St. Brigid’s Day Eve traditions – Imbolic in Ireland

It’s the eve of St. Brigid’s Day here in Ireland, and we’re getting ready for the second ever Bank Holiday. She’s Ireland’s only female patron saint, and is the goddess of fertility, springtime (and returning of the light), blacksmiths/crafters, poetry/song, and healing. The longer that I live in Ireland, the more I become a follower of the female energies she brings. Today, I want to talk about some of the traditions and ceremonies that happen on the Eve of Imbolic.

You can learn more about the Goddess turned St.Brigid here in my prior blog post.

Hill of Faughart, Co. Louth

[Photo: Ribbon seen in tree next to St. Brigid’s Holy Well, Hill of Faughart, Co. Louth]

Brat Bríde or Ribín Bríde tradition – Tonight (January 31st) is the night that according to tradition, a piece of cloth or ribbon (Brat Bríde or Ribín Bríde) was left outside on the windowsill or near the door. This collected dew (the tears of the goddess) and was brought inside in the morning. This dew collection was thought to have been touched by Brigid on her travels and have the power to ward off illness, instill healing, and prevent pain in both humans and animals. When dried, the cloth/ribbon was taken and wrapped around yourself/ someone else (eg sore throat, cut finger) to help ward off illness and help with healing. Often you can see these pieces of cloth, tied in trees, outside homes, or in other holy sites if you know what to look for.

Imbolic 2020 in Kildare

[Photo: The eternal flame of Brigid’s Temple, relit on Brigids Day 2020, Kildare, Co. Ireland]

A place to rest – Another tradition related to the cloth and Brigid’s blessing involves making up a small bed in front of the fireplace / hearth – so that as Brigid travelled offering her blessings she could be offered a comfortable place of rest and contemplation. Often, a candle was left on the mantle, as a welcoming sign so that Brigid could see her way in, and an offering of bread was left in case she was hungry. A dusting of ash from the fire would be spread out in front of the hearth and any mark left in it the following morning was a sure sign that Brigid, the fire and fertility goddess, had been to bless your home. In this hearth bed (or in some cases, in your own) you would place a bridey doll.

Imbolic 2020 in Kildare

[Photo: Giant Bridey Doll in the center of Kildare, Co. Ireland]

What is a Bridey Doll?It is a representation of the triple goddess Brigid and was traditionally made from raffia, or dried grass, herbs and fabric. As you were making it, the doll would be sung to, told poetry, danced with around the home, left in front of the hearth with sweet herbs and flowers. Historically, these meant as a symbol of fertility, fortune, good health, and the reawakening of nature. On Brigid’s Eve, if you, or a loved one needed healing, wanted a child, or simply hoped that Brigid would bring her blessings to you, you would take the doll and place it with your loved one, in the bed made for Brigid, or under your pillow. They’re not difficult to make, and you can learn how to make one of your own here.

Imbolic 2020 in Kildare

[Photo: Brigid’s Cross in window of St. Brigid’s Cathedral, Co. Kildare]

Finally, we move into the symbol most people know, the Brigid’s Cross. A symbol of equality, this cross is usually made of green rushes or palm fronds and woven together with a center square before the ends are tied together. They are hung in homes over doors and windows as symbols of protection and remain there (drying out) before being removed and replaced with a newly woven “green” cross the following year. The old one is burned in the fire to destroy any of the negative energies it might have prevented from entering the home.
The Brigid’s cross has four arms that are of the same length and believed to represent the “sunwheel” with rays of the sun projecting out from the center – a symbol of springtime, a return of the light via the lengthening of days. In Christianity, the arms represent the four cardinal directions (N,S,E,W) and the center represents the spirit and mind of the person. Today, it’s a symbol of Irish Celtic ancestry and heritage.

Stay tuned for tomorrow, when I tell the tale of the eternal flame of Brigid – and how I received the honor of lighting the flame you see above.

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Happy Imbolic from Ireland

February 1st marks the festival of Imbolc, Imbolic, or Imbolg, also called Brigid’s Day. It is one of the four Gaelic seasonal festivals—along with Beltane, Lughnasadh and Samhain which were important in ancient times. Historically, the day was used for marking the beginning of spring, more specifically the lambing season and stirrings of new life. The original word Imbolg means ‘in the belly’, as in pregnant or expectant. The day holds the promise of hope, renewal, and life force stirring as the light returns to the earth and the growth cycle starts anew. It is believed that Imbolic was originally a pagan festival associated with the mythical fire goddess Brigid (Brighit,Bride, Brigit) and is a time of magical energy related to the feminine aspect. Eventually, this festival to celebrate the Goddess became Christianized into a festival of Saint Brigid.

