Loading...
Loading deity details...

Also known as: Dian Cecht, Cainte
By Elizabeth Stein for Mythos Atlas. About the author. Editorial notes are grounded in the site's cited sources and can be challenged through the contact page.

Interactive 3D representation
Dian Cécht is the divine healer of Irish mythology, whose skills preserved the Tuatha Dé Danann through their wars against the Fir Bolg and the Fomorians. His name may mean "swift power" or "god of power," and his craft represents the ancient Irish respect for medical knowledge and its keepers.
When King Nuada lost his arm to the Fir Bolg champion Sreng, his reign was imperiled: a blemished king could not rule. Dian Cécht crafted an arm of silver that moved as a living limb, with joints that flexed and a hand that gripped. This prosthesis, the finest work of divine medicine, earned Nuada the epithet Airgetlám ("Silver Hand"). The king was whole, and seven years of tyranny under Bres would end.
Dian Cécht's son Miach achieved what his father could not: he replaced Nuada's silver arm with one of flesh, regenerated from the king's own body. "Joint to joint and sinew to sinew," the medieval text says. Rather than celebrating this miracle, Dian Cécht was enraged that his son had exceeded him. He struck Miach three times; the first two wounds Miach healed, but the third killed him. This dark tale reveals the danger of jealousy, even among the gods.
During the Second Battle of Mag Tuired, Dian Cécht and his surviving children—Airmed, Octriuil, and Cian—tended the Well of Sláine. Tuatha Dé Danann warriors killed in battle were immersed in this well while the healers chanted incantations; they emerged alive and whole the next day. The Fomorians discovered this secret and filled the well with stones, after which the Tuatha Dé Danann dead stayed dead.
From Miach's grave sprouted 365 healing herbs, one for each part of the body. Airmed gathered and classified them, laying them out on her cloak in their proper order. Dian Cécht, still bitter over his son, overturned the cloak and mixed the herbs together. For this reason, no one knows all the cures—though Airmed retained some knowledge and passed it on.
Dian Cécht served as chief physician to the **Tuatha Dé Danann**. When **Nuada** lost his arm in the First Battle of Mag Tuired, Dian Cécht fashioned him a fully functional arm of silver—a feat of divine surgery that restored the king's eligibility to rule. However, Dian Cécht's son **Miach** later replaced the silver arm with one of true flesh and bone, surpassing his father's craft. Consumed by jealousy, Dian Cécht struck Miach three times on the head with his sword: Miach healed the first two wounds, but the third cut his brain, killing him. From Miach's grave grew 365 healing herbs, one for every joint and sinew. Dian Cécht's daughter **Airmed** gathered and organized these herbs, but her father scattered them, and their secrets were lost.