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  3. Cu Chulainn

Cu Chulainn

Cú Chulainn: The Hound of Ulster

Cú Chulainn was a famous Celtic war hero and one of Ireland’s most popular figures;

He was called Ireland’s child of light. He lived in and defended the town of Ulster, and most of his stories stem from there. He was an almost invincible warrior, and he trained for battle from a young age.

Monuments for the Celtic god Cú Chulainn

This article will describe the story of Cú Chulainn, and his famous fighting ability as well as his tragic death.

Who Is Cú Chulainn in Celtic Mythology?

Cú Chulainn was a war hero, and his skills on the battlefield were unmatched. His name meant “Hound of Culann,” but it was more like a title rather than a name. His actual name was Sétanta, which means “Son of Sualtam.” Because of his history with the town, he was sometimes called the Hound of Ulster in certain myths.

He was born in Dundalk, but he grew up in Ulster and claimed that as his true home. He would later defend it using his seemingly unlimited powers. Even today, he is still a symbol of the town of Ulster, and his fame and legacy live on. He was involved in many battles and even came into contact with the fearsome Morrígan, which would be his undoing.

Powers and Weaknesses of Cú Chulainn

Cú Chulainn was like the Roman Hercules because they both were almost god-like in their powers. Cú Chulainn was said to be a descendant of the gods. It made him an incredible warrior who could defeat nearly any enemy.

He had a variety of powers and strengths, and these included:

  • A sleeping potion would get through his system in only an hour (an ordinary man would be asleep for a day)

  • Being so skilled at fighting that he could take on multiple opponents at one time

  • He had a strong warrior rage, called ríastrad. He would become like a tornado in battle, moving with such ferocity that his foes couldn’t defeat him

  • He rode into battle on a chariot pulled by two very strong horses: Liath Macha and Dub Sainglend

  • Cú Chulainn’s weapon was a spear named Gáe Bulg, which was created from the bones of a sea monster. He would carry this weapon into battle. Once Cú Chulainn’s spear was inserted into an enemy, the tip of it would send out other barbs into the victim’s body

  • He had two magical “curses” on him called “geas” that would give him power as long as he followed their rules

  • One was that he would have to eat any food that was given to him by a woman. And the other was that he could never eat dog meat (later, these rules would lead to his end)

  • He was very beautiful, and his hair color changed depending on his mood

Cú Chulainn’s Origin Story

The origin of Cú Chulainn is a little confusing. Most stories stated that his mother was named Deichtine of Ulster, but his father’s identity is a little unclear. Some said that it was Lugh of the Long-Arm, who was later King of the Tuatha dé Danann, the Celtic pantheon of gods. Others believed it was a mortal man named Sualtam mac Róich.

However, Deichtine was a son of a king named Conchobar mac Nessa, King of Ulster. So whoever his father was, Cú Chulainn had noble blood in his veins. His story began in a strange way. His mother had followed her father on a hunting expedition. They stopped at a castle along the way because there was a big snowstorm.

At the castle, Deichtine helped to deliver a baby. When they woke up, everyone in the castle found themselves in Brú na Bóinne, far away from where they were traveling. Because there was no one to care for the new baby that Deichtine had helped deliver, the baby died. Lugh of the Long-Arm appeared to Deichtine in a dream and told her that he was the father of that child and that she was pregnant now with that same child.

Deichtine and the Second Child

Enraged and surprised, Deichtine had the child aborted so that she could marry a mortal man named Sualtam mac Róich. After a little while, she gave birth to a new child from her new husband, and she named him Sétanta.

The myths state that it was Cú Chulainn, three times conceived and born twice. He was fostered by his grandfather, among others, and he had a few famous foster brothers: Conall Cernach and Lugaid Riab nDerg.

Cú Chulainn Exciting Childhood

He started training as a child to become a warrior. His strength was evident right from the start, and even before six, he got a few boy warriors to swear their allegiance. He also killed a very dangerous dog that belonged to a local smith named Culann. That was why one of Cú Chulainn’s nicknames was the Hound of Culann or the dog called Cú Chulainn’s dog.

At the age of seven, he went into his first warrior rage. Cú Chulainn’s fate was that he would become the greatest warrior of his time. He completed his training in Ireland and Scotland; he was trained by the warrior queen named Scáthach. He also battled with the queen’s twin sister named Aífe, who he later impregnated.

