{"id":7,"date":"2010-08-25T04:36:33","date_gmt":"2010-08-25T04:36:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.technogypsie.com\/faerie\/?p=7"},"modified":"2024-02-07T12:07:12","modified_gmt":"2024-02-07T12:07:12","slug":"the-otherworld-the-underworld-the-sidhe","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/technotink.net\/lore\/the-otherworld-the-underworld-the-sidhe\/","title":{"rendered":"The Otherworld, The Underworld, The Sidhe"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div><a href=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.technogypsie.com\/photogallery\/2010\/june\/062310\/JPEG\/062310-118.jpg\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.technogypsie.com\/photogallery\/2010\/june\/062310\/JPEG\/062310-118.jpg?w=250\" alt=\"\"  border=\"0\"><\/a><br>Otherworld Map<\/div>\n\n\n\n<div>&nbsp;<\/div>\n\n\n\n<div>&nbsp;<\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Otherworld<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From the dawn of religious thought there has been belief in an Underworld and\/or an Otherworld. A place where we are trapped when we die, disturbed or without resolution, that sits upon our world, sometimes referred to as Limbo, Hades, The Waiting Place, and the Inbetween. Many believe in a Hell and a Heaven. Others believe in a Summerland. Others do not. Some believe in Reincarnation. But just about everyone has an opinion about where we go when we die.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Otherworld is one place that many deduce is where human spirits reside after death. But it&#8217;s not just a place for ghosts and poltergeists. Still, it is also often labeled as a place of residence for all of the undead and supernatural, from zombies to vampires, from faeries to trolls, from Gods to Goddesses, and the elemental spirits of nature.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Celtic mythology calls \u201cThe Otherworld\u201d (Orbis Alia) the \u201cRealm of the Dead, the Home of the Deities, or the stronghold of other spirits, and the Mighty Sidhe.\u201d Folklore depicts the Otherworld as existing over the western sea or underground, such as in the Sidhe mounds of Ireland and the British Isles, or as a realm layered like a transparency over the world of the living but invisible to our physical sight. I\u2019m more of an advocate of the belief that the Elemental and Faerie Realm, Realm of Deities, and the Land of the Dead are all \u2018separate\u2019 realms \u2026 layered on top of each other as transparency-like layers of an onion in the worlds within worlds that make up the cosmology of universes in which we live.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Irish described their Otherworld as underground and sometimes on islands in the Western Sea. I believe they actually saw it as a separate realm from the land of Faeries and the Sidhe, and scholars or folklorists, not being very well versed in the different dimensions, just lumped these worlds into one solitary world separate from the land of the living. There are many different references by the Irish to these realms, including Tir na mBeo (\u201cthe Land of the Living\u201d), Mag Mell (\u201cDelightful Plain\u201d), and Tir na nog (\u201cLand of the Young\u201d), among other names.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is one of the reasons I believe the Irish truly believed them to be different places. Irish mythology talks of these places as a country where the inhabitants never grew old, got sick, or died, where they were eternally at peace and happiness, and one year of occupation in that realm would equate to 100 human years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Greeks spoke of a similar place called the \u201cElysium\u201d (Greek mythology). Of course, the Greeks and the Irish may have a shared origin in ancient Proto-Indo-European religion, so that might make sense. There are many folktales in both cultures where a beautiful young woman often approaches the hero and sings of these happy lands, offering him an apple or the promise of her love in exchange for his assistance in battle. The myths have him following her on a journey over the sea, and they are never seen again.