22:
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it. His exertion seemed to them, by the movement of his hands and feet, like that of a man swimming in the sea. And when he came down to the anchor, he endeavoured to loosen it. And then some men ran towards him and wanted to seize him. But in the church, to which the anchor was fastened, there is a bishop's chair. The bishop was by chance on the spot, and he forbade the men to hold that man, for he said that he would die as if he were held in water. And as soon as he was free he hastened his way up again to the ship; and as soon as he came up, they cut the rope, and then sailed on their way out of the sight of men. And the anchor has ever since lain as a witness of the event in that church.
91:, all briefly mention a strange apparition; the Ulster Annals, for example, simply say that "ships with their crews were seen in the air". Though the annals differ as to the precise date, whether it was in 743, 744 or 748/9, they are nevertheless considered to be an early, if possibly second- or third-hand, description of the same event, an occurrence considered remarkable enough to be recorded. Naturally, the precise nature of these supposed ships cannot now be proved, though they have been variously interpreted as an unusual cloud-formation (such as the ship-shaped cloud recorded to have been seen by the 13th-century monks of
195:
until, hope in the effectiveness of exertion having been exhausted, the sailors sent down one of themselves – who, as we have heard, dangling from the anchor rope, came down it hand over hand. When he was about to disengage the anchor, he was seized by bystanders: he gasped in the hands of his captors like a man lost in a shipwreck, and died suffocated in the moisture of our thicker air. But the sailors overhead, surmising that their comrade had drowned, cut the anchor rope after having waited for an hour, and sailed away leaving the anchor.
337:
so, and the sailor climbs back "out of the marvellous as he had known it". Heaney has variously said that his poem is "about the way consciousness can be alive to two different and contradictory dimensions of reality and still find a way of negotiating between them", and that "It's about the negotiation that goes on in everybody's life between what is envisaged and what is endured – between the dream up there and the doings down here...I think it's about poetry". When Heaney won the
2229:
139:, and we are told that one of the crew threw a dart at a salmon, which fell among those gathered there. A man came down to retrieve the dart, but when one of those on the ground held on to it the stranger cried, "I am being drowned". Congalach ordered that the man be let alone, and he returned to the ship, swimming.
231:
of the anchor got hooked in an arch at the church door, and all the people went out of the church and wondered, and looked upwards after the rope. They saw a ship float on the rope and men in it. And next they saw a man leap overboard from the ship, and dive down towards the anchor, wanting to loosen
336:
includes a sequence of 12-line poems called "Lightenings". The untitled eighth poem in this sequence, consisting of four three-line stanzas, outlines a new version of the story in which the anchor attaches itself to the church's altar, the sailor who climbs down fails to release it but the monks do
194:
The people were amazed, and while they discussed it among themselves, they saw the rope move as if were struggling to free the anchor. When it would not budge for all their tugging, a voice was heard in the thick air, like the clamour of sailors vying to recover the thrown anchor. Nor was it long
262:
flying his ship "like a cloud" over fields and forests. Flying ships or boats, emblematic of the Church, sailing towards heaven are a motif found on several medieval Irish carved crosses, some dating from as early as the 8th century. The trope of fouling and recovering an anchor in a monastery
289:
returning home by night who came across a rope and anchor being dragged across country until it finally snagged on a railway line. The rope, they saw, was attached to an airship with lights shining from its windows. A man climbed down the rope, cut it below him, and was carried away with the
321:
a kind of dream instruction, a parable about the necessity of keeping the lines open between the two levels of our being, the level where we proceed with the usual life of the meeting and the decision, and the other level where the visionary and the marvellous present themselves suddenly and
290:
airship. The anchor, concludes the report, can now be seen in the local blacksmith's shop. The whole report contains enough similarities to the various versions of the
Clonmacnoise story to demonstrate a link, including the returning churchgoers and poor light conditions described by the
190:(completed c. 1211). Gervase tells us that, when leaving their local church somewhere in Britain one dark and cloudy day, parishioners saw a ship's anchor embedded in a heap of stones in the churchyard and a rope leading down to it from above. He continues:
40:, simply mentioned an apparition of ships with their crews in the sky over Ireland in the 740s, later accounts through the Middle Ages progressively expanded on this with picturesque details. First the ships were reduced to one ship over
52:
was changed to an anchor which snagged on some feature of a church. The sailor who climbed down to release it was also said to be in danger of drowning in the thicker air of this lower world. The story was retold by
227:. And there it thus befell on a Sunday, when people were at church and were hearing Mass, there came dropping from the air above an anchor, as if it were cast from a ship, for there was a rope attached to it. And the
241:
The details with which the original story in the annals were progressively embellished appealed to the medieval, and especially medieval Irish, love of miracles, marvels, and inversions of reality. The
Celticist
172:
it is an anchor that is dropped. The priests seize it, but a man comes swimming down, and when the priests hold on to the anchor he protests that he is drowning. Then he swims back to the ship with his anchor.
