PuniCodex

The Authentic Orthography

Manannán mac Lir Manannán

Sea, Otherworld, Mist · Son of the sea (from Old Irish Manannán)

Tier 2 Manannán.com
Manannán — Sea, Otherworld, Mist
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Original Script

Manannán mac Lir

The name in its original Celtic form. Manannán (Manannán mac Lir) is attested in the source tradition — “Son of the sea (from Old Irish Manannán)”. Its acute stress marks carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

manannan

Reduced to plain manannan, the name loses everything that made it specific: acute stress marks. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Manannán

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Manannán restores acute stress marks, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Manannán.com → xn--manannn-mwa.com

The non-ASCII characters in Manannán are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Manannán.

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Manannán travels from ancient script to the modern URL

Manannán mac Lir
Medieval Irish (Latin script)
Manannán mac Lir
Reading: /maˈnanˠaːn makʲ lʲeɾʲ/
Reconstruction: /maˈnanˠaːn makʲ lʲeɾʲ/
Old Irish / Middle Irish in Insular script · left-to-right · Old Irish, c. 7th–10th c. CE · Ireland, Isle of Man, Scotland
Manannán
Manannán 'son of the sea'
theonym
Letter
The name is traditionally derived from Manann, a figure linked to the Isle of Man; the final -án is a diminutive or patronymic suffix.
mac Lir
mac Lir 'son of Lir'
patronymic
Letter
Ler / Lir is an old personification of the sea in Irish tradition.
Original Script
Manannán mac Lir
Indigenous writing
Transliteration
Manannán mac Lir
Scholarly reading
Unicode Restoration
Manannán
Registrable form
Punycode
xn--Manannn-mwa.com
DNS encoding
ASCII Fallback
manannan
Flattened spelling

Etymology

Irish Manannán, traditionally 'son of the sea' (mac Lir); the first element may connect to the Isle of Man.

Meaning

Sea, otherworld, mist, and liminality; a guide between worlds.

From original to transliteration

  1. Old Irish was written in the Latin alphabet using Insular minuscule from the early medieval period.
  2. The name appears in the Ulster Cycle and Mythological Cycle as Manannán mac Lir, 'son of Lir (the sea)'.
  3. The acute accent on the final á marks a long vowel in modern scholarly convention.
  4. The Unicode restoration Manannán preserves the long vowel; the ASCII form flattens the name.
  • Manannán mac Lir Standard Old Irish form
  • Manannán Unicode restoration
  • Manannan ASCII fallback
  • Immram Brain (The Voyage of Bran)
    c. 7th–8th c. CE Ireland Immram Brain
  • Tochmarc Étaíne
    c. 8th–9th c. CE Ireland Tochmarc Étaíne
  • Cóir Anmann (The Fitness of Names)
    c. 12th c. CE Ireland Cóir Anmann
DIL (Dictionary of the Irish Language)Tier 1
Carey, The Irish National Origin-LegendTier 2
MacKillop, Oxford Dictionary of Celtic MythologyTier 2

DNS / IDN note

The Unicode restoration Manannán uses the acute accent to mark the long final vowel; the ASCII form loses this length marker.

  • !The etymology of the first element Manann- is debated.
  • !Insular script spelling varies across manuscripts.
03

Pronunciation

How Manannán was spoken

/maˈnanˠən/ Old Irish Reconstruction
M- Voiced bilabial nasal [m], as in English 'man'.
-a- Short open front [a], the first unstressed syllable.
-nan- Alveolar nasal [n], short open front [a], and another [n]; the second syllable carries stress.
-án Long open front [aː] marked by acute, ending in alveolar nasal [n].
04

Lord of the Sea and Mist

Guardian of the Irish Otherworld

Manannán mac Lir is the great sea god of Ireland and guardian of the Otherworld. He rules the waves, the weather, and the mist that separates the mortal island from the Land of Promise. A shape-shifter, navigator, and bestower of marvelous weapons, he appears in myth as helper, host, and boundary-keeper between this world and the next.

Sea Lord

He commands the waters around Ireland and the weather that governs them.

Otherworld Guardian

The mist that hides Tír na nÓg and the Isles of the Blessed is his cloak.

Treasure-Giver

He bestows weapons, cloaks, and horses on heroes who cross his path.

Shape-Shifter

He moves between forms — rider, fisherman, beggar — to test or aid mortals.

Sacred Symbols

Boat Sguaba Tuinne The Wave-sweeper, a self-propelling boat that obeys the owner's thought
Horse Aonbharr The steed that travels over land and sea alike
Sword Fragarach 'The Answerer,' a blade that compels truth and opens every fortress
Cloak of mist The féth fíada that hides the Otherworld from mortal eyes
05

Mythology

Stories of Manannán

Manannán moves through Irish myth like the tide: now distant, now suddenly present, always connected to the boundary between worlds. He is not a creator or a warrior king but a guardian of passages — between islands, between life and death, between the known and the hidden.

Immram Brain

The Voyage of Bran

In Immram Brain maic Febail, Manannán appears to Bran as he sails toward the Otherworld. From the god's perspective, the sea is a plain of flowers and the ships are chariots. He sings of the blessed lands beyond the wave and urges Bran onward. The poem makes him the poet of the threshold, the one who explains what mortals cannot yet see.

Lebor Gabála

The Shrouded Island

The Lebor Gabála Érenn ('Book of Invasions') describes Manannán as the one who raises a mist around the island of Tír Tairngire so that it cannot be found. He also governs the weather and the harvest, pouring silver showers on the fields. Here he is less a sea god in the maritime sense than a deity of the invisible boundary between Ireland and the Otherworld.

Altram Tige Dá Medar

Foster-Father of the Gods

In the late tale Altram Tige Dá Medar, Manannán acts as foster-father to the children of the gods, including the Dagda's son Angus. He provides the sídhe mounds where the divine race dwells after mortal Ireland is given to human invaders. The story expands his role from sea guardian to provider of the Otherworld's real estate.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Manannán is the god of the horizon. He does not rule the land; he rules the mist that hides the land beyond the land. His gifts — the boat that needs no oars, the horse that runs on water, the sword that cannot be refused — are all instruments of passage.

Enter Extended Lore
Manannán mascot