Sheela-na-gigs
Proposal review
Unravelling an Enigma
Abstract
Here Barbara Freitag examines all the literature on the subject since their discovery 160 years ago, highlighting the inconsistencies of the various interpretations in regard to origin, function and name. By considering the Sheela-na-gigs in their medieval social context, she suggests that they were folk deities with particular responsibility for assistance in childbirth. This fascinating survey sheds new light on a controversial phenomenon, and also contains a complete catalogue of all known Sheela-na-gigs, including hitherto unrecorded or unpublished figures.
Keywords
Young Man; St Patricks; patrick's; National Library; day; Scottish Gaelic; patricks; St Patrick’s Day; celebrations; St Patrick’s Day Celebrations; stone; English Dialect Dictionary; carving; Church Stretton; fertility; Dead Man; figures; Raglan Castle; british; Folk Deities; isles; Early Irish Tales; Evil Eye; Llandrindod Wells; Early Irish Literature; Birthing Stones; Irish Language; Round Towers; Gaelic; Slip JigsDOI
10.4324/9780203567067ISBN
9781134282494, 9781134282494, 9781134282487, 9780415345521, 9780203567067, 9780415345538, 9781135113421, 9781134282449OCN
1135845028Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2005Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Archaeology by period / region
Archaeological theory


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