145:, a late-11th century bishop of Dublin, gives a Latin verse account of the story which closely parallels that in the Book of Ballymote, though leaving out the intervention of Congalach and the man on the ground.
263:
occurs also in a story referenced in a gloss on an early Irish hymn, "Ní car Brigit buadach bith"; in this story the anchor belongs to an ordinary seagoing ship and the monastery lies at the bottom of the
2032:
1183:
279:(then an invention then at an experimental stage of development) seen in the sky, some being vouched for by apparently reliable sources while others were clearly hoaxes. One account, printed in the
317:
apparently first came across the
Clonmacnoise story in a 1983 academic paper by Andrew Foley, and seventeen years later said that he had been entranced by it ever since, seeing it as
1853:
1901:
345:
as "a crystallisation of much of Heaney's imaginative world: history and sensuality, myths and the day-to-day – all articulated in Heaney's rich language".
246:
instanced other Irish stories which, like the airship legend, explore "the relationship between the natural and the supernatural, between this and the
127:: "Another wonder of the same assembly: seeing three ships voyaging in the air above them, when the men of Ireland were celebrating the assembly with
1504:
1921:
2214:
2123:
250:, together with the ambiguities and relativities of time and space which were implicit in their interaction". These include the meeting of
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267:. John Carey believed this anecdote had been appropriated by the monks of Clonmacmoise and added to their version of the airship legend.
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1896:
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1931:
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135:. The ship (rather than ships) still appears at the Teltown fair assembly, but this time in the presence of the 10th-century king
176:
The anchor form of the story spread outside
Ireland, and can be found both in the chronicle of the late-12th century French abbot
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21:
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in 2014, which depicts a figure in a tiny ship in the sky which is supported by leaves of paper bearing lines from the poem.
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is the subject of a historical anecdote related in numerous medieval sources. Though the original report, in the
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period, which ended c. 1200. The locale is moved from
Teltown to the church at Clonmacnoise, and instead of a
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1987:
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Heaney's retelling of the medieval story has itself inspired other artworks. It is the starting-point of
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in his flying chariot, when Manannán said that what is sea to humans is land to gods. Also the story of
104:
306:). Altogether, the precise source of this story and the way in which it reached Texas are not obvious.
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He ends by telling us that fittings for the church door, made from the anchor, can still be seen there.
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from which a crewman threw and then recovered a fishing-spear. Then the scene shifted to the abbey of
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bewilderingly. We must, in other words, be ready for both the routine and the revelation. Never be so
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1053:"Voyagers in the vault of heaven: the phenomenon of ships in the sky in medieval Ireland and beyond"
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There is yet another thing that will seem most wonderful, which happened in the city that is called
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MS 72.1.26. The manuscript is 15th or 16th century, but the text is not so easily dateable:
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A further development becomes evident in a version of the story preserved in
Edinburgh,
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1952:
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1000:(1992). "Aerial ships and underwater monasteries: the evolution of a monastic marvel".
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223:. In that city is a church which is sacred to the memory of the holy man who is called
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1886:
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806:"Magical nationalism, lyric poetry and the marvellous: W. B. Yeats and Seamus Heaney"
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742:. Office of University Communications, University of Pennsylvania. 1 June 2000
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2010:
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298:), and the display of the anchor and escape of the aeronaut described by the
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131:", who reigned from 743 to 763. New details are given by an account in the
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1911:
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1812:
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169:
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128:
111:, a phenomenon which can make ships at sea appear to be above the horizon.
