Cailleach Bheur, A Scottish Artemis
On the Celtic British Isles, Cailleach Bheur was a goddess of probably pre-Celtic origin. Her name means 'veiled'. She is said to have created the land by throwing stones here and there and was associated with agriculture, but also with the protection of flora and fauna from hunters. She was eventually considered to be a witch. The dark mythical principle from which all life arises, which nourishes all living things, and to which it returns, was presented by the Celts as an eternal cauldron: the Cauldron of death and rebirth. In Celtic mythology, the Cailleach constantly stirring this cosmic cauldron so that everything arises over and over again and is consumed in an endless recycling process. Even the fallen heroes ended up in it and were made whole again in another world. But from the role of creatrix, this deity has gradually fallen into that of a witch. Probably because only the face of the destroyer was remembered.
Memories of an ancient Goddess cling to a giantess who in
the folklore of Scotland is referred to as Cailleach Bheur, Mala Liath, the
Muilearteach and other names connected with localities. She resembles somewhat
the Greek Goddess Artemis, being associated with wild animals and capable of
transforming herself into animal shape. Withal, she is a weather controller,
like the Artemis to whom Iphegenia, daughter of Agamemnon, was sacrificed so
that a favourable wind be obtained for the fleet which was to set out from
Aulis with the warriors who were to wage war against Troy.
1. Artemis of Ephesus. |
In The Scottish Goddess we appear to have glimpses of the
fierce old Artemis who was ultimately idealized by Greek sculptors and accorded
refining treatment by the poets after her character had been adjusted to
changed social ideas and customs and after goats and boars were sacrificed to
her instead of human beings.
Cailleach means in modern Gaelic “Old wife” and originally
signified a nun (Veiled one) The
supernatural Cailleach was distinguished from a nun by being referred to as
Cailleach Bheur (Bheur in the meaning of shrill, sharp, cutting).
The Cailleach Bheur is in folklore associated with the
coldest and stormiest period of the year, She is called “The
daughter of Grianan”, that is, of
the “little sun”. Daughter of the little
sun doesn’t mean, however, that the sun was either her father or mother, but
that she was born during the cold season. The Cailleach Bheur was supposed to
have been transformed into a grey boulder at the end of the period of the
“little sun” and have to have remained in that form during the period of the
“big sun”. There are references to this boulder being always moist, indicating
it was reputed to contain life
substance.
The descriptions of the Cailleach Bheur in various parts of
the Highlands agree in giving her a blue-black face with one eye on the flat of
her forehead, the sight of which is very keen. In songs put in her mouth she is
made to say: “Why is my face so black, so black?” Her teeth are red as rust and
her hair matted, confused and long and white as an aspen covered with hoar frost.
She wears a kerchief or mutch. All of her clothing is grey and she is wrapped
in a dun-coloured plaid drawn tightly about her shoulders. On her feet are
buskins. She is of enormous stature and great strength, and capable of
travelling very swiftly and of leaping from mountain to mountain and across
arms of the sea. In her right hand she carries a magic slachdan (beetle, rod) which
is also referred to as a farachan
(hammer). With her magic hammer or rod
the Cailleach Bheur smites to the earth, so that it may be hardened with frost
and the grass preventing from growing. She is the enemy of growth.
She is spoken of as a wild hag with a venomous temper,
hurrying about with a magic wand in her
withered hand, switching the grass and keeping down vegetation to the detriment
of man and beast. She is baffled in the early spring period which bears her
name: “When the grass, upborne by the warm sun, the gentle dew and the fragrant
rain, overcomes the Cailleach Bheur she flies into a terrible temper, and,
throwing away her wand into the root of a whin bush, she disappears in a
whirling cloud of angry passion. She then takes flight, saying as she goes:
“I threw my druidic
evil wand
Into the base of a
withered hard whin bush
Where shall not grow
fionn nor fionnidh,
But fragments of
grassy froinnidh.“
In other versoins the Cailleach Bheur flings her magic rod
or hammer under a holly tree, “and that is why no grass grows under holly
trees.”
2. |
The Cailleach Bheur uses her want chiefly as a weather
controller. Some of the folktales in which she approximimates to a human being
refer to her however, as wielding her wand as a weapon. She had apparently a
connexion with the holly tree and whins (gorse), as with marsh reeds and water
plants.
