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Irish prognostics from thunder in the form of prose entries to a Latin calendar in Edinburgh, University Library, MS Laing 21, covering the months from January to October. The calendar itself refers to saints' feasts and astrological matter, with the prognostications given at the foot of each page.
Brief Irish prose tract containing a list of prognostications from thunder.
Irish prose tract containing prognostications from thunder.
Irish prognostications from thunder in the form of prose entries to a calendar. The entries are given at the bottom of each page.
Irish prose tract on omens and visions of the night, deriving from a version of the Somniale Danielis, a popular medieval Latin handbook for interpreting dreams.
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Brief prose text attributed to Fintan (mac Bóchra?) offering prognostications of the weather from the day of the week on which the first (calends) of January falls. It belongs to the type of prognostics that is often known by the Latin title Revelatio (or Supputatio) Esdrae, after the prophet Ezra.
Short Irish text of prognostications of the weather. The opening part ([M]áthair ime gaeth áithe, sáille sneachta; Túar fola fleochadh, túar teadhma torann) recalls the two quatrains in Tecosca Cormaic § 17. This is followed by some prose notes using an ‘if (madh)/then’ formula.
Early Irish poem on the eight winds blowing on the kalends of January.
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Medieval Irish poem variously attributed to Fintan or Colum Cille, containing prognostications from thunder. The first part deals with thunder as it may occur on different days of the week, while the second one deals with the phenomenon at different times of the day.