- Lost
tales Echtrae Con
Culainn Echtrae Chrimthaind Nia Nair
Echtrae Fiamain Echtrae Con Roi
Echtrae Chonaill Echtrae Chonchobair Echtrae Machae ingine...
-
should rather be
considered an
echtra (‘adventure’ tale) and the
title Echtrae Brain should be adopted, for
indeed Echtra Bran maic
Febail is the title...
- again. The
immrama are
generally confused with a
similar Irish genre, the
echtrae or "adventure". Both
types of
story involve a hero's
journey to an "otherworld"...
-
various Irish heroes and
monks forming the
basis of the
Adventure Myth or "
echtrae" as
defined by
Myles Dillon in his book
Early Irish Literature. This otherworld...
-
catha battles uatha terrors immrama voyages aite
deaths fessa feasts forb****a
sieges echtrae adventure journeys aitheda elopements airgne plunderings...
- in the
Welsh Mabinogion. An
example from
Irish literature occurs in the
Echtrae Airt meic
Cuinn (Echtra, or
adventure in the Otherworld, of Art mac Cuinn)...
-
American Library ****ociation. ISBN 9780838908037. Dumville,
David (1976). "
Echtrae and Immram: Some
Problems of Definition". Ériu. 27: 73–94. JSTOR 30007669...
- been
translated by
Trevor Joyce and
Seamus Heaney. The adventures, or
echtrae, are a
group of
stories of
visits to the
Irish Other World (which may be...
-
Eithne Tháebfhota ("of the Long Side") was one of the
daughters of the king Cathaír Mór.
According to the
Irish mythology, she was
described as the queen...
- Art mac
Cuinn ("son of Conn"), also
known as Art Óenfer (literally "one man", used in the
sense of "lone", "solitary", or "only son"), was,
according to...