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Fand and Ulster
In the Ulster Cycle tale, Serglige Con Culainn (" The Sickbed of Cúchulainn ") Manannán's wife, Fand, has an ill-fated affair with the Irish warrior Cúchulainn.

Fand and tale
Cú Chulainn sends him to the Otherworld with Lí Ban, sister to Fand, and he brings back bountiful descriptions of the Otherworld in the tale Serglige Con Culainn ( The Sickbed of Cúchulainn ).

Fand and Serglige
Though Cú Chulainn had many lovers, Emer's only jealousy came when he was entranced into love with Fand, wife of Manannán mac Lir, the king of the great sea, as recounted in the narrative Serglige Con Culainn (" The Wasting Sickness of Cú Chulainn ").

Fand and Cúchulainn
When Fand sees that Cúchulainn's jealous wife, Emer is worthy of him ( and accompanied by a troop of armed women ), she decides to return to Manannán, who then shakes his magical cloak of mists between Fand and Cúchulainn so that they may never meet again.
Cúchulainn eventually regains his health by the favor of Fand when, via negotiators ( Lí Ban, and Cúchulainn's charioteer, Láeg ), Cúchulainn reluctantly agrees to travel to the Fand's otherworld island and help her in a battle against her foes.
Cúchulainn and Fand then become lovers.
Fand sees that Emer is worthy of Cúchulainn, and obviously upset by their affair, so Fand chooses to leave him.
She chants a poem, and then returns to her husband Manannán, who shakes his magical cloak of mists between Fand and Cúchulainn, that they may never meet again.

Fand and sea
According to Táin Bó Cúailnge ( the Cattle Raid of Cooley ), his wife is the beautiful goddess, Fand (" Pearl of Beauty " or " A Tear "-later remembered as a " Fairy Queen ", though earlier mentions point to her also being a sea deity ).
Fand is an early Irish sea goddess, later described as a " Queen of the Fairies ".
Lí Ban is an " Otherworldly woman " from Irish Mythology, best known as the sister of the sea goddess Fand, and perhaps an early sea deity herself.

Fand and goddess
The woman may be the goddess Fand, the warrior may be Manannán mac Lir or Lugh, and after strange adventures the hero may return successfully.

appears and Ulster
She sometimes appears in the form of a crow, flying above the warriors, and in the Ulster cycle she also takes the form of an eel, a wolf and a cow.
In the Táin Bó Cuailnge queen Medb of Connacht launches an invasion of Ulster to steal the bull Donn Cuailnge ; the Morrígan, like Alecto of the Greek Furies, appears to the bull in the form of a crow and warns him to flee.
It appears, although the original tales are lost, that Fiachnae mac Báetáin ( d. 626 ), Dál nAraidi King of Ulster, was overlord of both parts of Dál Riata.
Unusually for a character from the Ulster Cycle, Conall appears in medieval Irish genealogies as the ancestor of the kings of the Dál nAraidi and the Uí Echach Cobo.
When the three heroes return to Ulster, Cú Roí appears to each in the guise of a hideous churl ( bachlach ) and challenges them to behead him, then allow him to return and behead them.
Cú Chulainn, also spelled Cú Chulaind or Cúchulainn () Irish for " Culann's Hound "; and sometimes known in English as Cuhullin (), is an Irish mythological hero who appears in the stories of the Ulster Cycle, as well as in Scottish and Manx folklore.
This appears to have resulted in a heavy defeat by the Northumbrians, led by Uhtred of Bamburgh, later Earl of Bernicia, which is reported by the Annals of Ulster.
A " Gilla Caemgein son of Cinaed " also appears in the Annals of Ulster.
His death appears in the Annals of Ulster for 694 along with a number of other entries which appear to be misplaced by 45 years.
Cathbad, the druid who foretells the evil consequences of Deirdre's birth and appears in several other tales of the Ulster Cycle, gives his name to Sláine's chief druid.
However a scythed chariot appears in the The Cattle-Raid of Cooley ( Táin Bó Cúailnge ), the central epic of the Ulster cycle of Early Irish literature.
Caladbolg (" hard cleft ", cognate with Welsh Caledvwlch ; the name 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 Troi ), sometimes written Caladcholg (" hard blade "), is the sword of Fergus mac Róich from the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology.
It is possible that Ivar may be identical to the Ímar, apparent ancestor of the Uí Ímair dynasty, whose death appears in the Annals of Ulster in 873:
It appears first in the official English records in 1210 when King John laid siege to it and took control of what was then Ulster ’ s premier strategic garrison.
Alongside Conchobar, Cú Roí and Ailill, Cairbre appears as king of Tara in stories of the Ulster Cycle, where he is the brother of Ailill mac Máta, husband of Medb of Connacht.
Aed mac Neill appears in the following entries in the Annals of Ulster: 855. 3, 856. 5, 860. 1, 861. 1, 862. 2, 862. 3, 863. 2, 864. 1, 864. 3, 866. 4, 868. 4, 870. 2, 874. 4, and finally 879. 1
Along with kings and kingdoms, the entries in the Annals of Ulster focus on important places of Ireland such as Armagh, the ecclesiastical capital of Ireland which appears several times throughout the text.
The town appears 66 different times in the Annals of Ulster and can be found in the following entries:
While the tartan gangs of the time were closely associated with the Loyalist groupings of the Ulster Defence Association ( UDA ) and Ulster Young Militants ( UYM ), the term spide is applied to youths from both the loyalist and republican communities, and appears to be wholly without sectarian bias.
Flidais also appears in the story of the Táin Bó Flidhais, of the Ulster Cycle, where she is the lover of Fergus mac Róich and the owner of a magical herd of cattle.

