941,5 B644Yt -^-,>.- "mrM i*^* #•--• ;^{i;i- JP^"-^ •^Hfeto,^ tó^ *^Ai 'f?-3 í3W%f ■ ^ r'^i r^. ---ar- ■>&■ -íá^ -A? -^ J í^ ^: ■%: ■■'■^. :Jr- ■*^ *,':^.v;;, ^^^i^" .íííf^ ^i?^- • '• " ,-. ,, '-"^ i^^^" -•■■■■■■ --^N^ ^fi^^ --«i^íS'; l'#;---ii^ ■#»' *w- •** •í^ I tmuj.ujLíni jmrai i \ CENTRAL CIRCULATION BOOKSTACKS The person charging this material. is re- sponsible for its renewal or its return to the library from which it was borrowed on or before the Latest Date stamped below. You maybe charged a áninimum. fee of $75.00 for each lost ix>olcb ^ iiMvTf nMflfMnoHif QUO iiiM|Q^iiilii0 0v ooottu cm ff«r disciplinary ocHoa ana may rmmdf In élamá^má flna UnlvofMly* • TO RENEW CAU TELEPHONE CENTIK, 39a>M00 UNIVEISITY OF ILLINOIS LIMARY AT UMANA-CHAffrAIGN OCT 1 7 1995 k ■..:S-J-:^. When renewing by phone, write new due date below previous due date. L162 ■*! —if ÍHSÍÍt 11 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN STACKS y. •- -'V:;:.'--. , \ I DESCRimVE CÁTÁL(J&UE OF thbhCont: IRÍSH MANUSCEIPT ■I COMMONLY CALLED ^- ,1^ .BOOK OP FERMOr ^. . ■ . # BT JAMES HENTHORN TODD, D.D., F.S.A. 1.&; E., . VI(^(^X>&E8ID£N'KOF TUK ROtAL IBI8H ACADBKY ; FELLOW OF THB KbTAX BOCIBTY^OF KOKTHEaN ANTIQTJ ABIES OF CO: SENIOK FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, REOIVS PROFESSOR OF HE9REW IN THE UNIVERSITY, AND PRJECKNTOR OF ST. PATRICK'S CATHEDRAL, DUBLIN. Read before the Koyal Irish Academy, November 30, 1867. ■Mi.: 'DUBLIN:. PRINTED AT THE UNlVER^tTT jPI^ESSf . BY M. H. GILL. 1868. . /^ ■M^fi^' •♦-..€ii: ■ mm ~:f:TSí/7K,ÍUi .JÍ'- JjISP ..•5 >■■■ .^■ . I • ■ S ■» •«■-■ ■ '^;. ■ :Si..w.. -^ ewr -T;"v"i^ "l^^P^SPi I INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. tto the Academy a Catalogue of the contents of MS commonly called the " Book of Fermoy," wish to have accompanied it by some account of the the MS. ; but I regret to say that I have found but I am not sure that the title " Book of Fermoy" t it was the original name of the volume, neither ;hen the MS. was first so called. It is not men- that name by Keating, or, so far as I know, by any authority.* It is not mentioned by Ware, Harris, Arch- fshop Nicolson, or O'Reilly, in any of their published writings. h has been said that it was once in the possession of the Chevalier O'Gorman ; but this has not been established by any satisfactory evidence. There is in the box which now contains the MS. a paper giving a short and very imperfect account of its contents, I written about the beginning of the present century, in which it is said to have been then in the possession of William Monck Mason, Esq. This paper is apparently in the handwriting of Edward O'Reilly, author of the Irish Dictionary ; but, if written by him, it must have been written at an early period of his life, when his skill in ancient manuscript lore was very inferior to what it afterwards became. Unfortunately the paper is not dated. The Book of Fermoy was sold in London, at the sale by auction of Mr. Mason's books, by the well-known auctioneers, Sotheby and Wilkinson, in 1858. There 1 purchased it, together with the auto- * A collection of papers relating to the papers (now preserved in the box B. 5, 7), Book of Fermoy was deposited in the Li- consist chiefly of extracts from, or refe- brary of Trinity College, Dublin, by the rences to the Book of Fermoy, made for late Dr. John O'Donovan, in 1845. These philological or grammatical purposes. 1 5930() ^^*^ 4 INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. graph MS. ofO'Clery's "Life of Red Hugh O'Donnell," with a view to have both MSS. deposited in the Library of tJw Academy. For the Book of Fermoy I gave £70, and for the Life of Red Hugh £21, in all £91, which sum was advanced in equal ajiares by Lord Talbot de Malahide, Gen. Sir Thomas A. Lurcom, the late Charles Haliday, and myself; and it may be worth mentioning,! to show the rapid increase in the market value qflrish Mi that the Life of Red Hugh O'Donnell, which iiw^^' l>i^oi the sum of £21 in a London auction, had been ''WBB^ in 1830, at Edward O'Reilly's sale, for £3 7s. The Book of Fermoy, might with equal propriety hi the Book of Roche. It is a loose collection of misooj documents, written at different times, and in hands ; a great part of it relates to the family Roche family of Fermoy ; but it contains also a n^ poems and prose tracts on the general history of IrelaníT, amT^ curious collection of legendary, mythological, and Fenian taí^ It begins with a copy of the Leahhar Gabhahy or " Book Invasions," written in the fourteenth or beginning of the fif- teenth century, very much damaged, and imperfect at the end. Then follows that portion of the book which contains the le- gendary and mythological tales, written in the fifteenth century. This is in many respects the most interesting and valuable part of the volume ; it contains also some historical bardic poems on the O'Connors, or O'Conors of Connaught, the O'Keeflfes of Fermoy, the Mac Carthy, Roche, and other families of the south of Ireland. The volume concludes with soire fragments of medical trea- tises in the usual exquisitely neat handwriting peculiar to Irish medical MSS. These fragments were certainly no part of the ori- ginal Book of Fermoy ; they probably belonged to the family of O'Hickey, who were hereditary physicians, and whose name occurs more than once inscribed in the margins and blank places of this portion of the MS. J. H. T. Tein. Coll., Dublin. ( y «y "Tl DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF THE S OF THE lEISH MANUSCRIPT, COMMONLY CTALLED "THE BOOK OF FERMOY." I. A SHFbf eight leaves (10^ inches by 8), written in double mns, containing a fragment of the Leahhar Gabhala, or "Book of Invasions." The leaves are numbered in the upper margin, I to 8, in red pencil, by a modern hand. Fol. 1 . a. This page is very much rubbed and defaced, so as to be quite illegible. It begins with the letters Qio . . . . In the upper margin, in black ink, in a modem hand, is the letter B. Fol. 1. b. col. 1. begins with the words Sem t)napo sab an QppiQ» Cam ip an Qoppaic, lapec apancopaip, "Shem settled in Asia; Ham in Africa ; Japhet in Europe." This is a short prose account of the establishment of the descendantsof Japhet in the principal countries of Europe. Ibid. col. 2. A short poem, beginning TTlasoc mac an lapeé aca cinci a 6lann, " Magoth [read Magog,*] son of Japhet, well known are his descendants." Ibid. A prose tract, beginning baac mac goimep mo lapec ipuat) jaeDil, "Baath, son of Gomer, son of Japheth, from him are the GaedU." This short tract contains an account of the buUding of the Tower of Babel, and the Confusion of tongues, with a tabular list of the * Magog. In the Book of T^ecnn there is a copy of this poem beginning, fol. 25. b. col. 2. It is there attributed to '* Fintan," i. e. Fintan Mac Bochra, the person who is fabled to have survived the Deluge in Ireland. THE BOOK OF FKRMOV ir V seventy or seventy-two languages into which the speech of man was divided. Fol. 2. a. col. 2. A short poem beginning bepla in Domain Oeóait) lib, " Regard ye the languages of t^ ^r^d." • tlMte is in the Book of Lecan, fol. 26. a, col. 1. Ibid. Then the history is continued in a prose tract, beginning Spu mac Gppu mac gaeDil ipe coippaó t)0 jaebilib, '"" u, sr>^ of Esru^ son of Gaedil, was the leader of the Gadelians." Bee^|^»^ i' fol. 26. a. col. 2. ^Bí-> Fol. 3. a. col. 2. A poem by Gilla Caemhain (ob. I^KS?, bí 5aet)il slaip ocaic saebil, "Gaedhil Glas, from whoml Gaedhil." This poem occurs in the Book of Lpcum, fol 2C\ & Leabhar Gabhala (O'Clery), p. 60. The poem ends fol. 4 a. uoi. 2. Fol. 4. a. col. 2. A short prose paragraph, cnuuieratuHH^several conquests of Ireland, beginning Scuipim bo pceí||>!'