Sunday, 3 May 2026

Sacred Places: The Shrine of the Cailleach



 


The Shrine of the Cailleach (Tigh nam Bodach)

Situated in Glen Lyon, Scotland, is the only known surviving shrine to the Celtic goddess of winter and winter creator deity.



It refers  to a small but culturally rich sacred site connected to the ancient Gaelic figure known as The Cailleach—a powerful and complex deity associated with winter, the land, sovereignty, and the shaping of the landscape.  During the annual Beltaine festival in May, the correct name in Celtic language is  Bealtaine (Irish pronunciation: [ˈbʲal̪ˠt̪ˠənʲə])  which is sacred to the Celtic God Bel/ Belarus.


The  shrine holds an important significance. As the one of the two fire festivals in the pagan year ( the other being Samhain) the shrine and its associated folklore and tradition are very much part of the Celtic and pagan culture.


Location
Visit but show respect and care .

The best-known “Shrine of the Cailleach” is at Glen Lyon, one of Scotland’s longest and most atmospheric glens. This shrine sits near a place called Tigh nan Cailleach, meaning “House of the Old Woman.”

The exact location of the main shrine is kept a secret know only to a few so that visitors can be kept to a reasonable number and any potential damage is minimised.


 What the Shrine Is

The shrine is a modest, stone-built structure that houses a collection of water-worn stones. These stones are believed to represent:

The Cailleach herself , Her husband (sometimes identified as Bodach , Their children or attendants . Every year at Samhain, the stones are ceremonially brought inside the shrine. At Beltane, they are taken outside again.

The shrine represents Cailleach’s rule over winter (when she is “inside” or active). Her withdrawal or transformation during summer. She is a creator figure who formed hills and valleys

She is a weather deity, controlling storms and winterShe also represents the hag or crone archetype, representing age, wisdom, and the cycles of nature. The shrine and the strong symbolism it represents is a rare survival of pre-Christian belief woven into folk practice. 
A symbol of seasonal cycles, death and rebirth ,  physical point of connection between myth and landscape

She walks the land, striking the ground with her staff to freeze . She herds deer and controls storms.
Mountains and stones are said to have fallen from her apron
Turns to stone, sleeps, or transforms.
In some traditions becomes a younger goddess like Brigid.

At Beltane She releases her hold on the land, allowing fertility and growth

Stones are ritually moved with the seasons to mark the change from Winter to Summer.

The below act itself is the ritual—simple, physical, tied to land
A stone (preferably found in nature)
A bowl of water
A black or dark blue candle
Sit quietly and hold the stone
Light the candle and say:
Dip your fingers in water and sprinkle the stone
Reflect on:
What in your life is in its “winter” phase?
What needs to rest, end, or transform?
Close with gratitude and leave the stone outside overnight

The shrine itself is said to be formed when the Cailleach dropped stones from her creel
The dramatic mountain location also tied to her role as a landscape shaper
She is also associated with her washing plaid (cloak), whose turbulence creates storms
The shrine’s coastal rock is said to be her petrified formTied to the Irish aspect of her myth
The Crone: wisdom, endings, ancestral knowledge
The Land Itself: mountains, stones, wild places
Time & Inevitability: aging, cycles, decay as sacred
hardship
solitude
truth

She represents the dark half of the year (inner work, shadow, descent)
Her “stone form” symbolises latent power, not death and her  transformation mirrors alchemical nigredo—the blackening phase before rebirth

She is also a part of the Guardians of animals (especially deer)

She is ancient beyond time
She does not nurture—she tests
She strips life back to essentials

The Crone is one aspect of the Triple Goddess (Maiden–Mother–Crone)

She is honoured during the dark half of the year, especially at Samhain a time that we associate with griefagingendings , truths you might prefer to avoidsurvivingholding steadyletting things die when they must.

It reminds us to strip away fantasychallenge ego and  emphasise reality over wishful thinking.

Here’s a great simple ritual:
Choose a cold evening
Sit outdoors or near an open window
No music, no distractions
What in your life is ending?
What are you clinging to that needs to fall away?

Witchcraft, at its core, is about relationship with unseen forces and cycles
The Crone represents the final, most truthful phase of those cycles.
The Cailleach is that phase, personified in the land itselfNot all magic is about gaining,  it is also about letting go, enduring, and witnessing truth.

Sacredness doesn’t require spectacleThe land itself is the oldest altar. winter is not emptiness—but preparationthe necessity of endingsthe value of stillness and the kind of wisdom that only comes when illusions fall away.


Each stone is anthropomorphic in shape, giving them an almost figure-like presence.


A Living Tradition

What makes this shrine remarkable is that it preserves a continuous folk tradition, possibly stretching back centuries:


This seasonal movement symbolises:


It aligns with her mythological role as a winter goddess who shapes the land with storms, frost, and mountains.


Mythological Context

The Cailleach appears across Irish and Scottish folklore . In some traditions, she transforms into a youthful figure (like Brigid) when winter ends—symbolising renewal.


Folklorists believe the ritual at Tigh na Bodach has been going on possibly for thousands of years. It is one of the few surviving examples of continuity of ancient Celtic beliefs from the past in the present day. The ritual is still carried out by both local residents and visitors who pilgrim to the site to pay a visit to the Cailleach and her family. 

Source: celticcountries.com



Cultural and Spiritual Meaning


Even today, it quietly attracts visitors interested in folklore, pagan spirituality, and Scotland’s deep mythic heritage.