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49:
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37:
26:
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275:
During 1896 and 1897, there were many reports across the United States of
2118:
1772:
1576:
1528:
1344:
1013:
906:
512:
CODECS: Collaborative Online
Database and e-Resources for Celtic Studies
2215:
Unidentified
Anomalous Phenomena Disclosure Act (UADPA), USA law (2023)
2022:
1817:
588:
247:
323:
2113:
2017:
1977:
203:
180:, where the anchor is supposedly dropped onto London in 1122, and in
643:
476:
2005:
1902:
1116:
1027:
Elemental
Ecocriticism: Thinking with Earth, Air, Water, and Fire
100:
41:
16:
Alleged apparition of ship(s) in the sky over Ireland in the 740s
1029:. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 105–133.
408:
2128:
264:
352:'s poem "Against Pilgrimage". It is also the subject of the
1922:
Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (2007–2012)
1854:
Investigation of UFO reports by the United States government
907:
The Permanent Secretary, Swedish Academy (5 October 1995).
514:. A. G. van Hamel Foundation for Celtic Studies. April 2020
508:"Ship seen in the air at Clonmacnoise (Edinburgh version)"
883:"Seamus Heaney, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature"
1074:
850:. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 156.
704:
655:
569:
398:
396:
968:"Poetry in motion: tapestry tribute to Seamus Heaney"
776:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 12.
683:. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 16.
526:
383:
381:
379:
202:
Finally, one more medieval retelling is found in the
1025:. In Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome; Duckert, Lowell (eds.).
716:
631:
488:
393:
57:in a well-known poem collected in his 1991 volume,
1932:Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force (current)
376:
160:considered it perhaps 14th or 15th century, while
2245:
2210:United States Congress hearings on UFOs (2022)
760:
107:. Most recently, it has been explained as an
1090:
1002:Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium
1097:
1083:
774:The Cambridge Companion to Seamus O'Heaney
547:"L'aéronef dans les légendes du Moyen Âge"
285:for 28 April 1897, told of churchgoers in
114:
1050:
649:
625:
482:
414:
1184:1665 celestial phenomenon over Stralsund
1174:1561 celestial phenomenon over Nuremberg
962:
456:
236:
25:The interior of the cathedral church at
20:
932:
843:
803:
544:
123:as part of an account of events at the
2246:
1320:Barney and Betty Hill abduction (1961)
944:. Vol. 79, no. 4. p. 43
673:
270:
1078:
1020:
996:
877:
722:
710:
661:
637:
587:
575:
532:
494:
402:
387:
309:
1179:1566 celestial phenomenon over Basel
816:. Woodbridge: Tamesis. p. 235.
341:in 1995 this poem was cited by the
13:
1877:Flying Saucer Working Party (1950)
1534:High-altitude object events (2023)
1163:Ezekiel's Wheel (circa 622–570 BC)
593:"The Irish mirabilia in the Norse
14:
2300:
1937:NASA's UAP independent study team
457:McGovern, Iggy (8 January 2018).
2228:
2227:
1051:McCaughan, Michael (Fall 1998).
844:Russell, Richard Rankin (2016).
48:, and later to Britain, and the
2194:Committee for Skeptical Inquiry
1375:John Lennon UFO incident (1974)
1189:José Bonilla observation (1883)
956:
926:
900:
871:
837:
797:
754:
728:
667:
581:
538:
1927:Identification studies of UFOs
1405:Valentich disappearance (1978)
1390:Petrozavodsk phenomenon (1977)
1270:McMinnville photographs (1950)
1142:List of reported UFO sightings
1021:Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome (2015).
847:Seamus Heaney: An Introduction
814:A Companion to Magical Realism
680:The UFO Controversy in America
628:, paragraphs 8, 14, 19 and 21.