^^^^B|3Cbil, "I have done with the Stories of the Gaedhil." lio^f^l^^.ccan, fol. 27. a. col. 2. W Ihid. A poem attributed to Fintan (sixth century), beginning Cpi ce lappaigcapbim, "Erin, if it be asked of me." See Yellows Book of Lecan, col. 741. Fol. 4. h. col. 1. The narrative is continued in prose to the Deluge. Then follows an anonymous poem,* beginning Capo ip laisni ip luapcb SPinb. Ibid. col. 2. The prose narrative continues to the coming of Ceat.sair {pron. Kassar), grand-daughter of Noah. Then follows a poem (anony- mous) beginning Ceappaip canap cainic pi, " Ceassair, whence came she ?" Fol. 5. a. col. 1. The prose narrative continues to the death of Ceassar at"CamCuili Cessrach in Conacht." Then follows an anonymoufi poem, beginning Cecpaca cpac bon cup cinb po ppic epenn pe nbilmb. ' This poem, with a gloss, is preserved in O'Clery's Book of In- vasions, p. 3. Ibid. col. 2. A poem attributed to Fintan, beginning Oain pamb bo pinbpamaip. See Leabhar Gabhala (O'Clery, p. 2). ' • This poem is quoted by Keating. i ^ t - .-If.. w THE BOOK OF FEBMOT. Fol. 5. b. The history is then continued to the arrival of Fartholaa, and his death. J^W. 5. h., lower margin. There is a line of Ogham, in a modem hand, blotted,, and with the exception of one or two letters, quite illegible. Pol. h. a. col. 1. A poem (anonymous), beginning Q caemain ; tla\]\ cuinX) caompint), "Ye nobles of the fair-sided plains of Conn." This is attributed to Eochaid Ua Floinn (ob. 984), in the L. Gabhala ■)flp!ie 0'Ciery,/(p. 15), and by O'Reilly {/Writers, p. Ixv). Fol. 6. b'col. 1. The prose history is continued. «, 'wPm*'''^' 2. A poem which O'Reilly, p. Ixv. {loc cit.), attributes to Eochaidh XJa floinn, or O'Flynn, beginning Tio bo maic ih muincip mop, ** Good were the great people." Eochaidh O'Flynn flourished in the second half of the tenth century. Fol.iS0W>ipl. 1. A poem headed t)o cinpab papcholan m poebup, and beginning papcalcn canap cainic. This poem contains an ac- count of the principal adventures of Partholan, and ends with a notice of the battle of Magh Itha, fought by Partholan against the Fomorians, which is said to have ^een the first battle fought in Ireland. O'Reilly (^loc. cit.) attributes this poem to Eochaidh Ua Floinn. It is given in O'Clery's L. Gabhala, p. 9, with a gloss. At the end are the words, ip iGl) pin cpa pcela na .c. gabala epenn lap nuilmb, " These are the history [or traditions], of the first conquest of Ireland after the Deluge." Fol. 7. b. The history is then continued in prose to the coming of Nemed, thirty years after the destruction of Partholan' s people; with the taking of Conaing's tower in Tor-inis, now Tory island. Fol. B.a. col. 2. A poem beginning Gpiu oil oipnib gaebil, "Noble Erin, which the Gaedhil adorn." This is preserved in the L. Gabhala of the O'Clerys, with a copious gloss, (p. 25), and is there attributed to Eochaidh Ua Floinn. See also O'Reilly, Writers, p. Ixvi. The poem ends imperfectly, fol. 8. b. col. 2. II. Next follow sixteen staves, which constitute most probably what remains of the true Book of Fermoy. They are in a very different hand (or rather hands) from the fragment of the Book of Invasions already described, which had pro- bably no connexion with the Fermoy collection of Legendary Tales and Poems. ■ ^ ''■> THE BOOK OF FEBMOT. These sixteen staves are in good hands, probably of the 15th century, and are numbered in the upper margin in Arabic numerals, in a hand of the 17th, and in black ink. The pages are in double columns; size of column, 10.2 inches by 8. A full column contains thirty-six lines. (1.) The first stave consists of six leaves, and is numbered fol. 23-28, from which it appears that twenty-two leaves h^M been lost since the folios were numbered, unl^Ms the /^rL leaves of the former part of the volume have been included. The following are the contents of this stave : — -•■'ifl|r ? Fol. 23. a. The legend of Mór Mumhan (M6r or Moria of Kunstcr), daughter of Aedh Bennain, king of "West Luachair (i. é. of West Kerry), and wife of Cathal Mac Finguine,* king of Munster. ThMtract begins Qet> bennain pi iplocpu, ba meic bee laip, i ceopa injencrtC' Aedh Bennain, king of West Luachair, had twelve sons, and three daughters"). A space has been left for an ornamental capital Q, which, however, was never inserted. Mór was, and is to this day, proverbial for her great beauty. As she approached to womanhood, she was suddenly struck with an irresistible desire to travel, and stole away from her father's house. For some years she continued to wander alone, shunning the haunts of men, and traversing on foot the wilds and forests. At length she arrived at Cashel, in torn and ragged garments, foot-sore, and miserable ; but, notwithstanding, her transcendent beauty shone forth, so as to attract the attention of Cathal mac Finguine, king of Munster, who, after some inquiries as to her parentage, finally married her. After this her taste for wandering left her, and she became as celebrated for her wisdom and domestic virtues as for her beauty. * Cathal Mac Finguine. Aedh Ben- Aedh Bennain is called king of Munster nain was the lineal descendant of Cairbre by Tighemach, and king of lar Muniha, Pict, surnamed Luachra, from Sliabh or West Munster, by the Four Masters. Luachra, where he was brought up. He But he was really king of lar Luachair died, according to Tighemach, in 619, (West Luachair). The district was divided Ann. Dlt. 618, Four Mast., 614. If so, it into East and West, and had its name from is difScuIt to understand how his daughter Cairbre Luachra ; it is now Ciarraighe could have been the wife of Cathal Mac Luachra, or Kerry. See IFari of the Finguine, who died 737 (Four Mast.). Dane», p. li, n. ' ; Ixv. n. *. y ' _^_^ THE BOOK OF FEEMOY. 9 Besides the adventures of Queen Mór, this tract contains also the story of the abduction of her sister Ruithchern, the battles fought by their brothers on her account, and the death of Cuana, son of Calchin, King of Fennoy, with whom Ruithchem had eloped. He flourished in th* seventh century, and was celebrated for his liberality and hos- piiaity.* This tale, under the title of Qicet) Ruicceapna pe Cuana mac , Cailcm ["Elopement of Ruithcearna with Cuana mac Cailcin"], is men- \ ' ' tioiied by Mr J»0 Curry in the curious list of ancient tales which he has printed from the^" Rook of Leinster," Lectures, p. 590. A copy of it is '^prese^ed in that ancient book (H. 2. 18, Trin. Coll. Dublin); the only other copy (if I mistake not) which is known to exist. Fdl. 24.. a. A curious Legend, giving an account of the fifty wonders which occurred in Ireland on the night when Conn of the hundred Battles iKmg of Ireland in the third century, was born, f It begins, bai pinjen mac lucca ait)ci pamna m Opuim pingin, "On Samhain's night (i e. All HaUow Eve), Fingen Mac Luchta was at Drum-Fingin ;" a space being left for an ornamented initial b, which was never inserted. The fifty wonders were related to Fingen Mac y Luchta, King of Munster, by a lady named Bacht, who sometimes visited him from the fairy moimd called Sith-Cliath, which Mr. 0' Curry thought was originally a Tuatha De Danaan mound, now Cnoc Aine in the county of Limerick. This is a very rare tract, if indeed another copy exists ; it contains various topographical, historical, and legendary notices, which throw much light on several superstitious practices not yet entirely forgotten ; i it records the origin of several roads ; explains the ancient names of some rivers, and describes a few of the formerly existing monuments ofTara. ^, Fol. 25. a. col. 2. A poem of 35 stanzas, beginning, Cia po ajpap \ coip um cpuachain, " who is it that asserts a right to Cniachan," i. e. a right to the sovereignty of Connaught; Cruachan wag the fort or palace of the Kings of Connaught. It is now Rathcroghan,í county of Roscommon. The ornamented initial C which ought to have decorated the beginning of this poem was never inserted. * See O'FIaherty, Ogyg., p. 336. % See O'Donovan, (Four Masters, 1223, t ^^^^- P- 313. n. '.) B \' j> i 1 10 THE BOOK OF FERMOT. The author of the poem is not mentioned. His object was to arouse Muircheartach, son of John O'Neill, lorá of Tir-Eoghain [Tyrone], to assert his claim to the throne of Connaught, in right of his mother Una, daughter of Aedh, King of Connaught, who died in 1274 (Four Mas- ters) ; which year was therefore the date of this poem, for it must have been written before the successor had been inaugurated ; or at le&st before the confusions consequent on the death of Aedh had come to an end. No less than three Kings of Connaught were set up with^ that year, 1274, as we learn from the Four Masters, viz. : lAAedh (son of Rudraighe, son of Aedh, son of Cathal Croibhdearg), who waajnur- dered in the abbey of Roscommon, after a reign of three months, by his- kinsman Rudraighe, son of Toirrdealbach, or Turlogh, son of Aedh, son of Cathal Croibhdearg. 