We are indeed fortunate to still have these treasures from far in the mists of time. Great video
@vera.nadine3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, thank you, thank you. From the bottom of my heart, all love towards my ancestral home.
@daisypeters32163 жыл бұрын
I'm already here looking foward to another fascinating episode! See you all tomorrow!👍☘☘☘
@grahamfleming91793 жыл бұрын
Thig an latha! Tha mi dol air ais do Erinn. Great video Anthony capturing neolithic Ireland! S math sin uabhasach breagha!
@elauadeinsf2 жыл бұрын
I think I adore all your videos so far and I've watched 10!
@helenhershtjader57593 жыл бұрын
Love the guided tour. Really captures the imagination. The artwork is amazingly rich and distinctive. Well done!
@VinnieCamilleriMusic3 жыл бұрын
Amazing that!
@ctkindyas3 жыл бұрын
Great job! Very very professional. Loved the music and your words too.
@TheCuriousCelt3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the walk around and poetic narrative. 👍🍀 Amazing site.
@declancleary87153 жыл бұрын
First thanks for another great video, I love lough crew, I have a question, the hags chair, I've sat on that ,, is the hag you refer to the same hag as the hag of beara,? , my guess she is one and the same but I would like to hear what you think, thanks
@lovesings2us3 жыл бұрын
This is so wonderful! Thank you! I felt like I was there because the presentation is so vivid! I wonder what is the relationship of the stories of the Cailleach creating the cairns, along with her chair, and the actual building of the cairns. I mean, do we know anything about when the stories started to emerge and who told them?
@maryhoban85063 жыл бұрын
Thank you once again Anthony for keeping our great past alive, do you know where the stone for Loughcrew was sourced ?
@lardooley83972 жыл бұрын
The stone from which the Cairns were built, like most of the structures in the glacial Boyne Valley, came from glacial erratic deposited on the hills. Similarly, the white quartz is most likely local, and quartz veins are still appearing during quarrying at Snow's quarry, in the vicinity of the cairns, close to the Loughcrew Estate. Here also can be found limestone and chalk, so most, if not all, the stone is local, either glacial deposit, field clearance, or locally quarried.
@davidmccormick9589Ай бұрын
Thank you for another great video of Irish History 😊
@mythicalirelandАй бұрын
@davidmccormick9589 Cheers David. Glad you enjoyed it.
@hilarydiouf95633 жыл бұрын
I need to look into it further but for now I’m confused. Can you help me understand if the Equinox Stone in cairn T, the Calliagh’s cairn is lit on the equinox? You mentioned earlier cross quarter days of Samhain and Imbolc- was that just for cairn U? So are the cairns at loughcrew aligned to several celestial events. I’d appreciate anyone help understanding. Thanks.
@mythicalireland3 жыл бұрын
Yes, Cairn T is aligned to the equinoxes. And yes, other cairns are aligned to cross-quarter solar events. Cairn L points to Samhain and Imbolc sunrise. Cairn S to Bealtaine and Lughnasa sunset. Cairn U to Samhain and Imbolc sunrise (same as Cairn L). Hope this helps.
@PanglossDr Жыл бұрын
I have been in Cairn T at dawn on the Autumn Equinox. It is a great experience.
@michaeljames5936Ай бұрын
Used to live in Co. Meath and visited Loughcrew many times. I think a little context, in terms of how it fits into the surrounding mythic landscape would help. This was a somewhat united culture with the rest of Ireland and had a 'us' identity with the then Brits!. I love Loughcrew, although my pics of me 'sacrificing' my then 4YO daughter on my ''Altar Stone'' seem silly now, I know it's just a hag's chair. NB. It's ten years since I was there, but even then you could still 'borrow the key', from a house a few miles away and enter the main tomb. That upright support of modern days, was not there then, so it may have changed, but it was so easy to 'borrow the key' and just, let yourself in, and be sure to return it', is the most Irish aspect of this today. We are lucky to have anything. Given the horrors the peoples have endured since that time, I'm surprised they hadn't 're-used' those stones years ago. Superstition kept them away, unlike the thieves, who will steal and sell any moveable piece of ancientness.
@mezmarionybarra3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful ❣
@rainbowsprites222 жыл бұрын
Another great video. Looks like a face carved Into the stone at 9.30 Never noticed it in person and have been many times . One of the best places in Ireland besides from Tara.
@SusanBelfast112 жыл бұрын
Is there any campaign to get these beautiful stones covered? Does anybody know?
@SeannachyMcPoet4 ай бұрын
2nd time I've seen this video since 2021. Love your 'poetic' narration that moves with your lens, Hound of the Sea. I was gifted one of your prints. A droneseye view of Brugh na Boyne where my young prince godking ancestor's remains once lay, storing our DNA in an earbone, I'm told. It sits centered & framed on the white particle board which covers the mouth of an old fireplace in my bedroom. The entrance appears to be facing in the direction of the sunrise, as I fancy it doing. It is 25 yrs since I walked among the clocha na h-Éireann ársa. Tá súil agam gur féidir liom é sin a dhéanamh arís. Hope all is well.
@thechin28753 жыл бұрын
I was up there last year beautiful but jaysus took the breathe outta me getting up them hills I tell ya
@johnobrien786010 ай бұрын
Oh no no roof please . Dont turn it into a theme park .
@grahamoreilly19812 жыл бұрын
Hags Chair looks like it was in a putty state whilst being molded and then set 🤔
@catherinedonohue26622 ай бұрын
Cairn T is where Jeromiah the prophet in the bible is buried. Look it up. Now thats a religious fact for you.
@ehr4702 ай бұрын
They did it to represent the visuals they experienced after eating the liberty cap magic mushrooms which grow all over the hill, which evolved their minds into the human mind we know today.
@Unidentifying2 жыл бұрын
They need to do Chlorine 36 dating on this. Maybe its 30000+ years old
@sandraswift34893 ай бұрын
Maybe aaron was buried this way in israel.as jeremiahs cave is there somewhere.with menorah carved inside
@sandraswift34893 ай бұрын
Interesting fact.cairn in ancient hebrew means.' as aaron'.