Macneamh | Reflections
Living Archive of Language & Gaelic Wisdom
This is a space for Irish language, poetry, and traditional wisdom — held as living expressions of inner, cultural, and ancestral life. These offerings arise from land, memory, imagination, and relationship. They are not presented as material to master, but as presences to encounter. Gathered in fedóireacht — the Irish word for weaving — this archive holds language, story, symbol, folklore, and image as interlaced threads, in living relationship. It offers a way of sensing the texture and rhythm of how these elements are woven throughout the wider work, before entering more extended journeys.
You are invited to enter slowly, to linger where something stirs, and to return when the time is right.
Cocaí Féir
The haystacks stood in the field for a month or so, and then it was time to bring them home from the fields to the shed or haggard- the traditional storage area for the crops…
In the shelter of each other the people live. [Video]
Probably the most well-known Sean Fhocail, which is most often referenced, is “Ar scáth a chéile a mhaireann na daoine”…
Lá Buí Bealtaine [Video]
Bealtaine marks the beginning of summer in the ancient Celtic calendar. It is a Cross Quarter Day, halfway between the Spring Equinox and the Summer Solstice. In ancient times, bonfires were lit to mark a time of change and transition, celebrating the season's turning…
Raftery - The Poet’s Praise of Mary Hynes [Video]
Antoine O Raifteiri (Anthony Raftery) was an 18th-century blind Irish poet and fiddle player who came from the ancient bardic tradition. He lived and walked the roads of Mayo and, later, predominantly, South Galway, playing music and reciting poetry in the time before the famine…
Spring in the West [Video]
As we emerge from the dark incubation of the wintering season, the world outside the window begins to come back to life. The buds are slowly coming onto the trees, the earth softens, and new life forms. Our souls are growing, too…
St Patrick’s Day Celebration [Video]
Ireland is world-renowned for its writers, poets, storytellers, artists and musicians. It is unclear when literacy first came to Ireland. The earliest Irish writings are inscriptions, mostly simple memorials, on stone in the Ogham alphabet, the earliest of which date to the 4th century…
Granuaile – Pirate Queen of the Irish Seas [Video]
Gráinne Ní Mháille (Grace O’Malley in English), or as she is known in Irish folklore, Granuaile, was born in Ireland around 1530. She was the daughter of Dubhdara O Máille, who commanded the biggest fleet of ships in Ireland at the time. They were from Clare Island, a stunning island in Clew Bay in Co. Mayo. When her father died…