Ecne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Series on
Celtic mythology
Coventina

Celtic polytheism
Celtic deities

Ancient Celtic religion

Druids · Bards · Vates
British Iron Age religion
Celtic religious patterns
Gallo-Roman religion
Romano-British religion

Brythonic mythology

Welsh mythology
Breton mythology
Mabinogion · Taliesin
Cad Goddeu
Trioedd Ynys Prydein
Matter of Britain · King Arthur

Gaelic mythology

Irish mythology
Scottish mythology
Hebridean mythology
Tuatha Dé Danann
Mythological Cycle
Ulster Cycle
Fenian Cycle
Immrama · Echtrae

See also

Celts · Gaul
Galatia · Celtiberians
Early history of Ireland
Prehistoric Scotland
Prehistoric Wales

Index of related articles
This box: view  talk  edit


In Celtic mythology, Ecne (Wisdom, Old Irish ecna, ecne, wise, enlightened) was one of the Tuatha Dé Danann and was the god of wisdom, or knowledge.[1]

Ecne had three fathers, Brian, Iuchar, and Iucharba, who were all sons of Brigid and Tuireann, also known as Delbáeth.[2] They are called the tri dee Donand, meaning the three gods of Danu, which can also be read as the three gods of dán, or knowledge. Related attributes are personified as their descendants, and Wisdom is the son of all three.[1]

For Ecne to be the son of three brothers also recalls the early Celtic practice of fraternal polyandry.[1]

Ecne's three fathers killed Cian, the father of Lugh[2], and Lugh's deadly revenge is recounted in The Fate of the Children of Tuireann.[3]

In Irish Druids and Old Irish Religions, James Bonwick reports Ecne as female and as the goddess of poetry.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c MacCulloch, John Arnott: The Religion of the Ancient Celts (1911) - chapter V, The Tuatha Dé Danann online at sacred-texts.com (accessed 23 October 2007)
  2. ^ a b Gods & Goddesses: Ecne at shee-eire.com (accessed 23 October 2007)
  3. ^ The Fate of the Children of Turenn online (accessed 23 October 2007)
  4. ^ Bonwick, James: Irish Druids and Old Irish Religions (London, Sampson Low, Marston & Co, 1894) p. 141