lord of sea beyond which Land of Youth or Islands of the Dead were supposed to lie, [125];
master of tricks and illusions, owned magical possessions—boat, Ocean-Sweeper; steed, Aonbarr; sword, The Answerer, &c. &c., [125];
reference to daughter of, given to Angus, a Danaan prince, [143];
his wife, Fand, sets her love on Cuchulain, [226];
Fand recovered by, [227];
shakes his cloak between Fand and Cuchulain, [228];
Cymric deity Manawyddan corresponds with, [347], [348]
Manawyddan (mana-wudh'en). In Welsh mythology, son of Llyr;
Irish equivalents, Mananan and Lir, [347];
Bendigeid Vran (“Bran the Blessed”), his brother, [365];