2. Another Aedh, son of Cathal DaD, son of Aedh, son of Cathal Croibhdearg : he was elected by the people of Connaught, but was murdered a fortnight after. 3. Tadg, son of TSiníAíílbach, son of Aedh, son of Cathal Croibhdearg, who was permitted vo reign for four years, but was slain, in 1278, by the Mac Dermots. It is evident, therefore, that Muircheartach O'Neill (who must have been young at the time), did not yield to the exhortations of the poet to risk his life and fortunes in this troubled sea of factions. The following genealogy, gathered from the present poem, and from the Annals of the Four Masters, will assist the reader in understanding what has been said : — Cathal Croibhdearg [of the Red Hand] son of Roderick O'Connor, died 1224, at the abbey of Enockmoy, in the habit of a grey friar. Fedlimidh, died 1265, h^ the Dominican ab- bey of Roscommon, which he had him- self founded. Aedh, slain in the court of Geof. de Marisco, 1228. Aedh, died 3 May, 1274. Toirrdealbach. \ Una = Seaan O'Neill, I d.l318. I Rudraighe. Muircheartach O'Neill, si. by Philip Maguire, 1356. Tadg, K. of Connacht, 1274, si. 1278. Cathal Dall. Rudraighe. Aedh si. 1274. Aedh, or Eoghan, si. 1274, in Roscommon Abbey, after a reign of three months. / THE BOOK OF FEEMOr. 1 1 The present poem is very rare, if not unique ; no other copy of it was known to Mr. O'Curry. It belongs to a class of bardic poems which are extremely valuable for local and family history. Fol 26. a. col. 1. A poem of fifty-eight stanzas, beginning, TTlop , loiceip luchc an inDluis, ''Much do slandering people destroy." The iáitial M has been written by a modern hand, in the space left vacant for an ornamented letter. The author of the poem, which is addressed I to DaVid, son of Thomas O'Keeflfe, of Fermoy, was Domhnall Cnuic an ^ Bhile Mac Carthv. It seems that David O'Keefife had taken ofience at , ,, somejjeflections said to have been cast upon him by the poet, who ac- cordingly addressed to him the present poem as a reparation. In it the usual amount of flattery and conciliatory remarks is applied to the wound, the poet denying also the heavy charge brought against him, and putti ng^ t he blame of it on slandering and backbiting tongues. Thih/is'another of that class of bardic poems throwing light upon local family history. Mr. O'Curry knew of but one other copy of it. One stanza of the poem (fol. 26^ b. col. 1) seems to have been an after insertion, in a space originally left blank for it. Fol. 27. a. col. 1. (six lines from bottom) begins a poem of forty-nine S stanzas, the author's name not mentioned. It is in a good hand, by a well practised scholar, but not the same scribe by whom the foregoing poem was written. It begins baile puchain pre emna, " A mansion of peace is Sith Emna [the fairy hill of Emain.]" The initial letter b is as usual omitted. Five lines at the beginning of col. 2. are obliterated, and nearly illegible, by damp. The poem, which is other- wise quite perfect, is a panegyric on Randal, son of Godfrey, King of the Hebrides, whose royal residence was Emhain Abhla [Emania of the Apples], in the isle of Múilé {pron. Moole), now Mull. Randal was descended from Godfrey, or Geoffrey, King of Dublin and of the Hebrides, who is surnamed Mear attach in the Annals of ^ Ulster, and who died of the plague in Dublin in 1095. Hence, this poem must have been written before that year, for in it the poet exhorts his hero to lay claim to the throne of Ireland, and tells him that the stone which is on the side of Tara would proclaim him as the lawful sovereign. The allusion here is to the celebrated Lia Fail, or stone of destiny, which was said to utter a sound when the true heir of the crown was inaugurated upon it, but to remain silent at the inauguration of an usurper. It is remarkable that the poet speaks of this stone as being 12 THE BOOK OF FEEMOT. still in his own time at Tara. But notwithstanding his assertion of Randal's legitimate right to the Irish throne, the prudent poet advises him to remain in the enjoyment of the ease and happiness which sur- rounded him in his beautiful island. The language of the poem is a very ancient and pure style of Irish, containing, however, a few words peculiar to the Scottish dialect. For this reason the philological interest of the poem is very great, and that interest is increased by the historical facts of which it is th% only record. The fairy palace of Eamhain Abhla, or Sith-EanAna, for instance! is celebrated in the romantic legends and tales of the Tuatha De Danaan, but its exact situation was never before known. The pre- sent poem identifies it with the residence of the Kings of the Hebrides, in Mull, in the twelfth century. "This poem alone," wrote Mr. Curry to me, soon after I had purchased the Book of Ferm oy, " is worth the price you gave for the whole book, and I know of n^TOier copy of it." Mr. Hennessy has a remarkably fine copy of this poem. Fol. 28. a. col. 1. On the upper margin, in an old hand, is written, Cat)5 TTl*^ tDomnuill 05. c. c, i. e. " Tadg Mac Domhnuill Og cecinit." In other words, Tadg was the author of the poem, if his name be rightly decyphered (for the writing is injured and very obscure). The poem begins, 5®rP ó bob in§ill mna muman, " It is a short time since the women of Munster were pledged," i. e. since they were deemed worth having pledges given for them. The initial 5 is inserted, with a rude attempt at ornamentation, by a modem hand. This poem is a kind of elegy on the death of Siubhan [or Johanna] daughter of Connac Mac Carthy ; but it gives little information as to her history, or the time when she lived. (2). The second stave consists of eight leaves, numbered foil. 29-36. Its contents are as follows : — Fol. 29. a. col. 1. In the upper margin is the title of the first tract, Incipic each Cpinna, " Here beginneth the battle ofCrinna." This is a remarkably fine copy of this old historical Tale. It is in prose, and begins bai pi ampa pop hCpemi, 1. copmao mac afpc mac con cet) chacaig.* Crinna was a place on the borders of Meath and Louth, • " There was a noble king over Erinn, the Hundred Combats." Tiz., Cormac, son of Art, son of Conn of / 'J-^: J \ THE BOOK OF FEEMOT. 13 in the ancient Bregia, not far from Douth on the Boyne, near Drogheda. There the hattle was fought between three Ulster princes, brothers, all named Fergus,* and Cormac mac Art, grandson of Con of the Hundred Fights. Fergus Dubhdedach had usurped the throne, and had, moreover, with his brothers, insulted Cormac at a feast given by him in Bregia. Cormac succeeded in making alliance with Tadg, son of Cian, son of Oilliol Olum, King of Munster, and also with the famous cham- pion Lugaidh Laga. This latter hero had slain Art, Cormac's father, at the bfttle of Magh Mucruimhe [near Athenry, Co. of Galway], and Cormac 'demanded of him as an Eric, in reparation, that he should join him on the present occasion, and cut off the heads of the three Ferguses. To this Lugaidh Laga agreed, and in the battle that followed at Crinna, with their united forces, utterly defeated the TJlster princes, and brought their heads to Cormac. By this victory, gained A. D. 254, Cormac bíl5me firmly fixed on the throne of Ireland, which he held for twenty-three years. Another very good copy of this Tale will be foimd in the Book of Lismore. Keating, in his history of Ireland, has given a summary of it, including most of the legendary and marvellous incidents, which I have not thought it necessary to dwell upon. Other copies of the Tale are also preserved ; but they are very in- ferior to the copies in the vellum books, the " Book of Fermoy," and the " Book of Lismore." The other copies are on paper, transcribed, no doubt, from ancient copies, but with many mistakes and inaccuracies. Fol. 32. a. col. 1 . (line 1 6). Here begins an ancient prose tale, entitled bpuiben mc txipeó aripo piopana (" The Court ofthe^son ofDaire down here") beginning, bui poóopt) mop ic acec-cuacaib 6penii an aimpip cpi pig Gpenn [" There was