Hill of Faughart, Co. Louth

What do we know about Brigid? We know that as a Goddess, she was worshiped by the Filid, a class of poets and historians among the Celts of ancient Ireland and Britain. Her name comes from the Celtic “brig” or “exhalted one”, and she was one of 3 daughters of the god-king Dagda. (Brigid’s sisters were also named Brigid and are associated with healing and smith crafts, making her a “triple goddess”). Brigid was considered one of the most powerful Celtic gods, and part of her story appears in the saga Cath Maige Tuired and the Lebor Gabála Érenn, a purported history of Ireland collected from various poems and texts in the 10th century.

Legends say that Brigid was born with a flame in her head and drank the milk of a mystical cow from the spirit world. Brigid is credited with the very first keening, a traditional wailing for the dead practiced at funerals by Irish and Scottish women. As a goddess, Brigid was the goddess of fire, sun and hearth. It was believed that Brigid brought fertility to the land and its people and was known to be a protector of healers, midwives, and newborn babies. She was also a poet.

The Goddess Converts to Christianity? Like the Goddess of old, the real woman, St. Brigid lived in a time of transition and played a powerful role. She was a nun, Abbess, and foundress of several monasteries. She is one of Ireland’s three Patron Saints, and monks wrote about her going back to the 8th century (though it was likely they were merging the Goddess legends and the Abbess’s life to encourage religious conversions and attach “miracles” from the Goddess to the Saint.) Saint Brigid was born in approximately 450 A.D., to a Christian pict slave, Brocca (who was converted to Christianity by St.Patrick) and the chieftain of Leinster Dubhthach, at the hill of Faughart, in County Louth. Because her mother had been sold while pregnant at the behest of Dubhthach’s wife, Brigid was born into slavery. When Brigid was about 10 years old, her owner wanted to sell her – and went to her father (the Chieftain) to arrange for the sale. According to legend, she became a household servant to her father, who eventually set her free. From there, Brigid went into a Nunnery. In about 468 A.D. She was granted Abbaital powers, and in 480 A.D. founded the monastery at Kildare (Celtic – Cill Dara or “church of the oaks”). The monastery itself was established on the site of a former pagan shrine dedicated to her namesake, the Celtic Goddess Brigid. In time, she was credited with setting up religious life for women in Ireland, founding a school of art, a scriptorium (the Book of Kildare was illuminated here), and founded many churches. She also became friends with St. Patrick. St. Brigid died around 525 A.D.

How do we celebrate Brigid and what are the traditions? Celtic practices honored the Goddess Brigid by decorating altars with snowdrops, swan feathers, sheep, Bridey dolls (A handmade Brigid doll filled with wool, herbs, dried flowers, crystals, prayers and wishes for the future, then decorated and which can be included in ceremony and/or placed in ‘Bride’s Bed’ to bring fertility and good fortune to the home), and later, St. Brigid crosses made from reeds. Ashes from the fire that was left to burn all night long would be smoothed out and left to see if a mark from Bridget appeared, to confirm that she had visited the house. Sometimes a makeshift bed would even be made up next to the fire, in case the saint wanted to rest a while. Finally, many homes also had white and green candles and a ceremony led by women priestesses who lit and tended an eternal flame in her honor, a practice which continued long after Christianity renamed and adopted the Goddess into Saint Brigid. Gerald of Wales (Giraldus Cambrensis) a Welsh Chronicler, visited Kildare in the twelfth century, he reported that the fire of St. Brigid was still burning in Kildare and that it was being tended by nuns of St. Brigid. That flame (despite unsuccessful attempts to extinguish it) is known to have survived possibly up to the sixteenth century, when the monasteries were dissolved by Henry the VIII. The eternal flame was re-lit in 1993, and the today is maintained by 19 nuns in Market Square and at Brigid’s sanctuary at Solas Bhride, in Kildare, Ireland. Kildare is also the location of one of several sacred wells in the Celtic regions, many of which are connected to Brighid. On St Brighid’s day, it’s not uncommon to see ribbons and other offerings tied to trees near a well as a petition to this healing goddess-turned-saint.

Today, we take a breath and repeat the ancient sung through the ages: “Brigid, excellent woman, sudden flame, may the bright fiery sun take us to the lasting kingdom.”

Imbolic Blessings and Happy Spring from Ireland!

Pictured: St. Brigid figurine and wishing tree at the St.Brigid’s Holy Well at the Hill of Faughart

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