Brigit's Shrine The Celtic world in pre-Christian times was devoted
to the goddess Brigit, the all encompassing goddess of healing, farming (particularly dairy),
crafts (particularly smith crafts and poetry, the craft of words) and fire. At Brigit's shrine
at Kildare an ever burning sacred fire was kept lit in her honor by all female devotees.
This shrine was later claimed by the church and there was built a convent. Brigit was
canonized as St. Brigit and Catholic tradition had it that as a Druid convert to Christianity
St. Brigit founded this the first convent in Ireland.
St. Brigit's legends Not only as a keeper of the goddess Brigit's sacred fire,
many of the attributes and mythology of the ancient goddess was attributed St. Brigit.
It was believed that flowers sprung up from where she walked and at springtime her cloak
passed over the earth to bring it back to life. As the "Queen of Heaven" she was considered
by ancient Celts on a par with Marythe mother of Christ, some legends even referring to her as her
sister, and as the nursemaid to the infant Christ child, feeding him with her sacred milk. In a
popular spell to protect against the evil eye, she was invoked as "The Great White Mary sent to
Bride (Brigit) the lovely fair."
Brigit and St. Patrick Brigit herself was considered in popular Irish mythology
to be both mystic mother and bride of St. Patrick. Some legends have it that St. Patrick died as one
of her sacrificial victims and entered the underworld via her sacredgrove at Derry Down. As the old
Distich went, "On the hill of Down, buried in one tomb, were Bridget and Patricius."