500:
450:
420:
1:
2264:Atmospheric optical phenomena
1887:Project Blue Book (1952–1970)
1567:Aztec, New Mexico hoax (1949)
1562:Twin Falls, Idaho hoax (1947)
1415:Robert Taylor incident (1979)
1380:Travis Walton incident (1975)
1325:Lonnie Zamora incident (1964)
1220:Ängelholm UFO memorial (1946)
990:
119:The story is repeated in the
1430:Cash–Landrum incident (1980)
1330:Solway Firth Spaceman (1964)
1305:Lakenheath-Bentwaters (1956)
150:National Library of Scotland
7:
2189:List of scientific skeptics
1917:Project Condign (1997–2000)
1860:The Flying Saucers Are Real
1420:Val Johnson incident (1979)
1370:Pascagoula Abduction (1973)
330:His 1991 poetry collection
215:, a mid-13th century work.
10:
2305:
1882:Project Magnet (1950–1962)
1539:David Grusch claims (2023)
1310:Antônio Villas Boas (1957)
804:Allison, Jonathan (2005).
339:Nobel Prize for Literature
66:
2223:
2202:
2181:
2153:
2091:
2048:
2041:
1996:
1945:
1907:Condon Report (1966–1968)
1846:
1801:
1755:
1604:
1587:Alien Autopsy (1995 film)
1547:
1483:
1400:Zanfretta incident (1978)
1300:Kelly–Hopkinsville (1955)
1207:
1155:
1134:
1125:
1112:
438:(7): 50. 16 February 1833
326:as to ignore the uncanny.
164:assigned it to the later
158:Kenneth Hurlstone Jackson
1557:Maury Island hoax (1947)
1455:Voronezh incident (1989)
1440:Trans-en-Provence (1981)
1435:Rendlesham Forest (1980)
1365:Finnish Air Force (1969)
1295:Flatwoods monster (1952)
1147:Sightings in outer space
1104:
432:The Irish Penny Magazine
369:
137:Congalach mac Maelmithig
2289:UFO sightings in Europe
2279:Poetry by Seamus Heaney
1805:extraterrestrial beings
1572:Southern England (1967)
1500:Campeche, Mexico (2004)
1460:Belgian UFO wave (1990)
1290:Washington, D.C. (1952)
1285:Nash-Fortenberry (1952)
1168:Airship of Clonmacnoise
1057:Material Culture Review
942:Boston College Magazine
808:. In Hart, Stephen M.;
545:Gougaud, Louis (1924).
459:"Out of the marvellous"
115:Evolution of the legend
34:airship of Clonmacnoise
2254:8th century in Ireland
1892:Robertson Panel (1953)
1445:Japan Air Lines (1986)
1410:Kaikoura Lights (1978)
1260:Gorman Dogfight (1948)
1194:Airship wave (1896–97)
328:
234:
197:
129:Domnall son of Murchad
29:
1912:Institute 22 (1978–?)
1897:Ruppelt report (1956)
1872:Project Grudge (1949)
1582:Gulf Breeze (1987–88)
1529:Jetpack man (2020–21)
1505:O'Hare Airport (2006)
1475:Phoenix Lights (1997)
1395:Operação Prato (1977)
1280:Lubbock Lights (1951)
1255:Chiles-Whitted (1948)
1225:Kenneth Arnold (1947)
675:Jacobs, David Michael
359:Out of the Marvellous
319:
237:Sources and analogues
217:
192:
24:
2284:Supernatural legends
2203:Government & Law
2124:Government responses
1605:Sightings by country
1524:UFO incidents (2014)
938:"Against Pilgrimage"
103:, as evidence of an
1998:Conspiracy theories
1988:Trotskyist-Posadism
1867:Project Sign (1948)
1838:Reptilian humanoids
1495:UFO incident (2004)
1465:Ariel School (1994)
1360:Jimmy Carter (1969)
1355:Shag Harbour (1967)
770:O'Donoghue, Bernard
762:O'Donoghue, Bernard
277:mysterious airships
271:The Merkel incident
1953:Ancient astronauts
1577:Majestic 12 (1985)
1522:Theodore Roosevelt
1450:Ilkley Moor (1987)
1350:Falcon Lake (1967)
1215:Los Angeles (1942)
310:Seamus Heaney poem
244:Proinsias Mac Cana
182:Gervase of Tilbury
178:Geoffroy du Breuil
30:
2241:
2240:
2149:
2148:
2104:Cattle mutilation
1958:Cryptoterrestrial
1600:
1599:
1592:Morristown (2009)
1235:Flight 105 (1947)
1127:Claimed sightings
966:(19 April 2014).
