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Celtic Goddess Danu Statue, 10 Inches
Celtic Goddess Danu Statue, 10 InchesCouldn't load pickup availability
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Danu is the great mother goddess of the Irish Celts, the ancestral source after whom the Tuatha De Danann, the people of the goddess Danu, are named. Though almost no story about her survives, her name lies at the root of the Irish gods themselves, marking her as a primordial mother: a goddess of the earth, of rivers and abundance, of fertility and the deep ancestral well from which a whole pantheon flowed.
This 10-inch statue gives that quiet, foundational presence a place on the altar, a focal point for grounding, abundance, and connection to the ancestral mother.
Key Features
The Irish Celtic mother goddess. Danu, ancestral mother of the Tuatha De Danann.
Hand-painted resin, 10 inches. Finely detailed and sized for an altar or shelf.
A devotional focal point. A modern devotional sculpture, not an archaeological reproduction.
Product Details
- Height: about 10 inches
- Material: hand-painted resin
- Form: the goddess Danu
- Use: deity statue, altar focal point, grounding and abundance work
- SKU: SD886
- Sold by Plentiful Earth
The Spiritual Significance
Danu is one of the most ancient and mysterious figures in Irish myth. The gods of Ireland are called the Tuatha De Danann, the people of Danu, and that name is nearly all that remains of her directly, yet it tells us a great deal: she is the mother from whom the divine race descends. Scholars connect her with the earth, with flowing water and rivers, and with the abundance and fertility of the land. The great river Danube may carry an echo of her name, a reminder of how far her current once ran.
On a modern altar, Danu is honored as the ancestral mother and a goddess of the earth, worked with for grounding, for abundance and fertility in every sense, and for connection to ancestry and the deep roots of tradition. Where so little of her myth survives, devotion to her tends to be quiet and elemental, a turning toward the source. Honor her as the foundational mother she is, with respect for the living Celtic-tradition revival she belongs to.
How To Use
- Place her on an altar, near flowing or vessel-held water, or among plants, to honor her earth-and-river nature.
- Welcome her by cleaning the statue, then offer fresh water, milk, flowers, or grain.
- Sit with her for grounding and ancestral connection, asking for steadiness, abundance, or a sense of belonging to something older than yourself.
- Honor her through care for the land and water and through remembrance of your own ancestors.
- Keep offerings fresh and dust the statue gently with a soft cloth.
Pairs Well With
- Cerridwen Goddess Statue, 8.5 Inches the Welsh goddess of the cauldron and transformation.
- Horned God Statue, 12.5 Inches the wild lord of the forest, a Celtic-Pagan counterpart.
- Greenman Wall Plaque the leafy face of the living green world.
- Black Tourmaline a grounding, stabilizing stone for earth work.
- White Sage Smudge Sticks to cleanse the space and the statue.
History & Occult Background
Danu, sometimes linked with the figure Anu and the Welsh Don, is reconstructed largely from the name of the Tuatha De Danann and from comparative study of Indo-European river and mother goddesses. The scarcity of surviving myth makes her a goddess known more by implication than by story, which has not diminished her importance to modern Celtic Pagans and Druids, who honor her as the ancestral mother of the Irish gods and a deity of earth and water. River names across Europe, including the Danube, are thought by some scholars to preserve her ancient name.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is Danu?
She is the ancestral mother goddess of the Irish Celts, after whom the Tuatha De Danann, the Irish gods, are named. She is associated with the earth, rivers, abundance, and fertility.
Why is so little known about her?
Almost no direct myth of Danu survives. She is known mainly through the name of the Tuatha De Danann and through comparison with other Indo-European mother and river goddesses, which makes her a quietly foundational rather than narrative figure.
How do I honor her?
Offer water, milk, flowers, or grain, work with her for grounding and abundance, and connect with her through care for land and water and remembrance of ancestors.
Is she connected to the river Danube?
Possibly. Some scholars link her name to the Danube and other European rivers, reflecting a wider Indo-European pattern of river goddesses, though this is a reconstruction rather than a certainty.
How do I care for the statue?
Dust it with a soft dry cloth and keep it out of prolonged direct sunlight to protect the hand-painted finish. Avoid soaking the resin.

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