a great conspiracy among the Athech-tuatha of Erinn in the time of three kings of Erinn"], the three kings mentioned being "Fiacho Findolaigh (or Fiacha Finnolaidh), King of Ireland ; Fiac mac Fidheic-Caich, or Fiac-Caech, King of Munster; and Bres mac Firb, King of TJlster." This is an account of the insurrection of the people called Athech- tuatha against the Milesian chieftains and nobles in the first century of * But distinguished by the suraames who was also called Tene fo Breagha, or Fergus Dubhdedach [black toothed], Fer- "Fire through Breagh," in allusion to his gus Foltleabar [of the flowing hair], and frequent irruptions into Bregia. Fergus Cas-fiaclach [crooked toothed], i ■■ • . *''' 14 THE BOOK OF FERMOT. the Christian era. It relates to a most difficult and obscure incident in the history of Ireland — an incident which has been most probably greatly disfigured by the partizanship of historians, and of which we have only the account of the ultimately successful party. All revolutions which have failed in their object are not unnaturally liable to similar mis- representations. The very name Athech- tuatha is variously interpreted. Some have sought to identify the people so called with the Attacotti mentioned by Ammianus Marcellinus, and by St. Jerome, as a tribe of marauders, who, with the Picts and Scots, caused great distuAance to i the Britons, and are said to have appeared also on the continent of Europe. But no mention is made of them until the middle ^f the fourth century; and in true Celtic pronunciation the name Athech- tuatha bears no similarity to Attacotti. The word Tuatha signifies people, tribes, or the territories they inhabited ; but athech is the word whose etymology and meaning make the difficulty. KeatHir seems to translate the compound word by Oaop clanna, the clanns who were not free, that is to say, the clanns who were under an obligation to contribute by a rent of cattle and food to their chieftains ; in opposition to the Saop clanna, or free clanns who were not under any such rent or tribute. This is also Mr. 0' Curry's interpretation, who tells us that the word athech signifies nothing more than Rent- Payers, Rent-paying Tribes or People.* If this be the true signification, it will follow that in the word Athech - tuatha we are not to look for an indication of their genealogical de- scent, but only a description of their civil condition; they were not free ; in other words, they were compelled by an external force or moral obligation to pay tribute to their chieftains. This, however, is not the place for a dissertation on this subject, which very much needs a patient and dispassionate investigation by competent Irish scholars. It must be enough to say here, that there seems no reason to suppose these Rent- paying tribes to have been of * People. O'Curry's Lectures, p. 363. cuat, which he interprets "a plebeian." , (O'Donovan's B. of Rights, p. 174, n. "). But paóaó or atat, signifies a giant, It is to be regretted that Mr. 0' Curry and, therefore, Dr. O' Conor explains the did not give us his opinion on the etymo- words " gigantea gens." Rer. Hib. Scriptt. logy and origin of the word Athech or vol. i., Proleg. i. p. 74. n. Let it be ob- Aitheach ; his interpretation of it must served, however, that the word is not therefore rest on his own authority. Lynch fathach, or athaeh, hut athech, which is [^Camb. Evera. p. 65], explains it "pie- not necessarily the same thing. See beiorum hominum genus." O'Reilly (Diet. O' Donovan, Supplem. to O'Reilly's Irish in voc.) supposes it to be quasi pa6a6 Diet, sub row. THE BOOK OF FEKMOr. 15 a different race from the dominant Milesian nobility of the time. They were dissatisfied with their condition ; they were unable to supply the extravagant demands of their rulers ; they regarded themselves as % the victims of an intolerable oppression ; they therefore organized a secret conspiracy to murder the kings, and all the paop-clanna, "free clans," or nobles. Their plan was in accordance with the ancient cus- toms of their race. For a year and a half the plot was kept secret, during which time they laid by cattle and other viands, mead, and such sfrqpg drinks as were then in use, for a great banquet, to which they invited the kings, above named and their nobles, Fiacha Findo- laigh. King of Ireland, was also, it should be mentioned, King of Con- naught, 80 that the three provincial kingdoms, as well as the supreme power, were represented on the occasion. The unsuspecting guests all arrived on the appointed day at the Court of Mac Dareo, in a plain in Breifne, the O'E-ourke country, in the present county of Leitrim. For nine days the guests revelled in all the luxuries of the table ; on the ninth, especiidly, the excellence of the viands, the flavour and ad- mirable quality of- the drinks, surpassed every thing that had been till then experienced. All suspicion was lulled ; all was joyousness and noise, and goblets circulated, until at midnight, the royal party — kings, chieftains, nobles and their followers — all lay senseless in the utter helplessness of intoxication. This was the moment so long looked for by their treacherous entertainers. The Athech-tuatha arose, and basely murdered their unconscious guests. Not a man was suffered to escape, and the plain in which the Bruidhen mac- Dareo (or Court of Mac Dareo) stood, was thenceforth justly named Magh Cro, or the Plain of Blood. The insurgents were completely successful; but their notions were not republican, and they at once placed upon the vacant throne one Cairpre-cind-chait, or Cairpre of the Cat's head, who had been their principal leader in the massacre. All the "free tribes," it is said, had been entirely extirpated, with the exception of the queens of the three murdered kings, who by some means escaped. They were each pregnant, and having found refuge in Alba, or Scotland, soon after gave birth to three princes, by whom was afterwards restored the ancient race of the murdered sovereigns. It is not possible of course to receive all this as authentic history ; but that some such event did take place cannot be doubted. The bards, who were always in the interest of the chieftains and royal races, can- r , 16 THE BOOK OF FEKMOT. * not be supposed to have gratuitously invented a tale so dishonourable • to their race and sovereigns ; and the very inconsistencies of the history, the diflferent order in which the succession of kings, during and after the "^ revolution, is given by different bardic historians and annalists, clearly show that attempts were made to tamper with the truth. Keating gives the succession of supreme kings of Ireland thus : — [the dates are the supposed years of the accession of these» sovereigns to the throne] : — B. C. 12. Crimthann Nia Nair, killed by a fall from his horse. A, A.D. 4. FeradachFinn-Fectnách, son of Crimthann Nia Nair.* / A. D. 24. Fiacha Finn, slain by his successor. A. D. 28. Fiacha Finnolaidh (son of Feradach Finn-Fechtnach), slain by the Athech-Tuatha. A. D. 54. Cairbre Cinn Chait, the usurper, king of the Athech-Tuatha. A. D. 59. Elim, son of Connra. A. D. 79. Tuathal Techtmar, son of Fiaca Finnolaidh ; escaped in his mother's womb from the slaughter of the nobles. The " Four Masters " give the order of events and dates as fol- lows : — B. C. 8. [74]. Crimthann Nia Nair. A. D. 10 [90]. Cairpre Cinn-Chait. A. D. 15 [95]. Feradach Finn-fechtnach, son of Crimthann Nia Nair ; / died A. D. 36. A. D. 37 [1 16]. Fiatach or Fiacha Finn, slain by his successor. A. D. 40 [119]. Fiacha Finnfolaidh, slain by the Athech-Tuatha. A. D. 57 [126]. Elim Mac Connra, slain by his successor. A. D. 106 [130]. Tuathal Teachtmar. 0' Flaherty retains the same order of the events, but alters the dates to the years which I have put in brackets. The account given by Tighemach is as follows : — A. D. 79. Crimthann Nia Nair : died A. D. 35. A. D. 85. Feradach Finn-Fecbtnach. A. D. 110. Fiacha Findolaidh, or Findfolaidh. [A. D. 128. Elim Mac Conrach, or Mac Connra, is mentioned as king of Emania only.] A. D. 130. Tuathal Teachtmar. It is curious that Tighemach makes no mention whatsoever of the rebellion of the Athech-Tuatha, andtheir Cat-headed king. Fiacha Finn- >* * Nia- Nair, or Niadh-Nair, " hero of Nar," his wife's name. ^:;^^ .ite /C. ■ It. TOE BOOK OF FEKMOT. 