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Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx (Volume 2 of 2)

Chapter 3: CHAPTER IX Place-name Stories
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About This Book

This volume collects and analyzes Welsh and Manx traditions about watery catastrophes and submerged settlements, assembling local tales, topographical evidence, and historical notices. It recounts legends of lakes and coastal lands swallowed by the sea, examines reports of visible chimneys, drowned towns, and marine-borne relics, and discusses practices and explanations such as sympathetic magic that shape belief in attractions into water. Comparative notes tie field reports, manuscript sources, and register entries to patterns of coastal erosion and folklore transmission, blending narrative accounts with folkloristic interpretation throughout.

CHAPTER IX

Place-name Stories

The Dindṡenchas is a collection of stories (senchasa), in Middle-Irish prose and verse, about the names of noteworthy places (dind) in Ireland—plains, mountains, ridges, cairns, lakes, rivers, fords, estuaries, islands, and so forth …. But its value to students of Irish folklore, romance (sometimes called history), and topography has long been recognized by competent authorities, such as Petrie, O’Donovan, and Mr. Alfred Nutt.

Whitley Stokes.