Cú Chulainn’s Family

Cú Chulainn was married to Emer, but Emer and Cú Chulainn shared no children. He had a son by another woman, the warrior Aífe. He was a little bit of a womanizer, and as he traveled through the country on his battle tours, he left broken hearts behind him. He would commit affairs with married women as well. It’s possible he had other children as well that he didn’t know about.

Weapons used by the Celtic god Cú Chulainn

There are some clues that he might have had a sexual relationship with a male warrior named Ferdiad. Unfortunately, Cú Chulainn unintentionally later killed his son. Cú Chulainn’s son was resting in his grandfather’s for one evening, and an intruder entered. Since he was the defender of the fort, he killed the intruder.

But when he saw the ring on the man’s finger, he knew that it was his son that he’d just killed. The man was wearing a ring that identified him as Connla, son of Aífe.

Celtic Myths of Cú Chulainn

Because he was a great warrior and still one of Ireland’s great war heroes, he had many myths to his name. He fills much of Celtic lore. His final one was about his tragic death.

Cú Chulainn and Queen Medb

One day, Queen Medb, the queen of Connacht, used her men to search out the Bull of Cooley. He was a powerful bull, and its twin belonged to the queen’s husband, but she wanted one of her own. That way, her power would be increased. The bull resided in Ulster, and it made Cú Chulainn very powerful himself.

So she invaded Ulster with her men in search of this bull. Unfortunately, there was an old curse that laid upon the men of Ulster. Once the battle began, they started to feel labor pains and couldn’t fight as well as they might have. However, Cú Chulainn offered to fight her champions one by one, and he defeated each of them.

During the battle, there was a beautiful young woman who offered herself as a lover and to help him fight. He refused her, and when she left, he started being attacked by animals. There was an eel, a wolf, and a heifer, but he eventually defeated them and injured them all. Things started to go downhill from there.

Cú Chulainn and the Morrígan

After he won against those strange challenges, he traveled along and spotted an old woman milking a cow. She was bleeding in three places, and the places matched the wounds that Cú Chulainn had given to the heifer. He stopped by the old woman, and she offered him milk. With each drink that he took, he blessed her, and each of her wounds healed.

But once she was healed, she revealed herself as the powerful Morrígan, the powerful goddess of death and war. She had an old grudge against him, perhaps because he rejected her as a young maiden. Or It was because he yelled insults at her when she tried to steal one of his cows. Either way, she told him her prophecy: he would die in the next battle at the hands of his enemies.

Cú Chulainn and the Loss of His Friends

The battle continued, and his warrior friends came, including his supposed lover, Ferdiad. In a dream, his maybe father Lugh appeared to him and helped heal him after so long in battle. When he woke up, he felt better, but he saw that all his friends, including Ferdiad, were lying slain around him. They were killed by Queen Medb’s men.

He flew into another one of his rages, but first, he built a wall of protection using the bodies of his friends. He defeated his foes there, and the curse of the Ulster men was finally broken. They could fight with their real potential while Cú Chulainn could rest once again.

In a later battle, he met his former foster father (one of them), and because of their past, his foster father refused to fight Cú Chulainn again. So Queen Medb and her men had to retreat.

He went to fight against Queen Medb, but for some reason, he knew that she was menstruating, and he let her leave his borders untouched. The bull was protected within his kingdom for just a little while longer. He completed all of these things by the young age of eighteen.

How Did Cú Chulainn Die?

He had many enemies, even more than Queen Medb, and one of these was a king named Lugaid, whose father Cú Chulainn had killed. Even though Cú Chulainn had a powerful spear, Lugaid had three powerful and magical spears. Each spear was powerful enough to kill a king or essentially take down a powerful man, even one as powerful as Cú Chulainn.

Lugaid made an alliance with other enemies of Cú Chulainn, and together they agreed that the spear could kill the famous warrior, and they wanted Lugaid to do it.

Because Cú Chulainn was so strong, he might have had a chance against Lugaid’s spear. But there was only one problem: the magical curses that were already on him.

One day, he was offered food by a strange woman, and according to those rules, he had to accept the food. The food was dog meat, and he wasn’t allowed to eat that, so he was caught between a rock and a hard place.

Cú Chulainn’s death was a tragic one, and in the end, he took the meat and ate it, which weakened his superhuman abilities. Before the battle, he saw an old woman washing his bloodied armor in a river, and he knew his time was near. He hurried into battle on his chariot, and Lugaid was already there waiting for him, his spear poised for a deadly throw. Lugaid threw the spears one by one, and two killed Cú Chulainn’s horses, and the last one hit Cú Chulainn.