17 olaidh is said to have been slain in his palace of Tara, or as others say, in Magh Bolg, by Elim Mac Conrach, king of Ulster, who was himself kiUed in the battle that followed, by Tuathal Techtmar, in vengeance for the death of his father.* ilt will be seen that these accounts, each given by high authoiitiesj are not only widely discrepant, but also utterly inconsistent. This tale of the slaughter of the nobles is enumerated among the curious listf of ancient tales published by Mr. 0' Curry from the "Book of Leinater," under the title of Qpsam Caipppe Cinn Caic pop paep clannaib hepenn, " Slaughter of the free clans of Erinn by Cairpre Cinn-chait." There is a copy of it in the Trin. Coll. MS. H. 3. 17, and another which Mr. O'Curry calls "a detailed, but not very copious account," in the MS. H. 3.18. (Lectures, p. 264.) Fol. 33. a. col. 1. (Five lines from bottom) is a tale with this title — Qni t)iapoibe in cap pop ulcaib p6 pip, " This was how the debility came on the Tlltonians," beginning Ci6 t>iapaibe an cep pop ulcaib ? .nin., "Whence [proceeded] the debility that was on the Tlltonians ? not difficult to telV The story is this : Crunnchu, son of Agnoman, was a rich farmer J of Ulster, whose wife had died. Not long afterwards, as he was sitting in his house alone, a strange woman, well clad, and of good appearance, entered, and seated herself in a chair by the fire. She remained so until the evening without uttering a word, when she arose, took down a kneading trough, went to a chest, as if she was thoroughly at home, took out some meal, kneaded it, baked an excellent cake, and laid it on the table for the family. At night Crunnchu, perceiving her excel- lent qualities, proposed to her to become his wife ;,to this she consented, J ■ ■"■■.': ^- ' * Father. See Tighemach, Rer, Hibem. cited high authority ; but \é is curious Scriptt. torn. ii. p. 29. An instance of that he does not seem to have perceived the confusion which exists in the history their discrepancy. ofthese events isfurnbhedby Mr O'Curry. f List. Another list o£ these tales is In one place {Lectures, p. 263) he tells given in the MS. H. 3. 17. in Trin. Coll. us that Fiacha Finnolaidh was slain by the Dublin. See O'Donovan's Catalogue, insurgents at Magh Cro ; in the very next X Farmer. The word so translated is page Cp. 264) he says, that Fiacha sue- Giceach in the original ; the very same ceeded to the throne after the death of word which occurs in the disputed com- Cairpre Cinn Chait, but was afterwards pound Qi teach cuata, "the farmer or slain by a second body of rebels at Magh tribute-paying tribes," of which we have Bolg. For both statements he could have already spoken. . i- »Wf-' 1 8 THK BOOK OF FFRMOT. ftnd they lived together in great happiness and prosperity, until she became pregnant. At this time the great annual fair of the Ultonians was proclaimed, and Crunnchu pressed his wife to accompany him thither. This, how- ever, she refused on the ground of her approaching accouchement ; so Crunnchu went alone. The sports consisted of sham fights, wrestling, spear-throwing, horse or chariot racing, and other athletic games. In the race, the horses or chariots of the King of Ulster (the celebrateid Con- chobhair Mac Nessa*), carried off the palm from all competitors. The bards and flatterers of the Court extolled the royal horses to the skies ; they were the swiftest in the world — nothing could compete with them. In the excitement of the moment, Crunnchu publicly denied this statement, and declared that his own wife could excel in fleetness the royal steeds. He was immediately seized, and detained in custody until his words could be put to the proof. Messengers were sent for his wife ; she urged her condition and the near approach of the pains of childbirth ; but no excuse, no entreaty, was suffered to pre- vail; she was carried by the messengers to the race course, and forced to run against the king's fleet horses. To the surprise of all, she outran the horses, and reached the goal before them ; but in the very moment of her triumph she fell in the pains of labour. Her agonies were in- creased by the cruel circumstances which had prematurely caused them ; but she brought foith twins — a son and a daughter. In the irritation of the moment she cursed the Ultonians, and prayed that they might be periodically seized with pains and debility equal to that which they had compelled her to undergo. And this was the Ces [debility or suf- fering], or as it was also called, Ces naoidhean [infant or childbirth Bufferingf ], of the Ultonians. A tale called Cochmapc mna Cpunin, ••Courtship of the wife of Crunn,"or Crunnchu, is mentioned in the ancient listj of Tales, published by Mr. O'Curry, from the Book of Leinster {Lectures, p. 586). The * Conchohhair Mac Nessa. O'Flaherty 130. But there were but seven reigns from dates the beginning of his reign B. C. 13, Conchobhar Mac Nessa to Mai, inclusive, and his death, A. D. 47. See the list given 0" Conor, Stowe Cata- t Childbirth suffering. It is added that /o^we, pp. 101,102. this plague continued to afflict the Ulto- % Litt. It is also in the corresponding nians for nine generations. The Book of list in Trin. Coll. MS. H. 3. 17, under the Lecan says during the reign of nine kings, title of Tochmarc mna Crvinn mc Agno- to the reign of Mai Mac Rocraidbe, A. D. main. 0' Donovan's Catalogue, p. 319. 4 XUE BOOK OF FEKMOT. 19 story is also given in the BinnseanchiM, where Crunnchu's wife is named Macha, and she is mentioned as one of three ladies so called, from whom Ard-Macha, or Armagh, may have had its name.* Mr. O'Curry states {ihid. note), that the whole of this tale is pre- served in the Harlcian MS. 5280, in the British Museum. Fol. 33. h. col. 2. On the upper margin we have Cinaec .h. apca- gain .cc. " Cinaeth O'Hartigan cecinit." This poet, called by Tigher- nach the chief poet of Leth Chuinn (the northern half of Ireland), died A. D. 975. The poem here attributed to him begins Ooluit» aiUiU ip m caillit) 1 culbpeaD, "Ailill went into the wood in Cul-breadh." The object of the poem is to describe the manner of death, and places of inter- ment of the seven sons ofAedh Slaine, King of Ireland, A.D. 595 to 600. Several good copies of this poem exist- in the Academy's collection, and in that of Trinity College. The present copy is one of the best of them. Fol. 33. h. col. 2. (eight lines from bottom). A poem headed poch- a& na canome .cc, "Fothadhna Canoine [of the Canon] cecinit," be- ginning Cejic each pi§ co péill, t)0 clannaib neiU naip, "The right of every kipg clearly, of the children of noble Niall;" the next lines add, * * except three, who owe no submission so long as they are in power, the Abbat of great Armagh, the King of Caisil of the clerics, and the King of Tara." This poem was addressed to Aedh Oimighe, when he became king of Ireland in 793, by Fothad of the Canon, so called because he gave a decision, which was regarded as a law or Canon, exempting the clergy from military service. (See O'Curry, Lect, pp. 363, 364 ; Four M. 799, and O'Donovan's note *, p. 408). Fothad was tutor, as well as poet, to King Aedh Oirnighe, and in the present poem gives that sovereign - advice as to his conduct in the management of his kingdom. There is a damaged copy of this poem in the Book ofLeinster; and other copies, more or less perfect, in the Academy, and in Trinity College. The present is a very good copy, and quite perfect. * Name. Book of Lecan, foL 266. by Dr. Reeves in his "Ancient Churches of b. b. [pagination of lower margin]. The Armagh," p. 41, sq. See also Dr. S. Fer- original, with a translation, and a curious guson's agreeable volume, " Lays of the poetical version of tlie story, are published Western Gael," pp. 23 and 233. 