This ancient ritual is linked with farming prosperity, for Goddess Cailleach was believed to be watching over the cattle that once grazed on these mountains during the summer. According to local lore, the Cailleach and her family were once given shelter in the glen by the local people. So grateful was she for the hospitality given to her family that she left the stones with the promise that, as long as they were cared, she would ensure the glen would continue to be fertile and prosperous.

Source: celticcountries.com


Atmosphere

Glen Lyon itself is often described as one of the most beautiful and “enchanted” places in Scotland—isolated, serene, and steeped in legend. The shrine blends into this landscape rather than dominating it, reinforcing the Cailleach’s identity as a spirit of the land itself.


Let’s  go deeper into the world of the Cailleach, her rites, and the wider sacred landscape she inhabits.


In Scotland, where the Cailleach is depicted as a hag or wizened old woman, she is associated with the creation of Loch Awe in Argyll and Bute. There are also mountains named after her -Beinn na Caillich- on the isle of Skye and in Lochaber. 



Ireland has the legend of the Cailleach Bhéarra, a sovereignty queen embedded in the folklore of West Cork. The name of the Cailleach also appears on Ceann Caillí -the Hag's Head- at the Cliffs of Moher in Co.Clare and Sliabh na Caillí -the Hag's Mountain- in Co. Meath. 


Galicia, where folktales featuring hags and fairy goddesses are extremely common, may have been named after the Cailleach. According to some authors, the ancient name of the country -Callaecia- would have originally meant "Land of the Cailleach".

Source: celticcountries.com


The Mythic Cycle of the Cailleach


At the heart of Cailleach lore is a powerful seasonal rhythm. In Scottish and Irish traditions, The Cailleach is not just a figure of winter—she is winter itself.


At Beltane, she reflects a deep pagan understanding of death and rebirth, not as opposites—but as partners.


There are other legends associated with the Cailleach at Tigh na Bodach. One tale has it that terrible things will happen to anyone who dares to disturb her lair. Another legend says that the Cailleach gives birth to a new child every hundred years. Archaeological reports from 1967 state that originally there were 12 stones inside the shieling; this was probably an attempt to throw a Christian cloak over the pagan shrine, converting the stones into a saint called Meuran and his eleven disciples.

Source: celticcountries.com


Traditional & Modern Rituals


At the Shrine (Folk Practice)


At Tigh nan Cailleach in Glen Lyon:


No elaborate ceremony—just continuity.


A Simple Cailleach Ritual (You Can Do)


Here’s a grounded, respectful way to honour her:


What you need:


Ritual:

    “Cailleach of stone and storm,

    Keeper of bone and earth,

    I honour your season.”


This mirrors her essence: stillness, endurance, and transformation through hardship.



Other Sacred Sites of the Cailleach


The shrine in Glen Lyon is not unique—she is woven across the landscape.


Ben Cruachan


Corryvreckan Whirlpool


Hag of Beara (Ireland)


Symbolism & Archetype

The Cailleach is more than folklore—she’s a profound archetype. Unlike softened modern spirituality, she is uncompromising—she teaches through:


The Cailleach as Proto-Witch


The Cailleach is often described as a hag, but that word carries older meanings than its modern insult. In early Gaelic culture, figures like her were:


These are all roles later associated with witches.


In fact, many traits of the “witch” in British folklore—living on the edge of society, tied to nature, feared yet respected—echo the Cailleach almost exactly.


She isn’t a witch in the historical, persecuted sense, but she is something older: a sovereign spirit of wild power that witchcraft later remembers in human form.


The Crone Archetype


In modern pagan and psychological frameworks, especially those influenced by Carl Jung, the Crone represents:


The Cailleach embodies this completely:


Unlike the Maiden or Mother, the Crone does not create or grow—

she reveals what remains when everything unnecessary is gone.


But the Cailleach offers a more raw, less romanticised Crone than modern interpretations.


Working with her energy often involves:


1. Solitude & Stillness


Not social ritual—but quiet, often uncomfortable introspection.


2. Shadow Work


Facing:


3. Endurance Magic



Witchcraft Without Illusion


Here’s where it’s worth being honest:

the Cailleach does not align well with “aesthetic” or overly romantic witchcraft. If someone approaches her expecting comfort or quick results, they’ll likely feel nothing—or resistance. But approached with respect, she offers something rarer:

clarity, resilience, and a grounded sense of power.


A Crone-Centred Practice (Cailleach-Inspired) is less a ritual and more a discipline


The Winter Vigil


Hold a stone and reflect on:


Speak aloud (quietly is fine):


“Old One of stone and storm,

Teach me what remains.”


Then sit in silence for at least 10 minutes.


No visions required. The work is in the honesty of the questions, not the answers.



The Shrine of the Cailleach is powerful precisely because it is small.

No grand temple—just stones, seasons, and memory.

The connection between the Cailleach, witchcraft, and the Crone archetype runs very deep—it sits at the meeting point of folklore, psychology, and spiritual practice. What we’re looking at here is less about “spellcraft” in a narrow sense, and more about a way of relating to power, age, and the land.


In a culture that often avoids aging, death, and hardship, the Cailleach stands in opposition. She is not gentle—but she is honest. To honour Her and this sacred space is to accept the turning of the wheel with grace and strength free from illusion and pomp.