The period of spring called A’Chailleach is the one in which she pauses to prepare for her
final effort in arresting growth, as is usually explained in the céilidhs (house gossipings). The
daughter of the little sun of winter had been an active influence since her
arrival at Halloween. According to the folktales our Cailleach Bheur ushers in
winter by washing her great plaid in the whirlpool of Corryvreckan (Coire Bhreacan), which may be translated
either Breacan’s Cauldron, or the Cauldron of the Plaid.
Her chief seat in Scotland is Ben Nevis and she keeps as a
prisoner there a beautiful maiden, with whom her son falls in love. The young
couple elope at the end of winter and the Cailleach Bheur raises storms to keep
them apart. These, according to one account, begin in February, the ‘wolf’
month (Faoilleach). Then comes the
wind called Feadag (the whistle),
which kills sheep, lambs, cattle and horses. It lasts for three days and is
followed by Gobag (the sharp-billed
one), which pecks in every corner and “lasts for a week” or, as some have it,
“three, four, or nine days”. Next comes Sguabag (the sweeper) and it is followed
by Gearan (complaint), which lasts
for a month and is associated with the period called Caoile (leanness). The next period is A’Chailleach (the Cailleach).
The Gobag wind, the voracious
one, began on the day before the ‘wolf’ month (Faoilleach). Lathan a
Cailleach (Cailleach Day) March 25, is referred to as the date of the Cailleach
Bheur’s overthrow. Until December 1599
March 25 was New Year’s day and is now ‘Lady Day’. Some folk stories tell that before the Cailleach Bheur had
ceased her activities her son pursued her, riding a swift horse. Having in her final storm caused the death of
the wild duck and her newly hatched ducklings she ‘put out her eye’. Other versions
state her eye was put out’’ by her son.
To escape destruction at his hands, she transforms herself into a grey stone
looking across the sea. Her transformation into a boulder took place on Beinn na Cailleach, and she is also
associated with a prehistoric cairn on the summit of that mountain.
3. |
Another
mountain connected with her activities is Schiehallion (Sidh Chaillean, fairy or sacred hill of the Caledonians). On this
eminence there is sgriob na Caillich,
the Old Wife’s Furrow, where she unearthed huge masses of stones in her
ploughing. There are references to the
pursuit of the Cailleach Bheur by her son beginning when the day and night are
of equal length. In the west this period March 17-29, the middle day, is known as Feill Paruig (St. Patrick’s Day) and
there is supposed to be a south wind in the morning and a north wind at night.
The son who pursues the Cailleach Bheur is supplanted by St. Patrick, who is
said to come from Ireland, to see his parishioners in Barra and other places on
the west of Scotland. His wife is a daughter of Ossian, the last of the Fianna (Fians). After this day ‘the limpet is better than the whelk’ and
although ‘horses grow lean, crabs grow fat’. Vegetation is reviving. A Gaelic
saying is: “There is not a herb in the ground but the length of a mouse’s ear
of it is out on St. Paticks Day”. High tides come on St. Paticks Day. A
swelling (Tòchadh) in the sea is
supposed to be caused by the increasing
heat.
Like the Goddess Artemis, the Cailleach Bheur as has been
stated is the patroness of wild beasts.
Artemis sometimes assumed the form of the wild animals with which she is
associated. One of these was the quail. In Highland folklore the the Cailleach
Bheur is spoken of occasionally as a gull, eagle or heron. C. St.John heard of the
Cailleach Bheur in the form of a heron in Moray, about a century ago. She was associated with Loch A-na-Cailllach (Lochan na Cailliche), the Cailleach Bheur’s small loch, ‘a bleak,
cold-looking piece of water, with several small grey pools near it’. Donald, a gillie, who related a long story of
the origin of the name of the lochan, drew St.John’s attention to a large cairn
of stones at the end of it. The Cailleach Bheur had been ‘spreading sickness
and death among man and beast’and was opposed by the local clergyman by means
of bible and prayer, holy water and ‘other spiritual weapons’. It was subsequently discovered that she had her
abode in the cairn and was in the habit of flying through the air by night,
especially when the moon was shining, towards ‘the inhabited part of the
country’. At length she was shot by Duncan, an ex-soldier, who placed in his
gun a crooked sixpence and some silver buttons. Everyone was convinced that the
heron brought down was ‘the Cailleach Bheur ’herself’. Donald added, ‘She
hasna’ done much harm since yon, but her ghaist is still to fore, and the loch
side is no canny after the gloaming’.
Artemis had a close connexion with the wild boar. The
untamed animals with which Artemis was most frequently associated in cult and
legend were the boar and the stag or fawn.