20 THE BOOK OF FKBHOY. On the upper margin of fol. 34. b. col. 1. a modern reader of the volume has written his name thus: — " UiU. ua beagpa," "William O'hEagra, 1805." The O'hEagra are called by O'Dugan* "kings" of Luighne, the present barony of Leyny, in the county of Sligo. The name is now O'Hara. Fol. 34. b. col. 2. A tract headed inbapba TTlochutja a\\ Raiéin, " Banishment of Mochuda out of Raithin." It begins TDochucca mac pinaiU t)0 ciapai5i Luacpa a cenel, " Mochuda, son of Finall» of Ciariaghe Luachra [now Kerry] was his family." ^ ^ This is a curious and valuable acco\int of the banishment of St. Mochudaf from Raithin, now Rahan, near Tullamore, King's County, and his settlement at Lismore, where he founded a celebrated school and episcopal see in the seventh century. The banishment of this holy man from his original scat at Raithin seems to have been due to the jealousy of the neighbouring clergy, and is said to have been owing partly to his being a native of Munster . The names of all the clergy who took part in this proceeding are given (a singularly curious list), — and the conduct of the joint kings of Ireland, Diarmait and Blathmac, is severely censured. This tract ends fol. 36. b. col. 2. imperfectly, the next leaf (fol. 37) of the MS. being lost. (3). The third stave consists of six leaves ; the first leaf is numbered 38, showing that the loss of fol. 37 has taken place since the numbering of the leaves in black ink, which has been already spoken of. Fol. 38. a. begins imperfectly. This leaf has been greatly damaged and stained. It contains the life of St. George, of which the Academy possesses a very fine copy in the Leabhar breac. The present copy ends fol. 42. b. col. 2. Fol. 42 h. col. 2 (eight lines from bottom), is a short legend, entitled, * O'Dugan. See Topogr. poems transl. Dr. Reeves is of opinion that the expulsion by 0' Donovan, p. 59. from Raithin had some connexion with the t St. Mochuda. He is also called St. Paschal controversy. Tighemach records Carthach. A beautiful woodcut of the it at 636 in these words : " Effugatio round window of the Church of Raithin Cairthaigh a Raithin in diebut Paschce;" (still nearly perfect) may be seen in Dr. and it. is remarkable that St. Cummian's Tetrie's Essay on the Round Towers, paschal letter was written in 63a. / • w THE BOOK OP FKRMOy. •- 21 Seel palcpach na muice annpo P'OP» "The story of the pigs' Psalter down here;" it begins e^puc ampai bo hi cluain mc noip," "There was a noble bishop at Cluain-mic-nois." The name of this bishop was Coenchomrach ; see Mart, of Donegal, July 21 (p. 199). He died 898 (Four M.) which was really 901. The present copy of the legend is damaged, but other copies exist in the Academy's collection. The original scribe seems to have written as far as line 9, col. 2. fol. 43. a., and to have left the tract unfinished, but it was afterwards taken up where" he had left off, and completed by another hand, on the next page. This continuation begins line 10, fol. 43. a. col. 2., under which a line is drawn in modem ink. The portion of the column thus for a time left blank is now occupied by the following curious note by the Scribe of the life of St. George, already noticed :— Qpaib laifr m mbfcuift T'O pain A prayer along with this life of reoipn ouil-^iQ"! o^^cea&a, t)0 boibio S'. George, from "William O'lliceadha mac muipip mhic j^Ca^n bo poicp, [O'Hickey], for David, son of Muiris, "I bo bmb bliobna in cisepna an eon of John Roitsi. [Roche], and the can bo pcpibab anpo hi .i. mile bli- year of the Lord when this was written aÓan l ceicpi .c. bliaban -\ fechc here was a thousand years and four hun- mbliabna bes "] ba p^6^c ; t in bapa dred years, and seventeen years, and la pióic bo mi nouemb. bo cpiónui- two score [1457] ; and it was finished geb anpo hi, i a paigicapiup bo bi here the twenty-second day of the month gpian mean pin i a campep bo bi of Novemher ; and the Sun was in Sa- me epsai ; .a. bo biib leicip bom- gittarius at that time, and the Moon was nach m bliaban pm, -| a 16 bo biib in Cancer; A was the Dominical Let- nuatmip oip, -\ ipe aipb pennaó bo- ter, and 15 was the Golden Number, and cigepnab panuaip pin bo lo .i. mip- the planet that dominated at that hour cufp, -\ 6 laeca ap pon in concup. of the day was Mercury, and 6 days on account of the concurrent. The year here designated, whose Sunday letter was A, and golden number 15, was 1457-8; that is, from 1 January to 24 March, was ealleA/í457, according to the old style reckoning; and from 25 March to'ÉÍe end of the year was 1458. It is not worth stopping to explain the astrological characteristics. | This note is followed by four lines of consonant and Coll Ogham, in which the two modes of writing are mixed up together in a way which renders it very difficult to read them ; and the difficulty is greatly increased by the injury sustained by the lower corner of the MS., which renders one- third of each line illegible. ti 22 THE BOOK OF FEBMOY. (IV.) The fourth stave contains but five leaves, numbered in the same hand as before, 44-48. It is greatly damaged by damp and dirt. ^ Fol. 44. «. Here commences a Tract on the Destruction of Jerusalem under Vespasian and Titus, taken apparently from the account given by Josephus ; it is of considerable length, and ends fol. 48. a. col. 2. It begins pa bliaftan ceachpachab babap na huit)ai6i, &c., "The Jews were 42 years, &c." Fol. 48. b. is occupied by a poem, but so obliterated by tót and damp that it cannot be easily decyphered, at least without giving more time to the task than I have now at my disposal. (V.) The fifth stave contains eight leaves, numbered as before, from 49 to 56. The leaves are all injured in the outer margin. "^ Fol. 49. a. col. 1. On the upper margin, in the handwriting of the original scribe, now nearly obliterated, are the words in nomine pacpip I'pilii 1 ppipicup pancci. amen ; under which is written, in a later hand, the title of the following tract : Co6mapc Cpeblainne, "The Courtship of Treblainn." It begins ppoech mo pibaig pole puaij o pi6 pibaig T o I06 pibaig, &c., "Froech, son ofFidach of the Red Hair, of Sidh Fidaigh, and of Loch Fidaigh," &c. • The tale belongs to the time of Cairbre Niafar, called in jmany of these tales erroneously King of Ireland ; he was in fact only King of Leinster ; but because he dwelt at Tara, he is sometimes called King of Tara, which led to the mistake. He was contemporary with Concho- bhar Mac Nessa, and therefore flourished about the end of ..he first century.* Treblainn was his foster daughter, although daughter of a Tuatha De Danann chieftain. The story is as follows : — At this time there dwelt in the west of Connaught a yomig chief- tain, named Froech, son of Fidach, of the race of the Firbolgs. He was as distinguished for his remarkable beauty as for his valour. His " Cefitury. See O'Flaherty, Offyff. p. Rer. Hib. Scriptt. vol. ii. p. 14). 273 ; and Tighernach, B. C. 2. (0' Conor, THE BOOK OF FEBMOY. 23 fame having reached the ears of the lady Treblainn, she contrived to convey to him a hint, that it would not be displeasing to her, if he would ask her in marriage from her foster-father. In this there was nothing, perhaps, absolutely improper — at least for a young lady brought up at an Irish Court in the first century. But whether she exceeded the rules of decorum or not I, do not pretend to say, when she went a step further, and gave her lover to understand that, if her foster-father re- fused his consent, she was quite prepared to take the law into her own hands, and elope with him. Froech, at least, saw no impropriety in this declaration of her independence. His vanity was flattered, and he at once communicated with King Cairbre on the subj^ect. As the lady had foreseen, however, his suit was refused, and in accordance with her promise, she managed to elude the vigilance of her guardians, and eloped with her beloved, who soon after joyfully made her his wife. Like all tales relating to the Tuatha De Danaann, thisstorj- is full of curious necromantic and magical narratives, some of which are per- haps worthy of preservation. In the list of ancient tales published by Mr. O'Curry from the Book of Leinster is a legend, called Tain bo Fraech, " the Cowspoil of Fraech," which, notwithstanding the difference of title, Mr. O'Currj' thought was the same as that now before us. Lectttr'es, p. 585, n. (115). Mr. Hennes^y thinks it a different tale, although the hero was the same. , c 1? Fol. 51. a. col. 1. A tale beginning but coipppe cpom mac pe- paDaigmic lugach mic Oalltím mic bpepail mic maiTie ihoip, a quo .1. mainé Connachc. " Coirpre Crom* was the son of Feradach, son of Lugaidh, son of Dalian, son of Bresal, son of Maine mór, a quo Hy Maine in Connacht, &c." This is a short legend giving an account of how the iniquitous Cairbre Orom, King of Hy Maine, in Connaught, was murdered and his head cut off; and how he was afterwards restored to life by the miracles of St. Ciaran of Clonmacnois, who replaced his head, but in such a manner that it remained from that time forward somewhat' stooped, a circumstance from which Cairbre received the name of Crom, or the stooped. -. Tf * Cairpre Crom. See the genealogical Customs of Hy Maine." table in Dr. O'Donovan's "Tribes and 24 THE BOOK OF FETJMOY. Thia story is interesting in consequence of the topographical infor- mation it contains. Seventeen townlands are enumerated which the grateful king, on the restoration of his head, conferred upon St. Ciaran and his church for ever.