PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Oilliphéist
rdfs:comment
  • In Irish mythology, the Oilliphéist was a dragon-like monster. In one story, the Oilliphéist cuts the route of the River Shannon when it hears that St Patrick has come to drive out it and its kind. The name is derived from the Irish oll, "great", and péist, "worm, fabulous beast, monster, reptile".
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • In Irish mythology, the Oilliphéist was a dragon-like monster. In one story, the Oilliphéist cuts the route of the River Shannon when it hears that St Patrick has come to drive out it and its kind. The name is derived from the Irish oll, "great", and péist, "worm, fabulous beast, monster, reptile". There is a comic addition to the story in which the monster swallows a drunken piper named Ó Ruairc (O'Rourke). The piper is either unaware of his predicament or is completely unperturbed and continues to play inside the monster's stomach. It becomes so annoyed with the music that it coughs him up and spits him out.