In Ireland and parts of Scotland, a traditional part of mourning is the
keening woman (), who wails a lament —in ('weeping'), pronounced in the
Irish dialects of
Munster and southern
County Galway, in Connacht (except south Galway) and (particularly west) Ulster, and in
Ulster, particularly in the traditional dialects of north and east Ulster, including
County Louth. This keening woman may in some cases be a professional, and the best keeners would be in high demand. Irish legend speaks of a lament being sung by a fairy woman, or banshee. She would sing it when a family member died or was about to die, even if the person had died far away and news of their death had not yet come. In those cases, her wailing would be the first warning the household had of the death. The banshee is also a predictor of death. If someone is about to enter a situation where it is unlikely they will come out alive she will warn people by screaming or wailing, giving rise to a banshee also being known as a wailing woman. The banshee was also associated with the
death coach, being said to either summon it with her keening or to travel in tandem with it. When several banshees appear at once, it indicates the death of someone great or holy. The tales sometimes recounted that the woman, though called a fairy, was a ghost, often of a specific murdered woman, or a mother who
died in childbirth. Accounts reach as far back as 1380 to the publication of the
Cathreim Thoirdhealbhaigh (
Triumphs of Torlough) by
Sean mac Craith. Mentions of banshees can also be found in
Norman literature of that time. ==Associated families==