The Old Ways

Celtic Tradition

Rhiannon

ree-AN-on (Welsh) — IPA: /rɪˈanon/

The great divine queen of the First Branch of the Mabinogion — an Otherworldly sovereignty goddess who arrives on a white horse no mortal steed can overtake, chooses Pwyll as her king, and endures false accusation without losing her essential power.

Rhiannon (Welsh, from Proto-Celtic Rigantona, “Great Divine Queen”) is one of the most fully realized figures in the Mabinogion — a goddess of sovereignty, equine power, and the liminal boundary between the mortal world and the Otherworld. She is the daughter of Hefeydd Hen, a lord of the Otherworld, and she arrives in the human world entirely on her own terms.

The arrival

Pwyll Prince of Dyved introduces Rhiannon through one of the most famous images in Welsh literature. Pwyll is seated on the mound of Arberth — a gorsedd, a place where the extraordinary is expected — when a woman appears on a white horse, riding at a steady pace. He sends a rider to speak with her; the rider gallops and cannot catch her, though she seems not to hurry. A second rider on a faster horse cannot catch her. Finally Pwyll rides himself, spurring his horse to its utmost speed: he cannot gain on her. Only when he calls out to her — addressing her by name, in request rather than pursuit — does she rein in her horse. “It were better for thy horse hadst thou asked me long since,” she says.

This is the first theological statement of the tale: Rhiannon cannot be overtaken. She can only be asked. The pursuit logic that governs the hunt does not apply to her. She has already chosen Pwyll — she came to Arberth for him, not as a passive prize but as an active agent of her own sovereignty. She intends to marry him, and she arranges it.

The accusation and the penance

After Pryderi is born and disappears in the night — taken by an Otherworldly force — Rhiannon’s ladies, fearing punishment, smear animal blood on her sleeping hands and claim she killed and ate her own child. Rhiannon, faced with unanimous testimony against her, does not plead or collapse. She accepts any sentence rather than see her ladies punished for perjury. Her penance — to sit at the mounting block of Arberth, confess her supposed crime to every visitor, and offer to carry them on her back like a horse — is an inversion of her sovereign arrival: she who came on a horse no one could catch now serves as a horse.

She endures it for years. When Pryderi is returned and the truth revealed, Rhiannon is immediately and fully restored to honor. The tale does not dwell on the restoration — it simply rights the balance and continues. This is theologically precise: her sovereignty was never genuinely diminished, only unjustly displaced for a time. What she is cannot be taken from her by false accusation.

Rhiannon in the Third Branch

In Manawyddan the Son of Llyr, Rhiannon marries Manawydan after Pwyll’s death — “from their discourse his mind and his thoughts became warm towards her, and he thought that he had never beheld any lady more fulfilled of grace and beauty than she.” When an enchantment falls on Dyved and empties the land, Rhiannon and Pryderi investigate a mysterious fort and are taken into it; the fort vanishes. Manawydan eventually negotiates their release by refusing to yield his field of wheat until Pryderi and Rhiannon are returned. Rhiannon returns with a golden collar of horse-bells around her neck — the Otherworldly echo of her equine nature.

Rhiannon in practice

Rhiannon is honored at liminal times — dawn and dusk, the thresholds of the day — and at the threshold seasons. Her sovereignty teaches that what belongs to the spirit cannot be permanently taken by unjust force, only temporarily displaced. Her birds — three whose song crosses the boundary between life and death — are heard at the edge of sleep.

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