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Imbolc, (Saint) Brighid’s Day, Candlemas and Groundhog Day: history and relationship: Part 2 of 4

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icymist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-26-10 08:34 PM
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Imbolc, (Saint) Brighid’s Day, Candlemas and Groundhog Day: history and relationship: Part 2 of 4
The History of Brighid's Sacred Site in Kildare, Ireland: The Origins of Brighid

Brighid is the Celtic Goddess of inspiration, healing, and smithcraft. Her holiday is February 2 and the Pagan Goddess and St. Brigit are both honored on this day. She is one of the best examples of the survival of a Pagan Goddess into Christian times. She was canonized as St. Brigit by the Roman Catholic Church and various stories are given of Her origins and Her life. She was a Druid's daughter, described in the Carmina Gadelica as the "daughter of Dugall the brown." She is reported to have predicted the coming of Christianity and to have been baptized by St. Patrick. Popular folk tales describe Her as the midwife to the Virgin Mary, and She is thus always called upon by women in labor. The Christian St. Brigit was a nun, and later an Abbess, who founded an Abbey at Kildare in Ireland. She was said to have had the power to appoint the bishops of Her area, an unlikely role for an Abbess, made stranger by Her unusual requirement that these bishops also be practicing goldsmiths.

In ancient times, the Goddess Brighid had a shrine at Kildare, with a perpetual flame tended by nineteen virgin priestesses called Daughters of the Flame. No man was permitted to come near Brighid's shrine and neither did Her priestesses consort with men. Even food and supplies were brought to the priestesses by women from the nearby village. When Catholicism overtook Ireland, Brighid's Fire Temple became a convent and the priestesses became nuns, but the same traditions were upheld and the eternal flame kept burning. Each day a different priestess/nun was in charge of the sacred fire and on the 20th day of each cycle, the fire was miraculously tended by the Goddess/Saint Herself.

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