appears and Cycle
Malory based his book — originally titled The Whole Book of King Arthur and of His Noble Knights of the Round Table — on the various previous romance versions, in particular the Vulgate Cycle, and appears to have aimed at creating a comprehensive and authoritative collection of Arthurian stories.
The Morrígan also appears in texts of the Mythological Cycle.
In the third volume of The Baroque Cycle, The System of the World, a mysterious member of the entourage of Czar Peter I of Russia, named " Solomon Kohan " appears in early 18th century London.
The mechanism is based on a solar year, the Metonic Cycle, which is the period the Moon reappears in the same star in the sky with the same phase ( full Moon appears at the same position in the sky approximately in 19 years ), the Callipic cycle ( which is four Metonic cycles and more accurate ), the Saros cycle and the Exeligmos cycles ( three Saros cycles for the accurate eclipse prediction ).
The story appears in Agallamh na Seanórach, which is part of the Fenian Cycle.
This story first appears in Chrétien de Troyes ' Lancelot, the Knight of the Cart, and reappears as a common motif in numerous cyclical Arthurian literature, starting with the Lancelot-Grail Cycle of the early 13th century and carrying through the Post-Vulgate Cycle and Thomas Malory's Le Morte d ' Arthur.
The character appears in a positive light in novels like Gillian Bradshaw's Hawk of May, Thomas Berger's Arthur Rex, Hal Foster's comic strip Prince Valiant, and Stephen R. Lawhead's Pendragon Cycle.
One of the most difficult specimens to create was the giraffe that appears in Body Worlds & The Cycle of Life.
Lancelot's character is perhaps most fully developed in Vulgate Cycle, where he appears prominently in the third and fourth parts, known as the Prose Lancelot ( or Lancelot du lac ) and the Queste del Saint Graal ( or The Quest for the Holy Grail ) respectively.
* Jean Bart appears as a character in the Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson.
Sir Galahad first appears in the Lancelot – Grail cycle, and his story is taken up in later works such as the Post-Vulgate Cycle and Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d ' Arthur.
Sir Galahad first appears in the early-thirteenth century Old French Vulgate Cycle.
In the Videssos Cycle by Harry Turtledove, there appears as a main character a Greek physician named Gorgidas, who has much in common with the men of the Sacred Band of Thebes.
( The drive used in the Childe Cycle appears in many of Gordon R. Dickson's works.
His story first appears in the Post-Vulgate Cycle.
She first appears in The Prose Lancelot ( The Vulgate Cycle ), but fully emerges as a character in Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte D ' Arthur.
In fiction, the House appears in Neal Stephenson's The Baroque Cycle as Ravenscar House with Daniel Waterhouse as the architect in place of Hooke.

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