Our Celtic Stories
Listen to our voices, hear our tales, see our home, and wish you were here”
"These are the stories of Ancient Celtic Legend, stories that root us to the past and show our entwined history”
It is said that, if you stand overlooking Cardigan Bay, between Aberystwyth and the Dyfi estuary, on a calm day, you might hear the ringing of bells coming from deep below the waves.
The unfiltered beauty and heavenly tranquillity of Glendalough in County Wicklow is what attracts almost three-quarters of a million visitors each year.
St Colman O’Ficra was a Catholic saint who lived in the 7th century and founded a monastery on what is now St Colman’s Church in Templeshanbo, County Wexford.
The Celts worshipped many Gods, but as with many other ancient cultures, they also feared evil forces. There are many stories of vampirism in Ireland and one of the most frightening creatures is known as the Dearg Due, or ‘Red Thirst’.
St David is the greatest figure in the Welsh Age of Saints, the bringer of Christianity to the Celtic tribes of Western Britain and the only native-born patron saint of the countries of Britain and Ireland.
This tale comes from the longer story of Culhwch and Olwen, in which the young squire Culhwch falls in love with Olwen, the daughter of an evil giant, and seeks her hand in marriage.
Listen to our voices, hear our tales, see our home, and wish you were here”
A suite of collectable comics, weaving our earliest shared history, unfolding through time and location – as only a trainee Druid and Pooka can.