One of the first openly pagan organisations in Ireland was the
Fellowship of Isis. Founded in
Clonegal, Wexford, in 1976 by
Olivia Robertson, her brother Lawrence and his wife, it has been continuously running since and claims 20–30,000 followers worldwide.
Stewart Farrar was one of the earliest initiates into
Alexandrian Wicca, being initiated in 1970. He and his wife
Janet moved to Ireland in 1976 to escape the bustle of London, finally settling in
Kells, County Meath and establishing their own coven – likely one of the first in Ireland. Prior to 1990, Neo-pagan groups in Ireland tended to be regarded as eccentrics; however since then their profile has risen considerably. This is due to several reasons. The decline in influence of the
Catholic church has prompted many to explore other belief systems. who also went on to set up a school of Paganism in
Doneraile, Co. Cork. With permission to use the name given by Bev and Del Richardson,
Pagan Ireland magazine was begun by Luke Eastwood in 2021, also resurrecting the website name. Extensive road and motorway development since the mid-1990s has endangered several Celtic heritage sites, and Neo-pagan groups have frequently been involved in protests against these works. The highest-profile protests were against the proposed
M3 motorway, which cuts through the Tara-Skryne or
Gabhra valley in
County Meath and close to the
Hill of Tara, the traditional seat of the High Kings of Ireland. Druidic groups in particular have been heavily involved in protesting the motorway's development. == Rights and national recognition ==