Cú Chulainn’s Death of Honor

He didn’t die right away, and he had made a vow that he needed to die standing up. So used his entrails to tie himself to a rock to look like he was standing up. He could fool his enemies for just a little bit longer. No one really knew he was dead until they saw a crow sitting on his shoulder. This was likely the Morrígan, standing proudly over the man she’d prophesied to die.

Even though he was dead, he still had a little power left. Lugaid, satisfied with his kill, rushed to come and cut off Cú Chulainn’s head. But when he did, a beam of strong light came from Cú Chulainn’s body, and it was strong enough to remove Lugaid’s hand.

After the battle, one of Cú Chulainn’s fellow warriors ran after Lugaid and slew him in vengeance. So in the end, despite Cú Chulainn’s death, his homeland was avenged, and Ulster won the battle.

Cú Chulainn and Other Mythical Heroes

Cú Chulainn was similar to a few other figures in various mythologies.

  • Hercules: Roman demi-god who experienced those bouts of fury, and he even killed his children

  • Hildebrand: an old German hero who also didn’t recognize his son until after he killed him

  • Samson: a mighty Biblical hero who had superhuman strength

  • Achilles: the Greek hero who also was a mighty warrior and experienced great loss

Cú Chulainn in Pop Culture

We can see the character of Cú Chulainn in a lot of pop culture media:

  • The title song of the “Boondock Saints” movie was called “The Blood of Cú Chulainn”

  • In Marvel comics in the Celtic pantheon

  • In the video game “Final Fantasy XII”

  • In the video game “Smite”

  • The highest rank in the Irish Scouts is called Order of Cú Chulainn

Conclusion

Swords of Celtic god Cú Chulainn, the hound of Ulster

Cú Chulainn was a fierce warrior with mythological powers whose story has stood the test of time. Even now, Ireland recognizes him as one of the most famous Irish folk heroes.

Take a look at the main points we covered in this article about Cú Chulainn’s story:

  • Cú Chulainn was a famous warrior hero, and he grew up and defended the kingdom of Ulster during his time

  • He had unsurpassed skill in battle, and he began his training as a child in Scotland and Ireland under the tutelage of a battle queen

  • His name means “Hound of Culann,” but that’s more like a title. His real name was Sétanta, meaning “Son of Sualtam”

  • He had many abilities that helped him in battle: he could get a sleeping potion through his system in an hour. He could beat anyone with a blade, even fighting multiple people at once.

  • He also could go into a blind rage in battle, which was like a tornado kind of force. He had a strong spear that would insert other barbs when pushed into an enemy’s body

  • But he also had two weaknesses: he would have to eat anything a woman offered him, and he could also not eat dog meat

  • Cú Chulainn was the son of Deichtine who was a princess. His father is unknown, but it might have been Lugh of the Long-Arm or Sualtam

  • Deichtine was traveling with her father, and when they stopped at a castle during a snowstorm, she helped to deliver a baby

  • But when she woke up, she and her father’s men had been dropped far away from that castle, and the baby died

  • Lugh came to Deichtine in a dream and told her that that was his child, and now she was pregnant with the child

  • She aborted it because she wanted to get married to Sualtam. After the wedding, they had a child, and some myths believe that all of these children were Cú Chulainn, conceived three times and born twice

  • By a young age, Cú Chulainn was already powerful. He could get people to swear allegiance to him, and he even killed a dangerous dog. This got him the nickname the “Hound of Culann” because the dog belonged to a smith named Culann

  • He was married to Emer, but they had no children together. He had a son with the warrior queen’s sister that he trained with

  • Later, he killed his own son, Connla, without knowing it because his son was intruding into his grandfather’s fort, and Cú Chulainn was defending it

  • Queen Medb was one of Cú Chulainn’s enemies, and she wanted a famous bull in Ulster, so she used her men to attack his kingdom

  • Cú Chulainn fought back and was able to defeat many of her men just on his own

  • He met a young woman along the way who offered herself as his lover and aide. He refused, and then animals started attacking him: an eel, wolf, and a heifer

  • He defeated and injured the animals, and later, he saw an old woman milking a cow, and the woman had the same injuries as the cow that attacked him

  • She offered him milk, and every time he drank, he blessed her, and some of her wounds healed

  • She revealed herself to be the Morrígan and told him that he was to die soon

  • Once when he was resting during the battle, he woke up to find his warrior friends dead, and he flew into a rage

