An
exploration of Celtic roots reveals a rich history, and at the
heart of Celtic spirituality stands the goddess/saint Brigid/Brigit.
The Celtic word “brig” means “high one”
or “exalted one,” suggesting that her name’s
first association was as a title, but as reverence for her spread
among the Celtic peoples of early Europe she became known by many
variations. Celtic tribes called her Bridget or Brigentis. She
had followers in ancient Rome where she was similar to Vesta,
a hearth goddess, and like Brigid, a keeper of the flame. She
existed as a goddess in Scotland (Bride or Brid) in Ireland (Brighde)
in Wales (Ffraid) and in England (Brigantia.) In Celtic France
she was worshiped as Brigandu. In Switzerland she was known as
Brigindo and Brigida in the Netherlands. Saint Brigit in Roman
Catholicism was attributed to be a 5th century CE Abbess of Kildare.
Like with so many Christian traditions, the saint absorbed the
goddess’s attributes. However, in the 1960s, Vatican II
de-canonized St. Brigit, claiming her historical existence was
questionable. Yet Catholic women continue to revere St. Brigit
today.
For centuries nineteen Druid priestesses tended an eternal flame
in Brigid’s honor at a shrine in Kildare, Ireland where
an ancient well sacred to Brigid also exists. The origin of the
custom is considered to have started when women burned a ritual
fire on a local hill. They invoked the goddess Brigid to protect
their herds and to provide a fruitful harvest. The shrine became
a convent when Ireland was Christianized. Like the priestesses
before them, nineteen nuns tended the fire in rotation and on
the twentieth day of the cycle, it was believed that Brigit tended
it. In 1220 CE the Church took action against the practice, claiming
it was Pagan, and the fire was extinguished. The fire was re-lit
until the reign of Henry VIII when it was permanently quenched.
In 1993, the Brigidine Sisters*, re-lit the flame in the market
square at Kildare, and they have since kept the flame burning
at Solas Bhride, their spiritual center. Fires and candles continue
to be burned worldwide in Brigid’s honor, especially on
her feast day, February 2nd.
Brigid
is a complex and diverse being with a wide appeal. She inspires
the poet and others in their creative endeavors. She is the patroness
of the forge and the hearth. Brigid guides the hand of the midwife
and the healer. She is a representative of unity and, therefore,
peace.
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*In Celtic Britain, warrior queens frequently led
the Brigantes tribe. Their primary deity was Brigantia