans etc

  • @ieatlolz
    @ieatlolz Před rokem +7

    This was awesome! Would love to see more conversations between you two :)

  • @kategreen-adarkcarnival6747
    @kategreen-adarkcarnival6747 Před 6 měsíci +1

    What a fabulous conversation - many thanks!

  • @marykayryan7891
    @marykayryan7891 Před rokem +14

    I wish you would teach this kind of Irish on line. I get so tired of learning Dia duit. Conas ata tu? I want to learn the words and ideas you are talking about. How do I call to the directions, the winds, the animals, the elements and so on in my mother tongue?

  • @rosemarymcbride3419
    @rosemarymcbride3419 Před 10 měsíci +3

    the first tool was a poem

  • @sunroom7
    @sunroom7 Před 3 měsíci

    Magical Interview. Learnt so much about my land Eire and people. Manchan may wish to read "Ireland 1845-1850: the Perfect Holocaust, and Who Kept it ""Perfect.""" by Chris Fogarty. Tells what really happened in Ireland and why it was rebranded as a Famine. Just like Plantations in Ireland, aka, Oliver Cromwell....happening again today in Ireland.

    • @braveandfaithful
      @braveandfaithful Před 3 měsíci

      The hidden history tuned to Fogarty
      Less than five minutes
      czcams.com/video/YH4eppQXaBA/video.htmlsi=zmMAoM23a8kU0-Bv

  • @aarnold1585
    @aarnold1585 Před rokem +4

    Great conversation!

  • @mollymcnaughton3133
    @mollymcnaughton3133 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Found Mr. Magan via my Gaeilge group, subscribed and am in love with my motherland...💚🤍🧡

    • @karlbyrne6021
      @karlbyrne6021 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @molly which gaelic group? I'm in Dublin & interested in joining as an absolute beginner.

    • @mollymcnaughton3133
      @mollymcnaughton3133 Před 5 měsíci

      @@karlbyrne6021 it was/is an chat group on Facebook that I removed myself from because I didn't think it was all that beginner. I'm going through Irish With Mollie.

  • @mythandstories3069
    @mythandstories3069 Před rokem +4

    Great conversation! Off to get his books now!

  • @jesselucas245
    @jesselucas245 Před rokem +10

    Is maith liom é! ❤ No Béarla

  • @dearbhailconnon8987
    @dearbhailconnon8987 Před 9 měsíci +3

    The fishermen sold all their nets and boats to make money to buy food… The shores were combed dry of shellfish etc. I don’t know if people can imagine the level of starvation. It is said there were few birds left in the sky. So no .. we couldn’t access any more sea life as it was all gone..

  • @worm_vaquero
    @worm_vaquero Před rokem +5

    My granny would put HOLES in the bread between the arms of the cross "to let the fairies out", the cross is very much christian

    • @ExcaliburOfYuletide
      @ExcaliburOfYuletide Před rokem +3

      All fairies aside, the cross was likely on the bread long before the Christian cross, though. A four-quarter cross is much more ancient, and carried on oneself, over doors, in the stables, etc. The rowan cross is a lovely example, but there are many examples of quarter crosses, wherein each segment is the same length.

  • @AriaIvancichArt
    @AriaIvancichArt Před rokem +3

    Ty. So very interesting

  • @ruadhan6707
    @ruadhan6707 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Comhrá iontach! Go raibh maith agat!

  • @carlhenrikschultz3261
    @carlhenrikschultz3261 Před rokem +2

    They Built The Road's Around Big Rock's Aswell.
    Isn't That So ?

  • @interestedpart2650
    @interestedpart2650 Před 7 měsíci

    Excellent

  • @madamlunamazzaroth203
    @madamlunamazzaroth203 Před rokem +3

    Where would I learn the olde Gaelic language?

  • @gandolfthorstefn1780
    @gandolfthorstefn1780 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm hoping Dualingo has some fairy-lore vocabulary in its Irish course. In the Welsh course we have Dragons buying parsnips from Germany. Is the Green Owl our last hope. Hwyl fawr dych chi. Físeán iontach.

  • @loganstrait7503
    @loganstrait7503 Před 3 měsíci

    Fairies wear boots.

  • @beepboop204
    @beepboop204 Před rokem

    🙂🙂🙂

  • @peterkurg8169
    @peterkurg8169 Před rokem +3

    Awesome discussion - love the dragon in Iceland.

  • @gandolfthorstefn1780
    @gandolfthorstefn1780 Před 5 měsíci

    Anglo-Saxon language has 67 words for a boat or ship. So the orientation of the language is maritime and not terrestrial like Gaelic.Slán👍🇮🇪🍀