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Mythological and folklore elements involve boats of glass, chariots, horses, food, drink, and lures of love. Sometimes, the mortal man returns to the human realm to find his previous family and friends deceased for ages and, while believed to have been gone for a few years, were actually gone for hundreds of years. (ex: Tale of Oisin, Thomas the Rymer, Rip Van Winkle, Tale of Bran and Branwen, etc.) There are quests in the tales, and a magical mist always seems to descend upon them. They are always changed and affected by their contact with the Otherworld. How many of these individuals cross over from the human realm to the land of spirits or the dead is abundant in Indo-European folklore and stories. These seem to occur in liminal places, gateways, or on special days of the year.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Gaelic festival of Samhain (November 1st), as well as Beltane (May 1st), are believed to date when the boundaries between the worlds become even more permeable than usual, and visitors from both realms can travel in between the realms, sometimes on purpose other times accidentally. Folklore is obsessed with the concern about preventing the intrusion of spirits into the human world and the loss of humans to the Otherworlds. Many spells, charms, superstitions, and rituals exist throughout history to prevent the crossing over of humans and entities between these dimensions. Some believe that Irish folklore is a heaven of sorts. Interpreters of Irish poetry and storytelling claim the Otherworld is simply a land of paradise, happiness, and summer.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I am of the opposite view that the realms those stories tell about are a completely different world than the land of the Dead. I believe that there is a land of Faeries (Sidhe, Faerieland or Faerieworld), a land of the Dead (Otherworld), a land of Demons (Underworld \/ Hades \/ Hell), a land of Deities (Summerland or Heaven).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Land of the Dead<\/strong> is what I refer to when I discuss the <strong>Otherworld<\/strong>. Brittany sees this as an island someplace west of Great Britain. When the souls of the dead leave the human body, they go to the homes of fishermen and knock desperately on their doors for the ferry to these islands. The fishermen would leave their homes and ferry the dead to these lands in ghostly ships called \u201cBag a Noz.\u201d Christian beliefs on the British Isles talk about a Galicia northern coastal village called \u2018San Andres de Teixido\u2019 where a little hermitage consecrated to Saint Andrew houses his bones. Tacitus says this is where the \u2018heavens, seas, and earth end.\u2019 It is believed by many that if you don\u2019t visit this place when you are living, you must visit after you die in the form of a serpent or lizard to take your journey to the land of the dead, according to words from Jesus through Andres. Many Spanish authors also claim this is the starting place for the souls of the dead on their trip to the Other World.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Irish God of Gateways and the Sea, Manannon Mac Lir, is often seen as a gatekeeper between these Isles of the Dead and the Lands of the Living. In modern fantasy, such as in the tales of the television series \u201cBuffy the Vampire Slayer,\u201d the gateway to the realms of the dead or the world of demons is called \u201cThe Hellmouth.\u201d This serves as a magical portal between the worlds. Supposedly, it is a place of increased supernatural energy and a gate that attracts demons and other supernatural creatures as a hot spot. While completely created by the filmmakers, the concept is based on the gateways to the realm of the dead found in mythologies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The \u201cOtherworld\u201d as the \u201cSpirit World\u201d or \u201cLand of the Dead\u201d is seen as a habitation realm of spirits. The belief in spirits comes from the theory that the Earth itself and all living things on the Earth have spirit counterparts that existed before the physical creation, and a living soul consists of a spirit body united with a physical body. The spirit&#8217;s existence is composed of organized and refined spirit matter that extends to all life, including plants, animals, and humans.