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wants him to be well, and he begins to get better, but says the cure will only be complete if she agrees to meet him on the hill above the house, so as not to shame the king in his own house. She agrees to do so three times, but each time she goes to meet him, she in fact meets Midir, who has put Ailill to sleep and taken his appearance. On the third occasion Midir reveals his identity and tells Étaín who she really is, but she does not know him. She finally agrees to go with him, but only if Eochu agrees to let her go.
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to 148 BC, is a real-life counterpart to this legendary road. Finally, Midir suggests they play for a kiss and an embrace from Étaín, and this time he wins. Eochu tells Midir to come back in a month for his winnings, and gathers his best warriors at Tara to prepare for his return. Despite the heavy
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However, Eochu's brother, Ailill
Angubae, also falls in love with her, and wastes away with unrequited desire. Eochu leaves Tara on a tour of Ireland, leaving Étaín with the dying Ailill, who tells her the cause of his sickness, which he says would be cured if she gave the word. She tells him she
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at Brí Léith, Midir appears and promises to give Étaín back. But at the appointed time, Midir brings fifty women, who all look alike, and tells Eochu to pick which one is Étaín. He chooses the woman he thinks is his wife, takes her home and sleeps with her. She becomes pregnant and bears him a
80:, who was turned into a fly by Midir's jealous wife, which had been swallowed by the wife of Étar, an Ulster warrior. Étar's wife becomes pregnant, and Étaín is reborn. When Eochu invites the men of Ireland to the festival of
97:, an ancient Irish board game, with him. They play for ever increasing stakes. Eochu keeps winning, and Midir has to pay up. One such game compels Midir to build a causeway across the bog of Móin Lámrige: the
84:, they refuse to attend for a king who has no queen. He sends messengers to look for the most beautiful woman in Ireland, and they find Étaín. Eochu falls in love with her at first sight, and marries her.
128:. Out of shame, Eochu, orders the daughter of their incestuous union to be exposed, but she is found and brought up by a herdsman and his wife, and later marries Eochu's successor
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daughter. Later, Midir appears and tells him that Étaín had been pregnant when he took her, and the woman Eochu had chosen was his own daughter, who had been born in Midir's
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guard, Midir appears inside the house. Eochu agrees that Midir may embrace Étaín, but when he does, the pair fly away through the skylight, turning into swans as they do so.
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Later, after Ailill has fully recovered and Eochu has returned home, Midir comes to Tara and challenges Eochu to play
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119:(fairy-mound) in Ireland until his wife is returned to him. Finally, when they set to digging at Midir's
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Lebor Gabála Érenn: The Book of the Taking of
Ireland Part V
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249:Heritage Ireland: Corlea Trackway Visitor Centre
35:synchronises his reign with the dictatorship of
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101:, a wooden causeway built across a bog in
49:dates his reign to 82–70 BC, that of the
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188:, Irish Texts Society, 1956, p. 299
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58:He plays an important role in the
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342:1st-century BC legendary monarchs
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314:Eterscél
303:82–70 BC
252:Archived
130:Eterscél
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76:of the
31:. The
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70:Étaín
62:saga
205:1.37
136:(in
82:Tara
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301:FFE
296:LGE
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126:síd
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