* See Proceedings of the Kilkenny Archaeolo- gical Society, New Ser. vol. i. p. 453. The present is a very excellent copy of this legend. Fol. 51. h. col. 1. (line 14), a tract beginning R15 uapal oipmit)- neaó oipe66a t)o Jab plaiceriinup pot)la pecc naill .1. conD .c. cachaó mac peiólimig peócmaip, "Once upon a time a noble, vcnerabl% famous king assumed the sovereignty of Fodla [i. e. Ireland], viz.. Conn of the Hundred Fights, son of Fedhlimigh Eechtmar." This is a full account of the exploits, reign, and manner of death, of the celebrated Conn of the Hundred Battles, called by 0' Flaherty, f Quintus Centimachus. He was treacherously slain by his kinsmen near Tara, on Tuesday, 20 October, A. D. 212, according to O'Flaherty's computation. The history is continued after the death of Conn, until the accession of his son Art-aonfir, or the solitary (so called because he had murdered all his brothers), who was slain at the battle of Magh-Mucruimhe, near Athenry,J in the county of Galway, A.D. 250, by his successor and ne- phew, Lugaial}^' The revolutionary times§ that followed are passed over briefly until Cormac, son of Art, the commencement of whose reign is dated by O'Flaherty from the battle of Crinna, A.D. 254 ; his glories|| and * For Ever. O'Donovan, ubi supra, p. 15. 81. t Cf Flaherty, Ogyg. p. 144, 313. X Athenry. O'Flaherty, Ogyg. p. 327. § Times. The chronology, as well as the succession of so called kings, is very confused in this part of Irish history. The following is O'Flaherty's arrangement of the events : — Art Aonfir, King of Ireland, slain at the battle of Magh Mucrulmhe by his suc- cessor, A. D. 220. Lugaidh Laga or Mac Con. In 237, his followers appear to have given him the title of king, which he disputed with Art After the battle of Cenn-febrath (dated by O'Fla- herty, 237), he fled beyond sea. In 250 he became undisputed king, having slain his rival and uncle. Art ; but in 253 he was expelled by Cormac, son of Art, and took refuge in Munster. Cormac, however, was himself also driven into Connaught, by Fergus Dubhdedach [of the Black Tooth], who seized the kingdom, but was soon after slain by Cormac at the battle of Crinna, A. D. 254. From this event O'Flaherty dates the beginning of Cormac's reign, although Lugaidh Laga was allowed to retain the name and pomp of king to 267 or 268, when he was murdered at the in- stigation of Cormac, by the Druid, Ferchis mac Comain, Ogygia, p. 151. II Olories. See O'Flaherty's panegyric, Ogyg. p. 336. / í THE BOOK OF FERMOT. 25 successful government are then described, until the story comes to the following romantic event which lost him the crown : — At the south side of Tara dwelt the family of Fiacha Suighdhe, brother of Conn of the Hundred Battles, and consequently Conhac's grand- uncle. These people werecalled Deisi, i. e. Right-hand, or Southern people, from their position in reference toTara ; and subsequently Beisi Temrach, or Deisi of Tara, to distinguish them from the Deisi of the cqtinty of Waterford. The barony of Deece, in the county of Meatb, still pVeserves their name. Some time before, Cormac had sent out his son Cellach in command of a party of warriofd to assert his right to the Boromean tribute, or annual tax of cows, which had been imposed upon the men of Leinster about 1 50 years before by the King Tuathal Teachtmar. Cellach returned with the cows ; but, as an insult to the Leinster men, he had brutally carried off 150 maidens. Amongst these was one named Forrach, who did not belong to the Leinster families liable to the cow tribute, but was of the neighbouring race of the Deisi, the allied tribe descended from Fiacha Suighde. In fact, Cellach had carried off, and reduced to slavery, his own cousin.* When this became known to her uncle, or grand-uncle, Aengus Gaei-buaibhtech, he undertook to avenge her. He had announced himself as the general avenger of all insults offered to his tribe, and for the better discharge of this duty carried with him a cele- ♦ Cousin. — The following Table will help the reader to understand this re- lationship : — Fedlimidh Eechtmar, K. of I. (A. D. 164). Fiacha Suighde, ancestor of the Deisi. Eochaidh Finn Fuathairt. Aengus Gaei=buaibhtech. [He was more probably the grandson of Fiacha Suighdhe ; See Ogyg. p. 339. The Pref. to the " Book of Aicill," calls him the brother of Sorach, which would make him the son of Art Corb (O'Curry's Art Corb. Sorach. ForrMh. Conn of the Hundred Battles. Art Aonfir. j Cormac. I Cairbre Lif- fefichair. Cellach. Led. p. 48), Mid this seems to have been 0' Flaherty's judgment. Ogyg. p. 340. The Seanchaa na relec, first published \y Dr. Petrie {Round Tower», p. 98), makes him the son of Eochaidh Finn Fuathairt. This must be wrong, for the whole story hangs on his being of the Deisi; but it shows how old the confusiun about his genealogy was.] 26 . THE BOOK OF FKBMOT. brated javelin, called Gaei-buaibhtech, or poisonous dart. He inamc- diately went to Tara, and found his kinswoman at a well called Ne- mnach, near Tara, engaged with the other captives in carrying water to the royal residence. "Without delay he led her to his own house, iuid having put her in safety, returned to Tara ; there he sought the presence of the king, behind whose chair stood the young prince Cel- lach. Aengus, after some words of angry altercation, struck Cellach with his formidable spear, and slew him in his father's presence. On withdrawing the spear, the blade touched King Cormac's eye, and blinded him for ever ; the other end of the spear-handle at tlie same time struck Setna, the king's house steward, in the heart, and killed him on the spot. In the confusion Aengus escaped, and safely reached his home. It was then the law that personal blemishes, such as the loss of a limb or an eye, incapacitated the sovereign from the active government of the kingdom ; Cormac therefore left Tara, and retired to Aicill, or Acaill, now the hill of Skreen, where he had a residence. He resigned his crown to his son Cairbre Liflfeacair, although for nearly a year Eochaidh'Gonnat, grandson of Fergus Black Tooth, took advantage of the confusion, and usurped tlie throne ; two years afterwards Corrnac was accidentally choked by the bone of a salmon which stuck in his throat. At Acaill, Cormac is said to have compiled the curious book of Brehon Laws, called the "Book of Acaill," of which two copies now exist in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin, and one,* a much more valuable and perfect MS., in the Stowe collection, now in the possession of the Earl of Ashburnham. In the Preface to this work is an ac- count of the loss of Cormac's eye, and the deaths of his son and steward, essentially the same as that given in the tract before us, although dif- fering in many of the details. Mr. O'Curry has published an extract from this Preface, from the Trinity College MS., E. 3. 5 {Lectures, p. 43 ; and Append, xxvii. p. 511). The "Action" taken by King Cormac, to recover damages from the Deisi for the loss of his eye, and for the double murder of his son and steward, is extremely interesting, as illustrating ancient criminal pro- ceedings under the Brehon Law ; and these proceedings are much more clearly described in the tract before us than in the Preface to the Book of Aicill. Cormac first sent his Brehon, Fithal, to demand reparation from * One. See Dr. O'Conor's Stowe Catalogue, vol. i. p. 282 (No. xxxvll.) y THE BOOK OF PEEMOY. 