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even the Christian bible refers to plant spirits as being created as spirits before they were created with physical bodies (Moses 3:5, 9). Under these beliefs, there are premortal and postmortal spirit worlds. Premortal spirits exist initially in \u201cheaven,\u201d where monotheistic faiths believe their God lives. There is the belief by many that the spirit, after leaving the body from death, yet before the resurrection, is taken by an angel or a reaper to the home of God who gave them life; they are then often judged and\/or assigned to a place of paradise or a place of hell and \u2018outer darkness.\u2019 Postmortal spirits inhabit a world where they reside and converse together in the same way as they do in the human world. There is the belief that they conduct similar activities, labor, and life as they did when they were living; it is a place where they learn and prepare for the next life as an extension of mortality. Those at unrest or unfinished with their mortal existence often haunt or are trapped in between the human realm and the Otherworld or the Underworld. Some equate these realms to be located in Middle Earth or akin to Hollow Earth Theory.<br><span id=\"more-7\"><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><a href=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.technogypsie.com\/photogallery\/2010\/june\/062310\/JPEG\/062310-117.jpg\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.technogypsie.com\/photogallery\/2010\/june\/062310\/JPEG\/062310-117.jpg?w=300\" alt=\"\"  border=\"0\"><\/a><br>Mythological Placenames<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>The Underworld<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>is often a realm corresponding to what some call \u2018the Otherworld.\u2019 In the studies of religion and mythology, this is a generic term that applies to \u2018the afterlife\u2019 or any place where newly dead souls go. It is often seen as a neutral or dystopic realm in the afterlife, instead of Heaven or Hell, so prophesized by the religion of Christianity. Many also believe it is a realm that resides atop our own where the unrested \/ disturbed \/ or spirits reside until they can pass on to the land of the dead. To some, it is a waiting place or a limbo. Others label the Underworld as Hell or Hades. The Underworld is referred to as Mctlan by the Aztec, Kurnugia by the Babylonians, Naraka or Niraya by the Buddhists, Annwn or Mag Mell by the Celts, Yum gan (??) by the Chinese, Aaru \/ Anubis \/ Duat \/ or Neter-khertet by the Egyptians, Toonela by the Estonians, Tuonela by the Finnish, Elysium \/ Asphodel Meadows \/ Hades \/ Tartaros by the Greeks, Sheol \/ Gehenna by the Hebrew, Naraka \/ Yamaloka by the Hindu, Uku Pacha by the Inca, Adlivun by the Inuit, Jahannam \/ Narr \/ Janna \/ Barzakh \/ Araf by the Islam, Yomi \/ Jigoku by the Japanese, \u201cJi-Ok\u201d ?? ?? by the Koreans, Aizsaule by the Latvians, Hawaiki by the M?ori, Pellumawida \/ Degin \/ Wenuleufu \/ Ngullchenmaiwe by the Mapuche, Metnal \/ Xibalba by the Maya, Bulu \/ Burotu \/ Murimuria \/ Nabangatai \/ Tuma by the Melanesians, Gimle \/ Hel \/ Niflheim \/ Valhall \/ Vingolf by the Norse, Ekera by the Oromo, Kasanaan \/ Empiyerno by the Philippine, Avaika (and other names) by the Polynesians, Shipap by the Pueblo, Inferno \/ Avernus \/ Orcus \/ Hades \/ Pluto by the Romans, Podsvetie \/ Peklo \/ Nava by the Slavs, Dilmun \/ Kur \/ Irkalla by the Sumerians, Guinee by the Vodou, and Hiyoyoa by the Wagawaga.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Underworld is ruled by demons, spirits, veli, Cerberus, ghosts, and other supernatural guardians, as well as Baiame \/ Eingana by the Aboriginal, Allu \/ Anu \/ Anunnaku \/ Ereshkigal \/ Etemmu \/ Gallu \/ Humbaba \/ Mamitu \/ Nergal \/ Utnapishtim by the Akkadians, E Bukura e Dheut by the Albanians, Spandaramat by the Armenians, Mictlantecuhtli \/ Mictecacihuatl\/ Chalmecacihuilt\/ Chalmecatl by the Aztec, Erra \/ Nergal \/ Ninlil \/ Sursunabu \/ Ur-shanabi \/ Utnapishtim by the Babylonians, Batara Kala \/ Setesuyara by the Balinese, gNyan by the Bon, Yama \/ Emma-0- \/ Yanluo by the Buddhist, Mot by the Canaanites, Aed \/ Arawn \/ Cwn Annwn \/ Donn \/ Gwyn ap Nudd \/ Mannanon Mac Lire \/ Pwyll \/ Sluagh by the Celts, Gui \/ Yanluo by the Chinese, Demons \/ Devil \/ Satan \/ Lucifer by the Christians, Aken \/ Aker \/ Am-heh \/ Amunet \/ Ammit \/ Andjety \/ Anubis \/ Apep \/ Apis \/ Astennu \/ Ha \/ Imiut \/ Isis \/ Mehen \/ Naunet \/ Nehebkau \/ Nephthys \/ Nun \/ Nut \/ Osiris \/ Ptah \/ Seker \/ Thoth by the Egyptian, Jabru by the Elamites, Vanapagan by the Estonians, Charun \/ Culsu \/ Februus \/ Mania \/ Mantus \/ Nethuns \/ Tuchulcha \/ Vanth by the Etruscans, Kalma \/ Kipu-Tytti \/ Kivutar \/ Lovitar \/ Surma \/ Tuonen akka \/ Tuonetar \/ Tuoni \/ Vammatar by the Finnish, Cerberus \/ Charon \/ Hades \/ Keres \/ Persephone \/ Styx \/ Thanatos \/ Tartaros by the Greeks, Sasuleti by the Georgians, Ta\u2019xet \/ Tia by the Haida, Yamaraja by the Hindu, Kachina by the Hopi, Ala by the Ibo, Supay \/ Vichama by the Incan, Dwi Shri \/ Ndara by the Indonesian, Pana \/ Sedna by the Inuit, Mala\u2019ikah by Islam, Hisa-Me \/ Hotoke \/ Ika-Zuchi-no-Kami \/ Jikininki \/ Shiko-Me \/ Shiti Dama \/ Shi-Ryo \/ Yama by the Japanese, Dur by the Kassite, Preas Eyssaur by the Khmer, Veli \/ Velu mate \/ Zemes mate by the Latvian, Mot by the Levantine, Kalunga by the Lunda, Kewa by the Maori, Xibalba by the Maya, Egei \/ Ratumaibulu \/ Samulayo by the Melanesian, Chepi by the Narragansett, Estanatelhi by the Navajo, Mctanteot by the Niguiran, Garmr \/ Hel \/ Ran by the Norse, Angra Mainyu \/ Azhi Dahaka \/ Peri by the Persians, Bathala \/ Demonyo Demon \/ Lucifer \/ Dyablo Diablo \/ Satan \/ Diyos God by the Philippine, Horo by the Phoenicians, Men by the Phrygian, Hikuleo (and many others) by the Polynesians, Picullus by the Prussians, Iyatiku by the Pueblo, Cereberus \/ Dea Tacita \/ Dis Pater \/ Egestes \/ Fames \/ Inferi Dii \/ Larenta \/ Letum \/ Libitina \/ Mors \/ Orcus \/ Pluto \/ Proserpina \/ Viduus by the Romans, Dyavol \/ Satanaya by the Russians, Yambe-akka by the Saami, Amotken by the Salish, Chebeldei \/ Kul by the Siberians, Crnobog \/ Flins \/ Marzana \/ Nyia by the Slavs, Edimmu \/ Ekimmu, Urshanabi (and many others) by the Sumerians, Cur by the Tamil, Heros by the Thracian, Erlik by the Turkic, Baron Cimetiere \/ Baron La Croix \/ Baron Samedi \/ Ghede \/ Maman Brigitte \/ Marassa Jumeaux by the Vodoun, Tumudurere by the Wagawaga, Oya by the Yoruba, Nga by the Yurak, and Uhepono by the Zuni. [Retrieved from \u201chttp:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Underworld\u201d]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Many believe the underworld is hidden within the depths of the Earth; some say the center of the Earth. According to Greek Mythology, it is the Kingdom of the Dead and is ruled over by Hades (residing at the very depths), who is only concerned with increasing the population of the Underworld. It is surrounded by a series of rivers such as the Acheron (river of Woe), Cocytus (river of lamentation), Phlegethon (river of fire), the Styx (river of unbreakable oath), the Lethe (river of forgetfulness). Across the rivers lies the gate to the mortal realm guarded by Cerberus. Many believe the dead area is ferried across the Acheron by Charon to Hermes, who leads them to the gates. Only those who can afford the fare, with coins on their lips or eyelids, receive passage. The rest are trapped between the worlds.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once in the Underworld, you cannot leave. At the Gates, those are judged by Rhadamanthus, Minos, and Aeacus, who pass sentence \u2013 those who are good go to the Elysian Fields, and the rest go through ordeals and often to the depths of the Underworld. Many see the Underworld as an unpleasant realm of misery, death, despair, darkness, and shadow.<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"600\" height=\"400\" data-attachment-id=\"3511\" data-permalink=\"https:\/\/technotink.net\/lore\/oweynagat-cave-of-the-cats\/050712-299\/\" data-orig-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/technotink.net\/lore\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/050712-299.jpg?fit=600%2C400&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-size=\"600,400\" data-comments-opened=\"1\" data-image-meta=\"{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;5.6&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;Leaf McGowan&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;NIKON D3100&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;Oweynagat Cave - Cave of the Cats - Gateway to the Underworld and the Morrigan&#039;s Palace. Rathcrohan - The Tain Trail: Exploring Queen Maeve&#039;s tromping grounds. May 5, 2012. (c) 2012 - photography by Leaf McGowan, technogypsie.com. Rathcrohan - burial place of the kings of Connaught covers an area of 518 hectares. There are more than 20 ring forts, burial mounds, and megalithic tombs, principally Relig na Ri (burial ground of the kings), Rath na dTarbh (for of the bulls); and Rathbeg.  