  • Later, when traveling to a new battle, an old woman offered him dog meat, and because he was offered food from a woman, he had to eat it

  • His powers were weakened, and he even saw the same old woman washing the blood of Cú Chulainn off his armor in the river

  • The next day he died in battle, and his enemy Lugaid threw a powerful spear at him

  • But he died standing up, and he even tied his entrails to a stone to keep him standing so that his enemies didn’t know that he was defeated

  • When Lugaid came to cut off his head, Cú Chulainn’s body emitted a powerful light that cut off Lugaid’s hand

  • Friends of Cú Chulainn killed Lugaid, and Ulster won the battle

  • Cú Chulainn was similar to Hercules, Achilles, and Samson

  • He appears in media such as the Final Fantasy game and Marvel comics

Cú Chulainn was a powerful warrior, and it was in his blood from the very beginning, learning the skills from childhood. He was so powerful that he was practically undefeatable, but at least he was loyal to his rules.

When the old woman offered him the dog meat, he had to take it, and even though it meant his demise, he was a rule follower to the end. No wonder he remains an important hero in Ireland even today, and his name lives on.

By Timeless Myths

Celtic Gods:

  • • Aengus
  • • Arawn
  • • Badb
  • • Brigid
  • • Cailleach
  • • Ceridwen
  • • Cernunnos
  • • Cu Chulainn
  • • Dagda
  • • Danu
  • • Gwydion
  • • Herne The Hunter
  • • Lugh
  • • Medb
  • • Morrigan
  • • Neit
  • • Nuada
  • • Taliesin
  • • Taranis
Cú Chulainn

Cú Chulainn

The greatest hero in Celtic myths was one of the principal characters in the Ulaid Cycle. Cú Chulainn (or Cu Chulainn) was the son of Deichtine and the sun god, Lugh Lamfada . Though Lugh was his father, he called himself Cu Chulainn Mac Sualtam a...

November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Cú Chulainn

Cú Chulainn

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November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Conall Cernach

Conall Cernach

Conall was the son of Amorigin and Findchaem (Finachoom), daughter of Cathbad and Maga. Conall was the husband of Niam. He was often called Conall Cernach - Conall the Victorious . Conall was also the cousin and foster-brother of the hero Cú Chula...

November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Scáthach

Scáthach

A famous woman warrior. Scáthach (Scathach) lived in the Land of the Shadow (which was possibly the island of Skye, near mainland Scotland). She was among the greatest women warriors who trained young warriors in special techniques in combat. Her ...

November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Cú Roi

Cú Roi

King of Munster. Cú Roi (Cu Roi) was the father of Lugaid Mac Cu Roi (Lewy). In the Welsh Culhwch and Olwen , Cú Roi was equated with Cubert son of Daere. During Bricriu's Feast , Cu Roi transformed himself into a giant or demon named Uath ("Horro...

November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Cailitin

Cailitin

Cailitín Dána (Cailitin or Calatin) was the chief druid of Medb and Ailill . Cailitin was known most for his fight against Ulster's hero Cu Chulainn , in the Táin Bó Cuailnge . Cailitin had many sons and several daughters, and they were all known ...

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Aífe

Aífe

A woman warrior. Aífe (Aife) possibly came from Britain. Aife was the chief enemy of Scathach , who was also a woman warrior. So great was her prowess and skills in battle that even if Scathach did not fear Aife, she was still wary, since Aife was...

November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
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Finn Mac Cumhaill

The greatest Fianna warrior in the Fenian cycle. Finn was the son of Cumhaill and Muirenn (Muirne, Murna), who was the daughter of the druid Tadg and the granddaughter of Nuada of the Silver Hand . During the reign of Conn, his father died before ...

November 25th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Cumhaill

Cumhaill

Captain of the Fianna ( rígfhéinnid ) and chieftain of Clan Baiscne. Cumhaill (Cumhall or Cool) was the son of Trenmor and descendant of Baíscne. Cumhaill was also the brother of Crimmal . Cumhaill married Muirenn , daughter of Tadg and granddaugh...

November 25th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe
Lugaid Mac Cú Roí

Lugaid Mac Cú Roí

A warrior from Munster. Lugaid (Lewy) was the son of Cú Roi (king of Munster) and Bláithíne (Blathnat). When Cú Chulainn (Cu Chulainn) killed his father, Lugaid conspired with Medb (Maeve), seeking the hero's downfall. Lugaid killed Cu Chulainn by...

November 8th, 1999 • Jimmy Joe

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