881:(May–June 1996).
713:, pp. 20–21.
664:, pp. 22–24.
652:, paragraphs 2–4.
591:(December 1894).
578:, pp. 19–20.
535:, pp. 18–19.
485:, paragraphs 8–9.
254:in his ship with
133:Book of Ballymote
2296:
2231:
2230:
2050:Abduction claims
2046:
2045:
1968:Interdimensional
1963:Extraterrestrial
1828:Little green men
1803:Types of alleged
1549:Confirmed hoaxes
1340:Kecksburg (1965)
1315:Levelland (1957)
1156:Pre-20th century
1132:
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256:Manannán mac Lir
208:Konungs skuggsjá
125:Teltown assembly
121:Book of Leinster
105:alien visitation
95:), a display of
89:the Four Masters
71:Several sets of
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2274:Legendary ships
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2109:Close encounter
2087:
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1992:
1941:
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1793:Space jellyfish
1788:Mystery airship
1783:Green fireballs
1751:
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1510:Alderney (2007)
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1470:Varginha (1996)
1203:
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1023:"The sea above"
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972:The Irish Times
964:Sheridan, Kathy
961:
957:
947:
945:
931:
927:
917:
915:
913:The Nobel Prize
909:"Press release"
905:
901:
891:
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879:Harty, Patricia
876:
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828:
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736:"Seamus Heaney"
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595:Speculum Regale
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417:, paragraph 32.
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343:Swedish Academy
312:
304:Otia Imperialia
300:Speculum Regale
296:Speculum Regale
292:Otia Imperialia
273:
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213:Speculum regale
187:Otia Imperialia
117:
97:aurora borealis
69:
17:
12:
11:
5:
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2224:
2221:
2220:
2218:
2217:
2212:
2206:
2204:
2200:
2199:
2197:
2196:
2191:
2185:
2183:
2179:
2178:
2176:
2175:
2174:
2173:
2163:
2157:
2155:
2151:
2150:
2147:
2146:
2144:
2143:
2138:
2133:
2132:
2131:
2121:
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2106:
2101:
2095:
2093:
2089:
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2085:
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2075:
2070:
2065:
2060:
2054:
2052:
2043:
2039:
2038:
2036:
2035:
2030:
2025:
2020:
2015:
2014:
2013:
2002:
2000:
1994:
1993:
1991:
1990:
1985:
1983:Time-traveller
1980:
1975:
1970:
1965:
1960:
1955:
1949:
1947:
1943:
1942:
1940:
1939:
1934:
1929:
1924:
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1889:
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1879:
1874:
1869:
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1850:
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1844:
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1841:
1840:
1835:
1830:
1825:
1820:
1815:
1809:
1807:
1799:
1798:
1796:
1795:
1790:
1785:
1780:
1775:
1770:
1765:
1763:Black triangle
1759:
1757:
1753:
1752:
1750:
1749:
1744:
1742:United Kingdom
1739:
1734:
1731:Canary Islands
1724:
1719:
1714:
1709:
1704:
1699:
1694:
1689:
1684:
1679:
1674:
1669:
1664:
1662:Czech Republic
1659:
1654:
1649:
1644:
1639:
1634:
1629:
1624:
1619:
1608:
1606:
1602:
1601:
1598:
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1589:
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1579:
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1569:
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1553:
1551:
1545:
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1542:
1541:
1536:
1531:
1526:
1517:
1512:
1507:
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1497:
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1485:
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1478:
1477:
1472:
1467:
1462:
1457:
1452:
1447:
1442:
1437:
1432:
1427:
1425:Manises (1979)
1422:
1417:
1412:
1407:
1402:
1397:
1392:
1387:
1382:
1377:
1372:
1367:
1362:
1357:
1352:
1347:
1345:Westall (1966)
1342:
1337:
1332:
1327:
1322:
1317:
1312:
1307:
1302:
1297:
1292:
1287:
1282:
1277:
1272:
1267:
1265:Mariana (1950)
1262:
1257:
1252:
1250:Mantell (1948)
1247:
1242:
1240:Roswell (1947)
1237:
1232:
1227:
1222:
1217:
1211:
1209:
1205:
1204:
1202:
1201:
1196:
1191:
1186:
1181:
1176:
1171:
1165:
1159:
1157:
1153:
1152:
1150:
1149:
1144:
1138:
1136:
1129:
1123:
1122:
1120:
1119:
1113:
1110:
1109:
1102:
1101:
1094:
1087:
1079:
1073:
1072:
1048:
1035:
1018:
992:
989:
986:
985:
955:
934:Linehan, Moira
925:
899:
870:
856:
836:
822:
796:
782:
766:"Introduction"
753:
727:
715:
703:
689:
666:
654:
650:McCaughan 1998
642:
630:
626:McCaughan 1998
618:
580:
568:
551:Revue celtique
537:
525:
499:
497:, p. 107.