Unfortunately because the earthworks are so spread out over a huge area apart from a 2m high standing stone said to mark the grave of King Dathi, last pagan King of Ireland, even a trained eye finds it difficult to make sense of the site. This area is the setting for the opening and the bloody conclusion of the epic \\&quot;Tain Bo Cuailgne\\&quot; the origins and meaning are lost in time and survive mainly in the folk memory of the people of Tulsk and Rathcroghan, proud custodians of his unique ritual landscape for many centuries. Modern science is shedding new light on the significance of this ancient landscape and the meaning of the 60 National Monuments to be found here which have long been an interest to antiquarians, archaeologists, and mythologists.  The Ancient Irish Epic of the Tain Bo Cuiailgne, the &#039;Cattle Raid of Cooley&#039; tells the story of Queen Maeve of Connaught and her armies, in their pursuit of the Grat Brown Bull of Cooley, the mighty warrior Cuchulainn does battle with the armies and his foster brother Ferdia as he defends the Brown Bull, and the province of Ulster.  The Tain Trail Cycling and Touring Route re-traces the journey taken by Queen M Maeve and her armies from her royal palace at Rathcroghan, across the hearto of Ireland, to the Cooley Peninsula in Co. Louth, the home of the Brown Bull.  To travel the Tain Trail is a unique way to experience some of the lovliest parts of Ireland and see some of her most famous monuments at your own pace.\\r\\rFor more information visit:\\rhtt&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;1336411624&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;copyright 2012 - photography by Leaf McGowan, technogypsie.com. See http:\/\/www.technogypsie.com\/photography.html&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;32&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;360&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0.008&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;1&quot;}\" data-image-title=\"050712-299\" data-image-description=\"\" data-image-caption=\"&lt;p&gt;Oweynagat Cave &amp;#8211; Cave of the Cats &amp;#8211; Gateway to the Underworld and the Morrigan&amp;#8217;s Palace. Rathcrohan &amp;#8211; The Tain Trail: Exploring Queen Maeve&amp;#8217;s tromping grounds. May 5, 2012. (c) 2012 &amp;#8211; photography by Leaf McGowan, technogypsie.com. Rathcrohan &amp;#8211; burial place of the kings of Connaught covers an area of 518 hectares. There are more than 20 ring forts, burial mounds, and megalithic tombs, principally Relig na Ri (burial ground of the kings), Rath na dTarbh (for of the bulls); and Rathbeg.  Unfortunately because the earthworks are so spread out over a huge area apart from a 2m high standing stone said to mark the grave of King Dathi, last pagan King of Ireland, even a trained eye finds it difficult to make sense of the site. This area is the setting for the opening and the bloody conclusion of the epic &amp;#8220;Tain Bo Cuailgne&amp;#8221; the origins and meaning are lost in time and survive mainly in the folk memory of the people of Tulsk and Rathcroghan, proud custodians of his unique ritual landscape for many centuries. Modern science is shedding new light on the significance of this ancient landscape and the meaning of the 60 National Monuments to be found here which have long been an interest to antiquarians, archaeologists, and mythologists.  The Ancient Irish Epic of the Tain Bo Cuiailgne, the &amp;#8216;Cattle Raid of Cooley&amp;#8217; tells the story of Queen Maeve of Connaught and her armies, in their pursuit of the Grat Brown Bull of Cooley, the mighty warrior Cuchulainn does battle with the armies and his foster brother Ferdia as he defends the Brown Bull, and the province of Ulster.  