|  | Celtic Goddess Names - F
 
    
      | Fachea An Irish goddess of poetry.
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      | Fand ("tear"; also Fann, "weak or helpless person") 
        In Irish and Manx Celtic myth Fand is a faery queen, who was once married 
        to the sea god Manannan. After he left her she was preyed upon by three 
        Fomorian warriors in a battle for control of the Irish Sea.
 
 Her only hope in winning the battle was to send for the hero Cuchulainn, 
        who would only agree to come if she would marry him. She acquiesced reluctantly 
        to his wishes, though when she met him, she fell as deeply in love with 
        him as he was with her. Manannan knew that the relationship between the 
        human world and the world of the faery could not continue without in eventually 
        destroying the faeries. He erased the memory of one from the other by 
        drawing his magical mantle between the two lovers.
 
 Fand was also a minor sea goddess who made her home both in the Otherworld 
        and on the Islands of Man. With her sister, Liban, she was one of the 
        twin goddesses of health and earthly pleasures. She was also known as 
        "Pearl of Beauty". Some scholars believe she was a native Manx 
        deity who was absorbed in the Irish mythology. Her name apparently derives 
        from the same Aryan root that produces "Venus".
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Fea ("hateful") An Irish war goddess, the wife of Nuada; daughter 
        of Elcmar and of the Brugh.
 
 Fedelma
 An Irish Poet and prophetess in the service of Queen Medb.
 
 Feidiline
 An Irish prophetess who foretold the death of Queen Maeve.
 
 Fideal
 A Scottish water demon, Fideal was one of those seductive maidens who, 
        after luring their lovers into the water, dragged them under to drown.
 
 Finchoem
 Finchoem was an Irish goddess who conceived her child in an unusualway. 
        She swallowed a worm from a magic well, hoping she would bear a hero. 
        She did; his name was Conall, a prominent stalwart in Irish heroic legend.
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      | Findabar This Irish heroine was the daughter of Queen Maeve and her consort, Aillil. 
        Aillil opposed Findabar's choice of a husband, but Findabar married the 
        mortal Froach anyway.
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      | Finnguala The Irish daughter of Ler, sister to Aedh, Conn, and Fiachra and, like 
        them, a victim of Aife. She is also known as Nuala, as such regarded in 
        some legends as Queen of Faerie (connected thereby into English mythology 
        as Una).
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      | Fiongalla Legend has it that she was held in enchantment by the powerful druid Amerach 
        in Ireland. Amerach made Fiongalla vow never to sleep with a man until 
        one brought magical yew berries, holly boughs, and marigolds from the 
        earthly seat of power. A hero named Feargal actually managed to perform 
        this almost impossible task, and won Fiongalla.
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      | Fionnuala In Irish legend, the daughter of Lir, who was transformed into a swan 
        and condemned to wander over the lakes and rivers until Christianity came 
        to Ireland.
 
 
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      | Fithir The younger of two daughters of an Irish king, she was courted by a neighboring 
        king, but her father refused permission for her to marry until her older 
        sister was wed. Not content to wait, the neighboring king kidnapped the 
        older sister and claimed that she had been killed. Fithir was then married 
        off to him. Years later, while she was on a hunting trip, Fithir ran across 
        her sister who had been held captive all those years. The shock of seeing 
        her sister alive killed Fithir. Her sister then wept herself to death.
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      | Flidais ("deer")An Irish Celtic goddess like Artemis; a huntress figure 
        associated with archery, the sanctity of forests and the wildlife therein, 
        and the chase. Unlike Artemis, however, Her lustiness and sexual appetite 
        is legendary. She can be seen in forest, driving a chariot pulled by deer, 
        and accompanied by stags.
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      | Fotla (Fodla) ("under-Earth")She one of the three goddesses who ruled 
        Ireland before the first Gaels, led by Amergin, came to the island. She 
        was given the honor of naming Ireland. Her husband is king MacCecht. See 
        also Banba and Eriu. Fotla is the wife of the Tuatha King MacCeacht.
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