Flidais was a figure of Irish mythology, surnamed Foltcháin, “beautiful (or soft) hair”. She had a magical cow, the Maol, as well as herds of cattle and of deer. She is usually considered a goddess of abundance (cows were wealth), sovereignty, feasting, magic, hunting and sexuality. Her dual nature, exemplified in the cows and deer, mingles the domesticated with the wild. As Sjoestedt puts it:

She reigns over the beasts of the forests ‘the herds of Flidais’ as Tethra reigns over the creatures of the sea ‘the herds of Tethra‘. Just as Net, the war-god, had two companions, Nemain and Badb, it seems that Fergus has two partners, Flidais the forester and Medb the warrior. (Loc. 716)

We know that she had a magical herd of cows, and that her son could milk deer as well as cows, as the Cóir Annam (The Fitness of Names) says:

“Adammair Flidaise Foltcháin, that is Flidais the Queen, one of the tribe of the god-folk (the Tuatha dé Danaan), she was wife of Adammair, the son of Fer Cuirp, and from her cometh the name Buar Flidaise, the Cattle of Flidais.

“Nia Ségamain, that is ség (deer) are a máin (his treasure), for in his time cows and does were milked in the same way every day, so that he had great wealth in these things beyond that of all other kings. The Flidais spoken of above was the mother of Nia Ségamain, Adammair’s son, for two kinds of cattle, cows and does, were milked in the days of Nia Ségamain, and by his mother was that fairy power given to him.”

Is Flidais a Goddess?

There are some who argue that Flidais is a legendary figure like Arthur, rather than a goddess proper. The story of the Táin Bó Flidhais states that she later died, which sounds pretty final. On the other hand, the Cóir Annam says she was one of the Tuatha de Danann, the last group of gods to colonize Ireland before humans came. (They were the ones who went into the hills to become the faery.)

That would seem to settle it, although many of the figures in her story (next post) are definitely legendary (Fergus, Bricne) or on the borderline, like Medb. Flidais, however, shares many qualities with other Irish deities.

In an earlier post on Damona, I mentioned that there are many magical cows in Celtic myth. The Gaulish Damona was the “Divine Cow” while Irish Boann was the “White Cow”. Cattle were both wealth and food in ancient Ireland, so superabundant cows were clearly the symbol of a wealth-giving god/dess of abundance. Brigit and the British goddess Verbia are also associated with cows.

Manannán mac Lir also had magical cows that gave superabundant milk. Both also had magical powers, including magical cloaks. The sea-god shook his between his wife and her lover that he might forget her, while Flidais used her to break up the fight between her lover and her husband. In addition to cows, Flidais had deer to milk, while the sea-god had self-renewing swine.

Flidais left her husband, Oilil, for Fergus mac Roich, whose virililty was such that he needed seven women or Flidais to satisfy him. (MacLeod points out that this says as much about Flidais’ capacity as Fergus’.) Another Irish goddess, the Morrigan, also had a lover of extreme sexual capacity – the Dagda.

She also transformed into a stag in one myth, linking her with the goddess of the wild. Both seem to have been capricious with their favours. Luck followed them both, and left with them: it was said of Fergus, “his householding in the east was not good after Flidais”.

I will be discussing in another post other Celtic goddesses of the hunt and the wild but the fact that there are similar goddesses makes an Irish goddess of deer or wild animals more likely.

There are other goddesses in Celtic myth and legend who either have animal names or appear horned, and I will be discussing them in another post. Since Celtic deities seem to run to types, there may well be a goddess of of wild animals who was known on the continent and in Britain as well as in Ireland.

Flidais’ Daughters

Her daughters were also considered members of the Tuatha: Bé Chuille was a druidess and Bé Téite, whose name means “wanton” or else “assembly, gathering” (MacLeod: 10); the two seem to be channelling different aspects of their mother.

Another daughter was Fand, also renowned for her beautiful hair; she was Manannán’s wife, the one who dallied with Cúchulainn and had to have the cloak shaken between them. A healing spell mentions the “three daughters of Flethnais”, which may be a version of the modern Irish Fliodhais, derived from Flidais.

So?

It seems to me that if the medieval Irish considered her a goddess, as well as her daughters, then we should probably take their word for it. Flidais shows many similarities to other gods and goddesses in the irish pantheon, which strengthens the case for including her.

Schjoested’s linking of Flidais and Tethra is important here, because both governed wild food – going back to the hunter-gatherer stage of human existence, but continuing to be important even after farming took over. It makes sense that, given the unpredictable nature of fishing and hunting, deities that could be propitiated and give success would arise.

From there, Flidais seems to have become a goddess of general abundance, which is why she has a supernatural cow, can milk deer, and, like the Dagda and Manannán, gives feasts. In my next post, I wll be discussing the only story we have about her – the Táin Bó Flidhais, or the Driving of Flidais’ Cattle.

Links:

The image at the top is Red Deer, by Amanda Drage. (Link broken)

Flidais and Me – post by a Celtic Reconstructionist

Feminism and Religion on Flidais

Flidais and the Cailleach Bhearach

The Fitness of Names on Nia Ségamain

A dissenting view on Flidais, with lots of information on other deer-goddessses and horned goddesses.

References:

Bell, Jonathan 1985: ” Last Sheaves, Ancient Cattle, and Protestant Bibles,” Béaloideas 53: 5-10.

Greenwood, E. M. 1992: “Manchín’s Cowl in ‘Aislinge Meic: Con Glinne’,” Seanchas Ardmhacha: Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society 15/1: 36-49.

MacKillop, James 2004: An Oxford Dictionary of Celtic Mythology, OUP.

MacLeod, Sharon Paice 2018: Celtic Cosmology and the Otherworld: Mythic Origins, Sovereignty and Liminality, MacFarland. (Amazon.com – this book has a chapter on Flidais and her daughters, and is a valuable resource for anyone interested in her)

Sjoestedt, Marie-Louise 2000: Celtic Gods and Heroes, Dover Publications (Kindle Edition).