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Crom Cruach

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irish pagan sun and fertility god
For the Robin of Sherwood episode, seeCromm Cruac (Robin of Sherwood).

Crom Cruaich and St. Patrick. Illustrated by L.D. Symington.

Crom Cruach (Old Irish:Cromm Crúaich[ˈkɾˠʊmˠˈkɾˠuəç]) was apagan god ofpre-Christian Ireland. According to Christian writers, he was propitiated withhuman sacrifice and his worship was ended bySaint Patrick.[1]

He is also referred to asCrom Cróich,Cenn Cruach/Cróich ([ˈkʲɛnˠːˈkɾˠuəx]) andCenncroithi ([ˈkʲɛnˠːˈkɾˠɔhɨ]). He is related to the later mythological and folkloric figureCrom Dubh.

The references in adinsenchas ("place-lore") poem in the 12th century to sacrifice in exchange for milk and grain suggest that Crom had a function as afertility god. The description of his image as a gold figure surrounded by twelve stone or bronze figures has been interpreted by some as representing the sun surrounded by the signs of thezodiac, suggesting a function as asolar deity.[2]

Name

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Crom Cruach's name takes several forms.Crom (orcromm) means "bent, crooked, stooped" or according to O'Reilly is perhaps related tocruim meaning "thunder".[3]Cenn means "head", and by extension "head, chief".Cruach (orcrúach) is a noun meaning "pile, heap, mound, stack", generally of grain, hay, peat or other gathered goods, booty, and so on, including slaughtered fighters. A common extension is its reference to hills or mountains that look like stacks or piles.

Crom Cruach is called the chief Celtic idol of Ireland byMichael J. O'Kelly, and was located onMagh Slécht (ThePlain of Prostrations) inCounty Cavan, surrounded by twelve other idols.[4]

Literary references

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According to an Irishdinsenchas ("place-lore") poem in the 12th centuryBook of Leinster, Crom Cruach'scult image, consisting of a gold figure surrounded by twelve stone figures, stood onMagh Slécht ("the plain of prostration") (pronounced Moy Shlokht)[5] inCounty Cavan, and was propitiated with first-born sacrifice in exchange for good yields of milk and grain. Crom Cruach is described as a wizened god, hidden by mists,[6] and is said to have been worshipped since the time ofÉrimón. An earlyHigh King,Tigernmas, along with three quarters of his army, is said to have died while worshipping Crom onSamhain eve, but worship continued until the cult image was destroyed by St. Patrick with asledgehammer.[7]

This incident figures prominently in medieval legends about St. Patrick, although it does not appear in his own writings, nor in the two 7th century biographies byMuirchu andTírechán.[8] HoweverJ.B. Bury,[9] infers that there is a missing passage in Tírechán about Crom Cruaich; L. Bieler, who edited the two biographies,[8] is non-committal on the point.

In the 9th centuryTripartite Life of Saint Patrick the deity is called Cenn Cruach, and his cult image consists of a central figure covered with gold and silver, surrounded by twelve bronze figures. When Patrick approaches it he raises hiscrozier, the central figure falls face-down, with the imprint of the crozier left in it, and the surrounding figures sink into the earth. The "demon" who inhabits the image appears, but Patrick curses him and casts him to hell.[10]Jocelin's 12th centuryLife and Acts of St. Patrick tells much the same story. Here the god is called Cenncroithi, interpreted as "the head of all gods", and when his image falls the silver and gold covering it crumble to dust, with the imprint of the crozier left on bare stone.[11]

Archaeology

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A decorated stone known as theKillycluggin Stone (fromIrishCoill an Chlogáin, meaning 'the Wood of the Bell-Shaped Stone') has been interpreted by some as the cult image of Crom Cruach. It was found atKillycluggin,County Cavan. It was discovered broken in several pieces and partly buried close to aBronze Age stone circle (54.090773, -7.634122), inside which it probably once stood.[5]

The 14th centuryBook of McGovern, written inMagh Slécht, contains a poem which states that Crom was situated at Kilnavert beside the road and that the local women used to tremble in fear as they passed by. There is still a local tradition in the area that the Killycluggin Stone is the Crom stone.

There is another standing stone identified[12] with Crom Crúaich in Drumcoo townland,County Fermanagh. It has the figure of a man walking engraved on it, representing either Saint Patrick or a druid, depending on when it was engraved. A nearby street is named Crom Crúaich Way after it.

A large wooden idol from the 4th century AD has recently been discovered in Gortnacrannagh, County Roscommon.[13][14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Smith, Tom. "The Irish God 'Crom Crúaich of Magh Slécht' : a review of the sources"
  2. ^"Celtic Gods, Crom Cruaich".Magic of Mythology. Archived fromthe original on 4 July 2010. Retrieved9 December 2010.
  3. ^Fitzgerald, David (1880).Popular Tales of Ireland. Revue Celtique. p. 176. Retrieved12 December 2021.
  4. ^O'Kelly, Michael J. (1989).Claire O'Kelly (ed.).Early Ireland: An Introduction to Irish Prehistory. Cambridge University Press. p. 288.ISBN 0-521-33687-2.
  5. ^abIsaac, Ali. "The intersection of Saint Patrick and paganism in Ireland", Irish Central, February 16, 2020
  6. ^Gwynn, Edward.The metrical Dindsenchas, vol. XI, Dublin, Hodges, Figgis and Co., Ltd., 1924
  7. ^Gwynn, E. (ed.).The Metrical Dindshenchas. Vol. 4. E. Gwynn (ed & trans). poem 7;
    Annals of the Four Masters. M3656;
    Keating, Geoffrey.History of Ireland. 2.25.
  8. ^abBieler, Ludwig, ed. (1979).The Patrician Texts in the Book of Armagh. Ludwig Bieler (ed. & trans.). Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.
  9. ^Bury, J.B. (1902–1904). "The itinerary of Patrick in Connaught, according to Tírechán".Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature.24: 156.
  10. ^O'Leary, James (1880)."Tripartite Life".The Most Ancient Lives of St. Patrick. James O'Leary (ed & trans). Part II.
  11. ^O'Leary, James (1880)."The Life and Acts of St. Patrick by Jocelin".The Most Ancient Lives of St. Patrick. James O'Leary (ed & trans). Chapter 56.
  12. ^Killinagh Church and Crom Cruaich by Oliver Davies and D. Lowry-Corry, in Ulster Journal of Archaeology, Third Series, Vol. 2 (1939), pp. 98-104
  13. ^"Eight-Foot-Tall, 1,600-Year-Old Statue of Pagan Deity Found in Ireland".
  14. ^"Gortnacrannagh Idol".YouTube. 17 December 2021.

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