In Ross and Cromarty, the Cailleach Bheur referred to as Mala Liath (Grey Eyebrows) was
protectress of a herd of swine. The writer has heard references in this area to
the Cailleach Bheur and her swine. There was the venomous wild boar of Glen
Glass, a verse about it goes like this:
“His lair on
Meall-an-Tuirc’s rough side
Where Mala Lia’ kept
her swine-
Witch Mala Lia’, evil-eyed
Foul, shapeless and
malign-
Was all begrimed with
filth and gore
And horrid with the
limbs of men
The unclean monster
killed and tore
To feast on in his den.”
4. |
Various warriors attempted in vain to slay the boar, but at
length the heroic Diarmaid went towards its lair. He saw a raven pecking a dead
hare and near it a corbie (hoodie-crow) perched upon a bare boulder. Both oracle birds warned
him (these birds were forms of the Cailleach Bheur) The raven said he was going
to slay the boar but would meet with his death, while the corbie advised him to
return to Grainne, the wife of Fionn, with whom he had eloped, because the boar
would cause him to die. Diarmaid raised and pursued the boar. Mala Lia’, the Cailleach Bheur, attempted to thwart him. She followed in his footsteps, taunting and cursing him and urging him to
return to Grainne. At length, greatly annoyed by her bitter tongue, Diarmaid
paused, caught her by a foot and flung her over a cliff. After slaying the
boar, he was fatally wounded by a venomous bristle which pierced a vital spot
on the inner side of one of his heels.
The reference in this folktale to the swine devouring human
beings suggests a memory of human sacrifices. There are, as stated, traditions
of human sacrifice in connexion with the early worship of Artemis. We meet with
a similar reference in the Scottish Lowland lore regarding the ‘Gyre Carling’ (Gay Old Wife), an undoubted
form of the the Cailleach Bheur. The Bannatyne MS. mentions her:
‘Thair dwelt ane grit
Gyre Carling in awld Betokis bour,
That levit (lived)
upoun menis flesche (men’s flesh).’
The Carlin carried ‘ane yren (iron) club’, the Cailleach Bheur’s druidical hammer or
wand, and when she was attacked by ‘all the doggis (dogs) ‘ from Dunbar to
Dunblane and ‘all the tykis of Tervey’, she fled in her pig form:
‘The Carling schup
(shaped) her on awe sow and is her gaitis (road) gane,
Grunting our (over)
the Greik sie (Greek sea).’
The Carlin was sometimes called ‘Nicnevin’, an interesting Gaelic survival in the Lothian and Border
counties. ‘Nic’ is the female patronymic prefix, but ‘nevin’ presents a puzzle.
It was probably the genitive of the Gaelic word for ‘bone’. There might be a connexion to the remarkable
story of a child conceived from the ashes of old burnt bones. This child was
called Gille Dubh Mac nan Cnàmh
(Black Lad, son of the Bones), with an obscure added epithet. His place of
origin was Annat in the parish of Kilmallie, Loch Eil. Apparently the burnt
bones were sacrificial.
There is the mention of ‘the milking-fold of the Cailleach
Bheur’s sheep and goats- Buaile nan Drògh,
which is a cave at Cailleach Point, that stormiest of headlands on the coast of
Mull. There she sits among the rocks, ever gazing seaward. When she sneezes she
is heard at the island of Coll. The rocks at the falls of Lora at the mouth of
Loch Etive, Connel Ferry, are known as the ‘stepping stones’ of the Cailleach
Bheur and her goats, which were at this place driven across the loch to
Benderloch and to Acha-nam-bà
(cow-field) in Benderloch where circular green hollows are referred to as ‘the Cailleach Bheur’s cheese-vats’. A natural enclosure in the rocks above Gorten
in Ardnamurchan is called ‘the Old Wife’s Byre (Bàthaich na Caillich), it being said she folded her cattle there. Deer are not kept in byres. Like the Irish Morrigan, the Cailleach Bheur had a cow which
gave great quantities of milk. The writer has heard Highlanders tell of the
Cailleach’s assistants (na Cailleacha
Beura) riding on wolves and wild pigs as storm-bringers. They raise the
storms of the wolf month, February.
Thus we have the
Cailleach Bheur’s animals: Deer, swine, goats, cattle and wolves. There are
many folk stories regarding the Cailleach Bheur’s herds of deer. One of the
pastures to which she drove them is in the Ross oof Mull. She also wandered
with them by night on wild beaches where they devoured sae-tangle, especially
in the winter season. The writer has seen wild goats feeding on seaweed in
Skye.
