![]() ![]() Queen Medb attacks Ulster after the bull but is resisted single-handedly by the hero Cú Chulainn fighting a series of duels with her champions at a ford. ![]() In the story of the “Táin Bó Cúailnge”, or “The Cattle Raid of Cooley,” the Morrigan appears as a crow to warn the bull named Donn Cuailnge that Queen Medb is plotting to abduct him. Sometimes she could be seen swooping over the battlefield in the form of a raven or crow and devouring the bodies of the slain. She had the power of prophecy and as a war goddess would sing her people to victory in battle. In Irish mythology, the Morrigan was a shapeshifting war goddess who could transform into a woman of any age and also change into animal or bird form. There are many different kinds of shapeshifting and here we look at different examples from Ireland, Wales and Scotland that provide differing glimpses of shapeshifters in action in the myth, folklore, and tradition of these three Celtic nations. Shapeshifters can be good or bad, often moving the story forward in a novel way or have some kind of symbolism that the teller wants to get across to their audience. Other times it is an unwelcome event such as a punishment and sometimes it is forced by a magical spell but there are many other reasons besides. ![]() Sometimes the transformation is controlled by the transformer who shifts shape at will. In such traditions, humans change into vampires, werewolves, frogs, insects, and just any about any other creature imaginable and back again. Shapeshifters are found in most mythologies and folk traditions around the world from ancient to modern times. ![]()
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