The Tain Trail Cycling and Touring Route re-traces the journey taken by Queen M Maeve and her armies from her royal palace at Rathcroghan, across the hearto of Ireland, to the Cooley Peninsula in Co. Louth, the home of the Brown Bull.  To travel the Tain Trail is a unique way to experience some of the lovliest parts of Ireland and see some of her most famous monuments at your own pace.&lt;\/p&gt;\n&lt;p&gt;For more information visit:&lt;br \/&gt;\nhtt&lt;\/p&gt;\n\" data-large-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/technotink.net\/lore\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/050712-299.jpg?fit=600%2C400&amp;ssl=1\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/technotink.net\/lore\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/050712-299.jpg?resize=600%2C400&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3511\" srcset=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/technotink.net\/lore\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/050712-299.jpg?w=600&amp;ssl=1 600w, https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/technotink.net\/lore\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/02\/050712-299.jpg?resize=300%2C200&amp;ssl=1 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\"><em><sub>Oweynagat Cave &#8211; Cave of the Cats &#8211; Gateway to the Underworld and the Morrigan&#8217;s Palace. <\/sub><\/em>   <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>The Sidhe or the Lands of the Fae<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>Ireland and the British Isles talk of an underground dimension or lands across the western seas hidden by mists where the original inhabitants of Ireland now live. The Mighty Sidhe, the Tuatha De Danann, and perhaps the Fomorians were all driven to this Underworld by waves of invaders such as the Gaels, who came from Spain and were led by chieftain Mil Espeine. It is believed they had no choice but to take refuge under the sidhe, which denotes \u2018hills where the long barrows lay and which is also used to name a special kind of fairies in Ireland and the Scottish Highlands, the daoine sidhe.\u2019 There are believed to be Knocks (Irish cnoc), which are hollow hills inhabited by large communities of faeries often led by a King and\/or Queen.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The most common sites are located in Ireland and known as Knockma (ruled by Finvarra of the Connaught fae), Knockany (ruled by Aine of the Munster Fae), and Newgrange in county Meath where the Angus og myth takes place, and archaeological ruins still exist; and in Brittany, the Castro of Altamira led by Xana Mega, the Queen of the Fairies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Many believe that during certain times of the year, humans can find sidhe as the faeries can often be seen dancing under the moonlight. Others believe faerie gates or portals connect these realms, from archways in trees, holes in stones, and fairie rings of mushrooms. The Sacred Isles of the Western Sea are known as Isles of Paradise, where supernatural beings reside, from Sirens to Mer-folk and the Lands of the Young. The waters surrounding these isles have magical properties.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Sterile women perform rituals at La Lanzada Beach (Galicia), where nine successive waves wash over them to help them become pregnant in these lands. On some of these Islands, the Gods, Goddesses, and Heroes reside. Anglesey (Min), located on the Northern Welsh Coast, is a sacred island of the druids of Britain; the Scilly islands, where archaeological remains of proto-historical temples have been found; and some of the Hebrides Islands, which were, in the Gaelic tradition, home of ghosts and demons: on one of them, Skye, the Irish hero Cuchulainn was educated by the war goddess Scathach. [wikipedia]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>From the dawn of religious thought there has been belief in an Underworld and\/or an Otherworld. A place where we are trapped when we die, disturbed or without resolution, that sits upon our world, sometimes referred to as Limbo, Hades, The Waiting Place, and the Inbetween. Many believe in a Hell and a Heaven. Others believe in a Summerland. Others do not. Some believe in Reincarnation. 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