Ogham Art | Your Presence Written in the Past
Ogham Art | Your Presence Written in the Past
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A Hundred Thousand Welcomes (Céad Míle Fáilte) Print
Ogham Art Cead Mile Failte print - closeup
Ogham Art 100,000 Welcomes print back view

A Hundred Thousand Welcomes (Céad Míle Fáilte) Print

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Regular price $60.00 $0.00

Welcome your guests a hundred thousand times with our 3-window print featuring the traditional Irish greeting.  The Irish words for hundred (céad), thousand (míle) and welcome (fáilte) presented in Ogham in hospitable hues of green and beige.  The phrase is featured in English in a footer window beneath. 

  • Presented in a white mat and domed black composite gallery frame (includes glass, open-front box, black velvet backing with installed hangers). Outer dimensions 17"W x 10"H
  • Includes a descriptive label on the back of the frame along with a 4x6 card explaining the history of the Ogham alphabet

Ships within 1-3 business days. USPS shipping times are in addition to this handling period.

Here is a brief summary of the Ogham alphabet.  Stay tuned for more detailed posts in the days to come.  Sign up below for the Ogham Art Newsletter to receive email notifications about new postings, blogs, products and events.

Sláinte,
Colleen & Chris

 

Ogham is the earliest written form of Primitive Irish, the oldest of the Gaelic languages. Ogham was first used in Ireland and parts of England, Scotland and Wales between the 2nd and 6th centuries. Though its actual origins remain a mystery today, it is believed the Celts desired a cryptic alphabet that could not be deciphered by Roman Britain.

Ogham Alphabet

Ogham stone

Represented as a series of perpendicular and intersecting lines, this ancient script is thought to be influenced by the Latin alphabet using 20 characters. It is most commonly written vertically and is read from bottom to top. When presented horizontally, it is read from left to right.

Ogham was carved into stones and trees to mark land boundaries or to commemorate a member of the community. Today there are roughly 400 surviving stones featuring proper names, ancestral and tribal affiliations, and Latin words.