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Ancient Aliens: Ireland's Portals to Different Worlds (Special) | History

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NARRATOR: Ireland.

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This lush, green island in the North Atlantic

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has a history of human activity

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dating back more than 33,000 years.

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Numerous cultures have called Ireland home,

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from the early Beaker People, to the Celts and the Gaels.

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And the island has a rich tradition of folklore

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that has spread throughout the world.

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But perhaps most notable is that Ireland

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boasts some of the oldest structures on the planet.

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Massive earthen mounds,

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many of which date back more than 5,000 years.

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TOK THOMPSON: These mounds are constructed. They're not natural hills.

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These are megalithic constructions

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involving, in the larger sites, an enormous amount

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of man hours and labor.

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These would have been, when they were made,

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just very, very impressive sites.

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CHILDRESS: These mounds were an ancient earth work

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that had a tunnel going through it,

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with stones on either side, and stones on top

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and then covered with earth.

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THOMPSON: Ireland has a tremendous amount of these mounds.

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These are some of mankind's oldest,

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large structures in the world.

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And they anchor all the land together.

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Usually if you visit one on top of a hill, you go up,

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you find one, and you can do a line of sight to the next one.

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There was almost a network, almost across

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the entire island of these sites.

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NARRATOR: The oldest known writing in Ireland

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dates to the sixth century AD,

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more than 3,000 years after the ancient mounds

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are believed to have been built.

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With no written record about the mounds' construction,

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archaeologists and historians can only speculate

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as to who made them, and for what purpose.

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THOMPSON: These things were built to go inside,

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where presumably very, very important rituals took place.

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We don't know, but much later on,

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these sites would have been used for gatherings,

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for rituals, and sort of keeping the society together.

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These were enormously long-lived sites of cultural importance.

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It was enormously long-lived societies

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that used these as focal points.

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NARRATOR: 30 miles north of Dublin in County Meath

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is Ireland's largest and oldest mound, called Newgrange.

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The ancient structure consists of over

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200,000 tons of stone,

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and has a passageway leading to a central chamber,

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in which human bone fragments have been found.

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But archaeologists say Newgrange also has

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an undeniable connection to the cosmos.

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Spiral petroglyphs thought to symbolize the universe

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are found all around it, and the passageway and chamber

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form a cruciform shape that researchers believe

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is based on the constellation Cygnus.

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At the time Newgrange was built,

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it was presumed to be the largest structure

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that mankind had ever built in the world.

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Now, one of the most interesting things about Newgrange

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is its celestial alignment.

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This is still very, very popular.

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If you go at the winter solstice,

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you have this sun dagger

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that it cuts tremendous distance,

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all the way in to brighten up the inner chamber.

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NARRATOR: Newgrange is unique among Ireland's mounds

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in its sophistication, and was clearly designed

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for ritualistic activity.

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But according to ancient Irish texts,

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the mounds serve a more profound,

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and mysterious purpose, as the dwelling places

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of otherworldly beings

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traditionally called the "sidhe."

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JENNY BUTLER: The word "sidhe," it can mean the mounds,

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and also can mean the otherworld people,

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the people of the mounds.

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In Irish tradition, it's bad luck

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to use the word "sidhe" to directly refer

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to these otherworld people.

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So, there are many different names.

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We have the English word fairy folk, also elves.

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NARRATOR: Stories of fairies, elves, and even leprechauns,

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are rooted in the ancient folklore

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of what the Irish called the sidhe.

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But for many Irish people,

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the sidhe are not merely mythological figures.

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MARTY MULLIGAN: Fairies and leprechauns and all that sort of stuff, like,

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too many people kind of laugh and joke about it at times.

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But it's knowledge that had been passed on

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for thousands and thousands of years.

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We have the terrestrial world,

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and the sub-terrestrial world, the human world,

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and the superhuman or other world.

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These worlds exist in parallel.

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Occasionally, however, there is communication

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between the two worlds.

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NARRATOR: The mounds are often referred to as fairy forts,

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as are stone circles and tree clusters

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that are considered the property of the sidhe.

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This strong cultural belief that these features

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are the domain of otherworldly beings

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has kept them intact for thousands of years.

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And the Irish say that when they are disturbed,

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bad luck always follows.

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MULLIGAN: Sean Quinn was the wealthiest man in Ireland.

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He lost everything because he moved a fairy fort.

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He damaged a fairy fort,

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and he moved it to another place.

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DeLorean car manufacturers, they came to Belfast

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and were making the DeLorean car up in Northern Ireland.

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And they built the factory on the site of a fairy fort.

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And it all came crashing down.

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The local people would say,

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"Well, you know, what do you expect?"

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Ask any Irish person, "Would you damage a fairy fort?

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What would happen if you damaged a fairy tree?"

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If you gave me ten million bucks

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and a Cadillac and a helicopter

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and a beautiful house on Sunset Boulevard,

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and said all I had to do was chop down a fairy tree,

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I'd be handing that money straight back to you.

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I wouldn't do it, no one I know would do it either.

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So, do we believe in the fairies in Ireland?

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We do.

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