uillean pipe - meaning and definition. What is uillean pipe
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What (who) is uillean pipe - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Dutchman's-Pipe; Dutchman's-pipe; Dutchman's Pipe

uillean pipes         
  • A half-set being played
  • Richard "Dicky" Deegan, piper, busking with his full set in Salamanca Place, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia in 1995
  • Uilleann Pipes drones
CHARACTERISTIC NATIONAL BAGPIPE OF IRELAND
Uilleann; Uillean pipes; Uilleann pipe; Uilleann Pipes; Uilleann bagpipes; Uileann pipes; Uilean pipes; Uiliann pipes; Union pipes; Uileann pipe; Irish Bagpipes; Illin pipes; Irish bagpipes; Uilleann piping; Uilleann piper; Oileann Pipes
['?l?n, '?l?n]
¦ plural noun Irish bagpipes played using bellows worked by the elbow, and having three extra pipes on which chords can be played.
Origin
early 20th cent.: from Ir. piob uilleann, lit. 'pipe of the elbow'.
pipe of peace         
  • Black Hawk]], on display at [[Black Hawk State Historic Site]].
  • Sisseton Sioux]]
  • Mississippian and Eastern Woodlands style "acorn" pipe. These pipes have been found in [[Mississippian culture]] earthwork mounds in the Eastern United States. This acorn pipe is made from South Dakota red pipestone.
  • High-grade red pipestone from [[Delta, Utah]], in both raw and cut-and-slabbed forms
  • [[Uncompahgre Ute]] Salmon alabaster ceremonial pipe. Ute pipe styles are similar to those of the [[Plains Indians]], with notable differences. Ute pipes are thicker and use shorter pipestems than the plains style and more closely resemble the pipe styles of their Northern neighbors, the [[Shoshone]].
CEREMONIAL SMOKING PIPE, USED BY NATIVE AMERICANS
Pipe of Peace; Piece pipe; Peace pipe calumet; Pipe of peace; Calumet dance; Peacepipe; Peace pipes; Peace Pipe; Peace pipe; Calumet (Native American); Medicine Pipe; Sacred Pipe; Sacred pipe; Ceremonial pipe (Native American); Calumet (pipe); Pipe ceremony
Calumet.
Ceremonial pipe         
  • Black Hawk]], on display at [[Black Hawk State Historic Site]].
  • Sisseton Sioux]]
  • Mississippian and Eastern Woodlands style "acorn" pipe. These pipes have been found in [[Mississippian culture]] earthwork mounds in the Eastern United States. This acorn pipe is made from South Dakota red pipestone.
  • High-grade red pipestone from [[Delta, Utah]], in both raw and cut-and-slabbed forms
  • [[Uncompahgre Ute]] Salmon alabaster ceremonial pipe. Ute pipe styles are similar to those of the [[Plains Indians]], with notable differences. Ute pipes are thicker and use shorter pipestems than the plains style and more closely resemble the pipe styles of their Northern neighbors, the [[Shoshone]].
CEREMONIAL SMOKING PIPE, USED BY NATIVE AMERICANS
Pipe of Peace; Piece pipe; Peace pipe calumet; Pipe of peace; Calumet dance; Peacepipe; Peace pipes; Peace Pipe; Peace pipe; Calumet (Native American); Medicine Pipe; Sacred Pipe; Sacred pipe; Ceremonial pipe (Native American); Calumet (pipe); Pipe ceremony
A ceremonial pipe is a particular type of smoking pipe, used by a number of cultures of the indigenous peoples of the Americas in their sacred ceremonies. Traditionally they are used to offer prayers in a religious ceremony, to make a ceremonial commitment, or to seal a covenant or treaty.

Wikipedia

Dutchman's pipe

Dutchman's pipe is a common name for some unrelated flowering plants, which have flowers, inflorescences or stems resembling a pipe:

  • Aristolochia species (birthworts or pipevines) from the Aristolochiaceae, particularly Aristolochia macrophylla
  • Epiphyllum oxypetalum ("night-blooming cereus") from the Cactaceae
  • Monotropa hypopitys (also known as yellow bird's-nest or pinesap) from the Ericaceae