Caladbolg
Caladbolg ("hard cleft",<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> also spelled Caladcholg, "hard blade") is the sword of Fergus mac Róich from the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology.<ref name=dcm>James MacKillop, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology, Oxford University Press, pp. 64-65</ref>
Fergus calls his sword by that name in Táin Bó Cúailnge. Ailill mac Máta had stolen Fergus's sword when he caught him in flagrante with Medb. Fergus carved a dummy wooden sword to disguise the fact he was unarmed.<ref name=tbc1>Cecile O'Rahilly (ed. & trans.), Táin Bó Cúailnge Recension 1, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1976</ref>Template:Rp Ailill returns the sword to him before the final battle, and Fergus speaks a poem over it, calling it Caladcholc in one version,<ref name=tbc1 />Template:Rp and Caladbolg in another.<ref name=tbc2>Cecile O'Rahilly (ed. & trans.), Táin Bó Cúailnge from the Book of Leinster, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1970</ref>Template:Rp It is said to have been "the sword of Leite from the elf-mounds. When one wished to strike with it, it was as big as a rainbow in the air."<ref name=tbc2 />Template:Rp Prevented from using it against Conchobar mac Nessa, Fergus instead cuts off the tops of three hills.<ref name=tbc1 />Template:Rp
A poem in the Duanaire Finn traces the ownership of sword through various figures of classical mythology and history, passing down from Saturn, via the heroes of the Trojan War, to Julius Caesar, to Cú Chulainn, who gave it to Fergus. After Fergus's death, it was passed down through the generations from Medb, to Fionn mac Cumhaill's grandson Oscar, and ultimately to Saint Patrick.<ref>Eoin Mac Neill (ed. & trans.), "Oscar's Sword", Duanaire Finn: The Book of the Lays of Finn, Irish Texts Society, 1908, pp. 153-162</ref>
T. F. O'Rahilly argues that Caladbolg is the older form of the name, and interprets it as meaning "hard lightning". He connects it with the Builg, an ancient people of Ireland (he identifies a subgroup of the Múscraige called the Dál Caladbuilg), as well as Template:Langx, the Welsh name of King Arthur's sword Excalibur.<ref>O'Rahilly, T. F., Early Irish history and mythology, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1957, p. 68-69</ref> Other sources connect similarly named swords with the legends of Arthur, Cú Chulainn, Fergus mac Léti, and Fergus mac Róich.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The name Caladbolg appears in the plural as a generic word for "great swords" in the 10th-century Irish translation of the classical tale The Destruction of Troy, Togail Troí.<ref>Thurneysen, R. "Zur Keltischen Literatur und Grammatik", Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie, Volume 12, p. 281ff.</ref>
See also
References
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