Uaithne
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates In Irish mythology, Uaithne (Template:Langx, {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) is Dagda's harp, or rather the Dagda's harper, according to a number of modern translators (cf. Template:Section link).Template:Refn
AttestationsEdit
Úaithne figures as the name of Dagda's harper captured by the Fomorians according to the narrative Cath Maige Tuired ("Second Battle of Mag Tuired").<ref name="CMT-ed&tr-stokes1891"/><ref name="CMT-ed&tr-gray1982"/>Template:Refn After this battle, Dagda discovered his harp hanging on a wall, in a feasting-house wherein Bres and his father Elathan were also. The harp had two names, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:Refn ("Oak of Two Meadows"<ref name="CMT-notes-gray1982"/>Template:RefnTemplate:Refn) and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("Four-Angled Music"Template:Refn or perhaps rather "Four-sided Rectitude"Template:RefnTemplate:Refn). On this harp, the Dagda bound the music so that it would not sound until he would call to it by its names. After he called to it, it sprang from the wall of its own accord, came to the Dagda, and killed nine men on its way.<ref name="CMT-ed&tr-gray1982"/><ref name="brown1966"/>
According to the Template:Interlanguage link ("The Cattle-Raid of Fraech"), Úaithne, the Dagda's harper, had three sons by the Bóand of the síthe, and the three sons became harpers themselves, each being named after Úaithne's musical strain, i.e., Goltraige ("weeping-strain"), Gentraige ("laughing-strain") and Súantraige ("sleeping-strain").Template:RefnTemplate:Refn
The TBF narrative further explains: "The time the woman (Bóand) was at the bearing of children it had a cry of sorrow with the soreness of the pangs at first: it was smile and joy it played in the middle for the pleasure of bringing forth the two sons: it was a sleep of soothingness played the last son, on account of the heaviness of the birth, so that it is from him that the third of the music has been named".Template:Refn
EtymologyEdit
Úaithne presumably means "Childbirth".Template:Sfnp
Úaithne is glossed as "Orpheus" in the Irish Glossaries.<ref name="eDIL-uaithne5"/> The word has multiple meanings beside Dagda's harp.<ref name="eDIL-uaithne5"/>
Úaithne can also mean "concord in music"<ref name="eDIL-uaithne5">eDIL s.v. "{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}"</ref> and Philippe Jouët endorses the interpretation that Dagda's harp indeed means "concordance" or "harmoniousness", which would be consistent with interpreting the byname {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} as "quadrangular harmony".<ref name="jouet2007"/> Jouët also notes that since Uaithne (Uaitniu) could mean "wood", "work", "pillar" or "harmony", those different meanings could be the consequence of successive metaphors.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Page needed
In popular cultureEdit
"An Uaithne" is also the original name of Irish choir Anúna.<ref>http://www.anuna.ie/anuna-biography/ Template:Webarchive</ref>Template:Unreliable source?
Appears in the Symphogear anime series as a relic owned by Carol Malus Dienheim.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Explanatory notesEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Citations