5. |
Cailleach Bheinn á
Bhric is associated with the speckled ben in Lochaber. She pastured her
herds of deer in Glen Nevis and milked them there, singing one of her song the
while. When hunters were unable to find deer, they blamed the Cailleach Bheur.
In a Sutherland folk tale regarding the Cailliach
Mhor Chlibhrich who had enchanted the deer of Lord Reay’s forest so that they eluded the
hunters. A man named William kept watch one night and by means of some counter
enchantments managed to be present when the Cailliach Mhor Chlibhrich engaged
in milking the hinds at the door of her hut in the early morning.:
“They were all standing
all about the door of the hut till one of them ate a hank of blue worsted
hanging from a nail in it. The witch (Cailliach Mhor Chlibhrich) struck the
animal and said: ‘The spell is off you, and Lord Reay’s bullet will be your
death today’. William repeated this to his master to confirm the tale of his
having passed the night in the hut of the great hag, which no one would
believe. And the event justified it, for a fine yellow hind was killed that
day, and the hank of blue yarn was found in its stomach.”
The blue yarn is of interest, contrasting with the red
cords, berries, &c., used by humans to shield themselves against attack by
the Cailleach Bheur, the fairies, &c.
Artemis had a connexion with fish and one of her forms
resembled that of the mermaid, having been fused with a seagoddess. It is of interest therefor to find that in
Lochaber the Cailleach Bheur generally appeared to them (wanderers) in the form
of a gigantic woman by a stream, in the act of cleaning fish. She was connected
with good or evil luck in hunting and fishing. There is a Gaelic song:
Cailleach Liath Ratharsaidh, which tells of the three Hebridean Cailleachs of
Raasay, Rona and Sligachan as being fond of fish. They were probably,
fish-goddesses. But the Cailleach Bheur was as complex a deity as Artemis. Her
connexion with fish, the sea, rivers, &c., is not confined to the Hebrides.
The Cailleach’s association with water is emphasized by a folk tale in various
parts of the Highlands. One version is as follows:
“Where Loch Ness now is, there was long ago a fine glen. A
woman went one day to the well to fetch water and she found the spring flowing
so fast that she got frightened, and left her pitcher and ran for her life, she
never stopped till she got to the top of a high hill, and when there, she
turned about and saw the glen filled with water. Not a house or field was to be
seen.
An Argyll version tells that the Cailleach Bheur was the
guardian of a well on the summit of Ben Cruachan. She had to cover it with a
slab of stone every evening at sundown and remove the slab at daybreak. But one
evening, being aweary after driving her goats across Connel, she fell asleep by
the side of the well. The fountain overflowed, its waters rushed down the
mountain side, the roar of the flood as it broke open an outlet through the
Pass of Brander awoke the Cailleach
Bheur, but her efforts to stem the torrent were fruitless, it flowed into the
plain, where man and beast were drowned in the flood. Thus was formed Loch Awe.
The Cailleach Bheur was filled with such horror over the result of her neglect
of duty that she turned into stone. There she sits, among the rocky ruins at
the pass overlooking the loch, as on the rocks at Cailleach Point in Mull she gazes
seaward."
The origin of Loch Tay in Pertshire and Loch Eck in Cowal is
accounted for in the same manner. According to the folklore of Ireland the
River Boyne was similarly brought into existence by a nymph who walked three
times by the left, with the result that the water rose furiously and drove her,
as the river, towards the sea.
The earliest form of Artemis was connected with the waters
and with wild vegetation and beasts. In Arcadia, Laconia and Sicyon she was
worshipped as ‘the lady of the lake’ Near the lake of Stymphalus she bred the
deadly birds which Heracles slew. She was also the goddess of the marsh in
Arcadia and Messene. She was associated frequently with rivers as in Elis. As
we have seen, the Cailleach Bheur was connected with the holly tree and whins
and fish. No cultivated trees were associated with Artemis. It may be that the
prototype of the Cailleach Bheur was connected with the river Lochy (Lòchaidh)
in Lochaber, which Adamnan, , in his Life
of Columba, refers to as Nigra Dea
(black goddess). Other river names of like character are the Lòchá and Lòchaidh
in Perthshire and Lochy in Banffshire.
2. https://aminoapps.com/c/pagans-witches/page/item/the-cailleach/QKn0_VLjiYI38X6r5DgzalvroZMjEW75GVe
5. https://artist.com/rebecca-magar/blue-wizard/?artid=1444