Mider
Mider visits Rib's camp and kills their horses, then he gives them a big horse of his own ready harnessed with a packsaddle
Mider visits Rib's camp and kills their horses, then he gives them a big horse of his own ready harnessed with a packsaddle (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
I may add that 6t^n was herself one of the side or fairies; and one of Mider's reasons for taking her away was, that she had been his wife in a previous stage of existence (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: Mider visits Rib's camp and kills their horses, then he gives them a big horse of his own ready harnessed with a packsaddle (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
"Mider visits Rib's camp and kills their horses, then he gives them a big horse of his own ready harnessed with a packsaddle."
- attestation: I may add that 6t^n was herself one of the side or fairies; and one of Mider's reasons for taking her away was, that she had been his wife in a previous stage of existence (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)
"I may add that 6t^n was herself one of the side or fairies; and one of Mider's reasons for taking her away was, that she had been his wife in a previous stage of existence."
- attribution: Now it is true that the fairy Mider is described as resembling the other heroes of Irish story (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)
"Now it is true that the fairy Mider is described as resembling the other heroes of Irish story, in having golden yellow hair and bright"