487:
483:McCaughan 1998
475:
449:
428:"Clonmacnoise"
419:
415:McCaughan 1998
407:
405:, p. 108.
392:
374:
373:
371:
368:
364:Dublin Airport
362:, unveiled at
311:
308:
272:
269:
238:
235:
116:
113:
99:, or, by many
68:
65:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
2301:
2290:
2287:
2285:
2282:
2280:
2277:
2275:
2272:
2270:
2269:Irish legends
2267:
2265:
2262:
2260:
2257:
2255:
2252:
2251:
2249:
2234:
2226:
2225:
2222:
2216:
2213:
2211:
2208:
2207:
2205:
2201:
2195:
2192:
2190:
2187:
2186:
2184:
2180:
2172:
2169:
2168:
2167:
2164:
2162:
2159:
2158:
2156:
2152:
2142:
2139:
2137:
2136:Organizations
2134:
2130:
2127:
2126:
2125:
2122:
2120:
2117:
2115:
2112:
2110:
2107:
2105:
2102:
2100:
2097:
2096:
2094:
2090:
2084:
2081:
2079:
2076:
2074:
2071:
2069:
2066:
2064:
2061:
2059:
2056:
2055:
2053:
2051:
2047:
2044:
2040:
2034:
2033:Project Serpo
2031:
2029:
2026:
2024:
2021:
2019:
2016:
2012:
2011:Storm Area 51
2009:
2008:
2007:
2004:
2003:
2001:
1999:
1995:
1989:
1986:
1984:
1981:
1979:
1976:
1974:
1971:
1969:
1966:
1964:
1961:
1959:
1956:
1954:
1951:
1950:
1948:
1944:
1938:
1935:
1933:
1930:
1928:
1925:
1923:
1920:
1918:
1915:
1913:
1910:
1908:
1905:
1903:
1900:
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1888:
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1880:
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1875:
1873:
1870:
1868:
1865:
1863:
1861:
1857:
1855:
1852:
1851:
1849:
1845:
1839:
1836:
1834:
1833:Nordic aliens
1831:
1829:
1826:
1824:
1821:
1819:
1816:
1814:
1813:Energy beings
1811:
1810:
1808:
1806:
1800:
1794:
1791:
1789:
1786:
1784:
1781:
1779:
1778:Ghost rockets
1776:
1774:
1771:
1769:
1768:Flying saucer
1766:
1764:
1761:
1760:
1758:
1756:Types of UFOs
1754:
1748:
1747:United States
1745:
1743:
1740:
1738:
1735:
1732:
1728:
1725:
1723:
1720:
1718:
1715:
1713:
1710:
1708:
1705:
1703:
1700:
1698:
1695:
1693:
1690:
1688:
1685:
1683:
1680:
1678:
1675:
1673:
1670:
1668:
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1658:
1655:
1653:
1650:
1648:
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1640:
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1635:
1633:
1630:
1628:
1625:
1623:
1620:
1617:
1613:
1610:
1609:
1607:
1603:
1593:
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1588:
1585:
1583:
1580:
1578:
1575:
1573:
1570:
1568:
1565:
1563:
1560:
1558:
1555:
1554:
1552:
1550:
1546:
1540:
1537:
1535:
1532:
1530:
1527:
1525:
1523:
1518:
1516:
1515:Norway (2009)
1513:
1511:
1508:
1506:
1503:
1501:
1498:
1496:
1494:
1489:
1488:
1486:
1482:
1476:
1473:
1471:
1468:
1466:
1463:
1461:
1458:
1456:
1453:
1451:
1448:
1446:
1443:
1441:
1438:
1436:
1433:
1431:
1428:
1426:
1423:
1421:
1418:
1416:
1413:
1411:
1408:
1406:
1403:
1401:
1398:
1396:
1393:
1391:
1388:
1386:
1385:Tehran (1976)
1383:
1381:
1378:
1376:
1373:
1371:
1368:
1366:
1363:
1361:
1358:
1356:
1353:
1351:
1348:
1346:
1343:
1341:
1338:
1336:
1335:Exeter (1965)
1333:
1331:
1328:
1326:
1323:
1321:
1318:
1316:
1313:
1311:
1308:
1306:
1303:
1301:
1298:
1296:
1293:
1291:
1288:
1286:
1283:
1281:
1278:
1276:
1275:Sperry (1950)
1273:
1271:
1268:
1266:
1263:
1261:
1258:
1256:
1253:
1251:
1248:
1246:
1245:Rhodes (1947)
1243:
1241:
1238:
1236:
1233:
1231:
1228:
1226:
1223:
1221:
1218:
1216:
1213:
1212:
1210:
1206:
1200:
1199:Aurora (1897)
1197:
1195:
1192:
1190:
1187:
1185:
1182:
1180:
1177:
1175:
1172:
1169:
1166:
1164:
1161:
1160:
1158:
1154:
1148:
1145:
1143:
1140:
1139:
1137:
1133:
1130:
1128:
1124:
1118:
1115:
1114:
1111:
1107:
1100:
1095:
1093:
1088:
1086:
1081:
1080:
1077:
1062:
1058:
1054:
1049:
1038:
1036:9781452945675
1032:
1028:
1024:
1019:
1015:
1011:
1007:
1003:
999:
995:
994:
973:
969:
965:
959:
943:
939:
936:(Fall 2018).
935:
929:
914:
910:
903:
888:
887:Irish America
884:
880:
874:
859:
857:9781474401654
853:
849:
848:
840:
825:
823:9781855661202
819:
815:
811:
807:
800:
785:
783:9780521838825
779:
775:
771:
767:
763:
757:
741:
737:
731:
725:, p. 28.
724:
719:
712:
707:
692:
686:
682:
681:
676:
670:
663:
658:
651:
646:
640:, p. 24.
639:
634:
627:
622:
606:
602:
598:
596:
590:
584:
577:
572:
556:
553:(in French).
552:
548:
541:
534:
529:
513:
509:
503:
496:
491:
484:
479:
464:
463:Seamus Heaney
460:
453:
437:
433:
429:
423:
416:
411:
404:
399:
397:
390:, p. 16.
389:
384:
382:
380:
375:
367:
365:
361:
360:
355:
351:
350:Moira Linehan
346:
344:
340:
335:
334:
333:Seeing Things
327:
325:
318:
316:
315:Seamus Heaney
307:
305:
302:(but not the
301:
297:
294:(but not the
293:
288:
287:Merkel, Texas
284:
283:
278:
268:
266:
261:
257:
253:
249:
245:
233:
230:
226:
222:
216:
214:
210:
209:
205:
200:
196:
191:
189:
188:
183:
179:
174:
171:
170:fishing-spear
167:
163:
159:
155:
151:
146:
144:
140:
138:
134:
130:
126:
122:
112:
110:
106:
102:
98:
94:
90:
86:
82:
78:
74:
64:
62:
61:
60:Seeing Things
56:
55:Seamus Heaney
51:
50:fishing-spear
47:
43:
39:
35:
28:
23:
19:
2119:Crop circles
2078:Perspectives
2028:Men in black
1973:Psychosocial
1859:
1616:South Africa
1521:
1492:
1484:21st century
1208:20th century
1167:
1064:. Retrieved
1060:
1056:
1040:. Retrieved
1026:
1005:
1001:
976:. Retrieved
971:
958:
946:. Retrieved
941:
928:
916:. Retrieved
912:
902:
890:. Retrieved
886:
873:
861:. Retrieved
846:
839:
827:. Retrieved
813:
799:
787:. Retrieved
773:
756:
744:. Retrieved
739:
730:
718:
706:
694:. Retrieved
679:
669:
657:
645:
633:
621:
609:. Retrieved
604:
600:
594:
583:
571:
559:. Retrieved
554:
550:
540:
528:
516:. Retrieved
511:
502:
490:
478:
466:. Retrieved
462:
452:
440:. Retrieved
435:
431:
422:
410:
357:
347:
331:
329:
320:
313:
303:
299:
295:
291:
282:Houston Post
280:
274:
265:Sea of Wight
240:
220:
218:
212:
206:
201:
198:
193:
185:
175:
166:Middle Irish
147:
141:
118:
109:ocean mirage
85:Clonmacnoise
73:Irish annals
70:
58:
46:Clonmacnoise
38:Irish annals
33:
31:
27:Clonmacnoise
18:
2259:Apparitions
2042:Involvement
1862:(1947–1950)
1818:Grey aliens
1773:Foo fighter
1707:New Zealand
998:Carey, John
589:Meyer, Kuno
248:other world
75:, those of
2248:Categories
2182:Skepticism
2141:Ufologists
2023:Dulce Base
1946:Hypotheses
1823:Insectoids
1230:1947 craze
991:References
740:Penn Today
723:Carey 1992
711:Carey 1992
690:0253190061
662:Carey 1992
638:Carey 1992
576:Carey 1992
533:Carey 1992
495:Cohen 2015
403:Cohen 2015
388:Carey 1992
162:John Carey
101:ufologists
93:St. Albans
2166:Religions
2114:Contactee
2083:Insurance
2073:Narrative
2068:Claimants
2018:Bob Lazar
1978:Nazi UFOs
1682:Indonesia
1632:Australia
1627:Argentina
1008:: 16–28.
601:Folk-Lore
557:: 356–357
356:tapestry
354:Peter Sís
260:Máel Dúin
204:Old Norse
81:Tigernach
2233:Category
2099:Implants
2063:Entities
1066:23 April
1042:23 April
1014:20557234
974:. Dublin
918:29 April
892:29 April
863:29 April
829:29 April
812:(eds.).
789:29 April
764:(2009).
746:29 April
696:28 April
677:(1975).
611:28 April
607:(4): 312
561:28 April
518:26 April
442:26 April
2161:Fiction
2154:Culture
2058:History
2006:Area 51
1847:Studies
1642:Belgium
1637:Belarus
1622:Albania
1135:General
1117:Ufology
772:(ed.).
225:Kiranus
143:Patrick
67:Origins
42:Teltown
2129:GEIPAN
1737:Sweden
1722:Russia
1717:Poland
1712:Norway
1697:Mexico
1672:Greece
1667:France
1652:Canada
1647:Brazil
1612:Africa
1493:Nimitz
1170:(740s)
1033:
1012:
978:10 May
948:10 May
854:
820:
780:
687:
468:11 May
221:Cloena
87:, and
77:Ulster
2092:Other
1727:Spain
1702:Nepal
1692:Italy
1677:India
1657:China
1010:JSTOR
768:. In
370:Notes
324:canny
229:fluke
2171:list
1687:Iran
1520:USS
1491:USS
1106:UFOs
1068:2022
1044:2022
1031:ISBN
980:2022
950:2022
920:2022
894:2022
865:2022
852:ISBN
831:2022
818:ISBN
791:2022
778:ISBN
748:2022
698:2022
685:ISBN
613:2022
563:2022
520:2022
470:2022
444:2022
252:Bran
154:Adv.
32:The
211:or
184:'s
2250::
1061:48
1059:.
1055:.
1006:12
1004:.
970:.
940:.
911:.
885:.
738:.
603:.
599:.
555:41
549:.
510:.
461:.
434:.
430:.
395:^
378:^
152:,
83:,
79:,
63:.
1733:)
1729:(
1618:)
1614:(
1098:e
1091:t
1084:v
1070:.
1046:.
1016:.
982:.
952:.
922:.
896:.
867:.
833:.
793:.
750:.
700:.
615:.
605:5
597:"
565:.
522:.
472:.
446:.
436:1
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