Ériu, Éire, Éri, Erin. One of three sisters, divine eponyms and tutelary goddesses of Ireland, along with
Banba and
Fódla; sometimes Ériu is a personification of Ireland. According to an oft-cited passage from the
Lebor Gabála[Book of Invasions] Ériu is chosen to give her name to Ireland itself. When the
Milesians invade Ireland, Ériu and her sisters greet them, each wanting the invader to name the country after herself. Asserting herself ahead of her sisters, Ériu meets the Milesians at
Uisnech, tells them that Ireland is the fairest land under the sun, and flatters them as the most perfect race the world has ever seen. When one of the leaders,
Donn mac Míled insults her, Ériu predicts that neither he nor his children will ever enjoy Ireland, and he subsequently drowns. The poet of the Milesians,
Amairgin, promises Ériu that the country will bear her name. Éire is the Modern Irish spelling for Ériu, and Erin is an anglicized form. Banba and Fódla have been poetic references for Ireland. Ériu is traditionally described as wearing circlets or rings, which may imply, along with the etymology of her name, an identification with the sun or moon.
Although the Ériu of the
Lebor Gabála can be identified with the Ériu who mothers
Bres in
Cath Maige Tuired[The Battle of Mag Tuired], these and variant texts present a conflicting picture of her pedigree. Her father is usually named as
Delbáeth(2), her mother either
Ernmas or
Eirnin; her foster-father is
Codal. She is usually married to
Mac Gréine (sometimes known as
Cethor), but she has a celebrated affair with
Elatha, son of Delbáeth (1), to produce Bres. While not named in
Baile in Scáil[Phantom's Frenzy], she is thought to be
Lug Lámfhota's consort, a
sovereignty figure, in that narrative. She is later killed at the Battle of
Tailtiu by Suirge, where the Milesians slaughter all the kings and queens of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Ériu is also named as the founder of the festival at
Uisnech. As a personification of Ireland, she may be the queen ‘married’ in the sacred ritual marriage of fled bainisi or
banais ríghe.
Bibliography
See Julius Pokorny , ‘Der Name Ériu’, Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie, 15 (1925), 197–202;
T. F. O'Rahilly , ‘On the Origin of the Names Érainn and Ériu’, Ériu, 14 (1946), 7–28.