Boa Island

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Boa Island, overlooking Lower Lough Erne

Boa Island is an inland island near the north shore of Lower Lough Erne in Fermanagh. It is 15.5 miles from the county town, Enniskillen.

Boa is the largest island in Lough Erne, approximately 5 miles long,[1] and relatively narrow. The A47 road goes through the length of the island. This road joins each end of the island to the mainland by bridges leading west toward Castle Caldwell and east toward Kesh.

The Boa Island carved stones, graveyard, and enclosure are Scheduled Historic Monuments sited in the townland of Dreenan in Fermanagh, at H08526197.[2] The Lustymore stone figure was moved here in 1939 from the nearby island of that name.

The oldest stone monument on the island is a denuded cairn at Inishkeeragh Bridge near the southern tip of the island.[3]

Name of the island

Boa Island is named after an old Erse goddess, Badhbh, sometimes spelled, Badb, the goddess of war.

Badhbh sometimes took the form of a carrion crow, most notably on the shoulder of the warrior, Cú Chulainn, after he died in battle.[4] At other times she is depicted as a wolf. She is one of a triad of Celtic war goddesses that included her sisters, Macha (from whom Armagh is named) and Morrigan. Badb is said to have caused confusion among the enemy in battles, providing victories to her side. Battlefields were named, "the land of the Badb", by the ancient Gaels.

Stone figures

The Boa Island figure and (foreground) Lustymore Island figure

Two unrelated anthropomorphic carved stone statues called the Boa Island figure and the Lustymore Island figure are now found together in Caldragh graveyard on Boa Island.[3] Caldragh graveyard dates from the Irish early Christian period (400–800 AD).[5] Both of the figures were badly damaged when they were first found. They have been placed beside each other on unrelated pillars in the graveyard which is the original location of the Boa figure.[6] A canopy has been placed over them to protect them from the weather. Both of the stone figures are generally accepted to be the likeness of pagan deities.[5]

The larger of the figures is the Boa Island bilateral figure. It is regarded as one of the most enigmatic and remarkable stone figures in Ireland.[3] It is called a Janus-figure because it has two faces, reminding some of the Roman two-headed deity Janus, however, it is not a representation of Janus. It is thought to represent a Celtic deity and could represent a Celtic goddess as readily as a god, especially given the name of the island.

In Celtic culture, heads were very important because they were thought to contain a person's spirit after their death. Severed heads were taken in triumph after battles.[5]

The former bases of the figures include further details

The Boa Island bilateral figure is 29 inches high, 18 inches wide on its two broader surfaces, and 12 inches wide on its two narrow surfaces.[6] Each side of the figure has a face and torso. On the sides of the stone where the two carved figures are joined, is an interlace design that may represent hair. The faces are large and pointed ovals in shape, with big eyes, straight noses, and half open mouths with protruding tongues above the pointed chins.

The figure has no neck, with its head resting directly on its torso. The torso is a square block with hunched shoulders, crossed arms, and a belt.[5][3] The figure ends just below its waist.[6] The lower section of the figure—two hands with elongated fingers carved in relief—was broken away from the top part at an unknown time in the past. This base was recently discovered half-buried in the ground close to the figure.[3]

In the top of the bilateral figure is carved a deep indentation of unknown purpose, and tourists often place small mementos in it for good luck. Fears of damage from freeze-thaw erosion have motivated authorities to provide a canopy over the statue.

The Lustymore Idol was discovered in an early Christian graveyard on Lustymore Island,[5][6] located due south of Boa Island in Lower Lough Erne. It was brought to the Caldragh graveyard on Boa Island in 1939. It is placed with its back to the indigenous bilateral figure. Lacking details of the facial features, it is less impressive visually,[3] and is approximately 27.5 inches in height.[6] It is, however, thought to be older than the bilateral 'Janus' figure - which is less worn than the Lustymore figure. Irish archaeologist Eileen Murphy states in Warrior Women (2002) that the Lustymore Idol is thought by some Irish scholars to be the precursor to Sheela-na-gigs: her arms lie across the torso and point toward the inverted V that represents the top of the vulva. A Sheela-na-gig is a female figure with enlarged genitals held open by her hands. Note the current offerings to the statue in the photograph above.

The reasons for creating these stone sculptures and the dates of their creation are not certain. They may have been part of pre-Christian religious sites, or they may have been made by early Christians who included older pagan beliefs in their grave sites.[5]

Boa Island's bilateral figure has been compared to another two-faced figure from Holzgerlingen in Germany and the Tandragee Idol, which is in a collection in St Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh.[6][7]

These comparisons suggest that the figure dates from the British Iron Age. However, early Christian sites around Lough Erne are rich in these types of figures.[5] An example is the White Island collection of figures found 3 miles southeast of Boa Island,[3] which are primitive looking, but date from the early Christian period.[8]

Poetry

The Nobel Prize winning poet Seamus Heaney celebrated the enigmatic Boa Island bilateral figure's similarity to the Roman deity Janus in his poem "January God".[9]

The Enniskillen-born poet Francis Harvey published a collection of poems called The Boa Island Janus in 1996.[10]

Similar statues appear outside the cave of Crom Cruach in The Secret of Kells.

Pictures

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Boa Island)

References

  1. FermanaghLakelands.com. "Find Fermanagh". http://www.fermanaghlakelands.com/Portals/3/downloads/Find%20Fermanagh.pdf. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 
  2. "Dreenan (Boa Island)". Environment and Heritage Service NI - Scheduled Historic Monuments. http://www.ehsni.gov.uk/scheduled_monuments1to31mar07.pdf. Retrieved 2007-12-03. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Halpin, Andy; Conor Newman (2006). Ireland: An Oxford Archaeological Guide to Sites from Earliest Times to AD 1600. Oxford University Press. p. 157. ISBN 0-19-288057-8. 
  4. Vance, Rob (2003). Secret Sights: Unknown Celtic Ireland. Gill & Macmillan. pp. 53–54. ISBN 0-7171-3664-7. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 The Chrono Centre, Queen's University Belfast. "Boa Island - Carved figures - Lower Lough Erne". http://www.chrono.qub.ac.uk/local/fermanagh/Boa/. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 O'Kelly, Michael J. (1989). Early Ireland: An Introduction to Irish Prehistory. Cambridge University Press. p. 292. ISBN 0-521-33687-2. 
  7. The Chrono Centre, Queen's University Belfast. "The Tanderagee Idol". http://www.chrono.qub.ac.uk/local/armagh/Tanderagee/. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 
  8. Herity, Michael; George Eogan (1996). Ireland in Prehistory. Routledge. p. 253. ISBN 0-415-04889-3. 
  9. McKee, Linda (2007-04-17). "Fury over plan to relocate historic statue". Belfast Telegraph. http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/article2456300.ece. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 
  10. Irish Writers Online. "Francis Harvey". http://www.irishwriters-online.com/francisharvey.html. Retrieved 2007-11-24.