Bibliography

Bondarenko, Grigory, “Hiberno-Rossica: ‘knowledge in the clouds’ in Old Irish and Old Russian”, in: Séamus Mac Mathúna, and Maxim Fomin (eds), Parallels between Celtic and Slavic: proceedings of the First International Colloquium on Links and Parallels between Celtic and Slavic Traditions, held at the University of Ulster, Coleraine, 19–21 June 2005, 1, Coleraine: TSO Publishers, 2006. 185–200.

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Citation details
Article
“Hiberno-Rossica: ‘knowledge in the clouds’ in Old Irish and Old Russian”
Pages
185–200
Year
2006
Description
Abstract (cited)
The present discussion aims to deal with one rare example of formulaic similarities in Old Irish and Old Russian poetic speech. In the past years several studies appeared devoted to Celto-Slavic isoglosses or correspondences in theonymics and mythopoeic language. The paper is devoted to two particular fragments in two Old Irish and Old Russian texts (the former is much less known than the latter) with a special emphasis on the semantics and poetic rules, which are common for both examples. An attempt is made to tackle the problem of common Indo-European ancestry for the formula discussed and cultural realities, which this formula reflects. The terms denoting the poetic creative art in IE languages are often borrowed from the vocabulary of different handicrafts. The poet may ‘weave’, ‘sew’, and ‘fashion’ a poem . In Old Irish a poetical craft might have been alluded by the verb fifgid ‘weaves’ as in f(a)ig feirb fithir ‘a teacher (of poetry) has woven a word’ (ACC, 52). The symbolism of binding evident in IDB can be interpreted by the shamanistic practice known throughout the world when the shaman binds a human soul (especially of a sick or dying person). This image is connected moreover with the magic of binding and bonds.
(source: eprints.ulster.ac.uk/11934)
Related publications
Other editions or printings
Bondarenko, Grigory, Studies in Irish mythology, Berlin: curach bhán, 2014.
Subjects and topics
Headings
Old Irish Old Russian
Sources
Texts
Contributors
C. A., Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
July 2015, last updated: June 2020