27 Aengus and his tribe, and to dictate the terms that would be accepted. These were referred to an assembly which, in due time, met on the hill of Uisnech ; the terms of reparation were insisted uponbyDaire, Cormac's youngest son, who represented his father on the occasion, and were the following : — 1. That the Deisi should no longer hold their territory in the neighbourhood of Tara of free patrimony, but by service. 2. That they should own themselves the vassals* and tributaries of Cormac and his descendants for ever. ■/^% , r These terms were indignantly rejected by the Deisi, whose an- cestor, i'iacha Suighde, was the elder brother of Cormac's grandfather Conn of the Hundred Battles : the result was a series of wars, and a lasting feud, which ended in the expulsion of the Deisi from Meath, and their wandering in different parts of Leinster and Munster for many years, until they settled at length, in the fifth centmy, in the present county of Waterford, in a territory where the two baronies of Decies without Drum, and Decies within Drum, still bear testimony to their emigration. But these subsequent adventures of the Deisif are not included in the present tract, which ends abruptly, and perhaps imperfectly, on fol. 55. b. col. 2. There is no other copy known of this important historical tale, which is well worthy of publication. This tract, although written in prose, contains, like all such bardic tales, some poems inserted into the narrative. The following are the -, initial lines of these poems : — t bponan pola peip cpogani (5 stanzas). Fol. 51. b. col. 2. puil 6uint) Do cuaig pocalmain (11 stanzas). FoL 52. b. col. 2. Cpi pludi&i$ 506 en bliaDan (9 stanzas). Fol. 53. a. col. 1. C1516 ariina imcolain 6uint) (9 stanzas). Ibid. col. 2. * Vassals. The legal steps by which bottom), is a tract " On the blinding of the free tribes were to be reduced to the Cormac mac Airt, and the expalsion of state of tributaries and vassals are minutely the Deisi from Meath." In H. 3. 17. coL described, and are extremely important as 720. is also an account of the blinding of illustrating the Brehon Laws, and the con- Cormac ; and coL 723, line 27 of the same 1 ditiou of civilization at the time when the MS., is an account of the Gaibuaibhtech, Book of Aicill was compiled. or poisonous dart with which Aengus in- t Deisi. In the Trinity College MS. flicted the wound. H. 2. 15. p. 67. a. col. 1. (ten lines from. 28 'IHE BOOK OF SSB.UOY. Ri mac |!>ei6limiS ampa conn (2 stanzas). Fol. 63. b. col. 1. Cpi mic a cunn poóuala (7 stanzas). Ibid. col. 2. Fol. 66. a. This leaf contains a long poem of fifty-eight stanzas, written across the ftill page, and not in columns ; it occupies the whole of this, and nearly the next page. The poem is anonymous, composed in praise of David Mac Muiris Roche, and begins, tileagap cunbpaó Do éoifiall, "A covenant must be fulfilled." It gives a curious account of various border battles, forays, and plunderings by the Lord of Fer- moy, whose hospitality and other virtues the poet celebrates. Mr. O'Curry told me that he had never seen another copy of this poem. (VI.) The sixth stave contains six leaves numbered in continua- tion, and in the same hand as the foregoing, from fol. 57-62. The double columns are here continued. Fol. 57. a. col. 1. A short legend, beginning, Gpoilebume cpuash bo6c, "A certain miserable poor man." This is a story of a miserably poor man who came one day to beg for alms from King David. David had nothing to give, and the poor man asked him to give him at least a blessing in his bosom ; David did so, and the beggar wrapping his cloak closely round the place where David had pronounced the words of blessing, hastened home ; there he cast his cloak into a well, which immediately became full of great fish. The poor man sold the fish, and soon became immensely rich, &c., &c. Ihtd. (line 19). A legend beginning, Ceicpe haipDi an bomam .1. coip, I ciop, cep, -| cuaigb, "The four cardinal points of the world, viz.. East and West, North and South." This is an account of the persons (/owr, in accordance with the points of the compass), whom God willed to live through and survive the Deluge, in order that the history of the world after that great destruction of all monuments might be preserved. The margin is injured by damp ; but enough remains legi- ble to see that one of these was Fintan, son of Lamech, to whom it was committed to preserve the history of the "Western world, viz., Spain, Ireland, and the countries of the Gaedhil. He is fabled to have lived in the South West of Kerry, to the middle of the sixth centuiy. Ano- ther was Firen, son of Sisten, son of Japhet, soii of Noah, who was ap- pointed to preserve the history of the North, from Moxmt Rifia to the THE BOOK OF F£liMOT. 29 Mur Torrian, or Tyrrhene Sea. Fors, son of Electra, son of Seth, son of Adaip, was to preserve the history of the East; and Annoid, son of Cato,* . son of Koah, was responsible for the history of the South. Fol. 57. a. col. 2. A tract beginning t)a mac ampa la Xio., " Two celebrated sons had David." The margin is greatly injured, and not easily read. This seems to be some worthless legend of David and bis son Solomon. Hid. (line 18). The Life and Martyrdom of St. Juliana, beginning t)o bi apoile uppai^i. Her martyrdom is commemorated in the Irish Calendars of Aengus and Maelmuire O'Gormain, as well as in the Koman Martyrology, at Feb. 16. The Life of St. Juliana ends foL 58. a. col. 1:. line 33. Fol. 58. a. col. 1. (line 34). Begins a tract with the following title : Cuapupcbail luDdip pcaipioé, "The account of Judas Iscariot." This is one of the innumerable legends connected with the voyages of St. Brendan. The beginning of the tract is injured. Fol. 58. h. col. 1. The beginning of this tract is injured. It is a legend of the wanderings of two of St. Columcille's priests or monks, who, on their return to Hy from Ireland, were driven by adverse winds into the northern seas, where they saw strange men, and great wonders. The details may not be altogether worthless, as it is possible that there may be a substratum of truth.f On the upper margin, a modem and bad hand has written, meapugat) clepeach coluimcille, " Wander- ings of Columcille's clerks." This tract begins O cainic bepeas pise -\ plaicemnup bomnaiU mc ae&a, mc ainmipech.. Ends foL 59. b. col. 1. Fol. 59. h. col. 1 . This tract is headed beacba baippe Copcaióe aflpo pip, "The Life ofBarre of Cork, down here." It begins TDo- baippe ba. bo chonnaccaib Do lapcineol, &c., "Mobairrewas of the Connachtmen by family»" Ends fol. 60. col. 1. There appears now a considerable defect between fol. 59 and 60, which had taken place before the folios were numbered, and is not noticed in the count ; four pages at least must be missing. Some paper copies of this life are extant. * Some words in the MS. are here ille- tract entitled eaócpa Clepech éo- gible. luimcille, " The Adventures of Colum- t Truth. In the Trinity College MS. cille's clerks." H. 2. 16 [qoI. 707 al. 711, line 29] is a \ A' ■ ;■ ■■ ' 30 THE BOOK OF FKBMOY. Fol. 60. a. col. 1. The title is written in a bad modern hand, beaca molaga, "Life of St Molaga." The tract begins TTlolaja t)i. bpepaib muiji pene a cenel, .i. be ui5 cupcpaift, &c., "Now Molaga, his race was of the men of Magh Fene, i. e. of the Hy Cus- graighe." St. Molaga was the founder of the Church and Monastery of Tech Molaga, now Timoleague,* county of Cork, and of many othei churches in Ireland. The present tract is extremely valuable for its topography and local allusions. The tract ends abruptly, as if the scribe had never quite finished it; but there is nothing lost. Ends fol. 61. b. col. 1. P> Fol. 61. h. col. 1. This tract is headed eaccpa Copmaic incaipc, ' 'Adventures of Cormac Mac Airt." Mt is one of the many fairy tales and romantic stories of which that celebrated hero has been made the subject. It begins pe6cup l)0 bi Copmac hui Cuinn a Lmcpuim, &c, "Once upon a time Cormac, grandson of Conn, was at Liatruim, i. e. Tara." This story has been published, with a translation, by the Ossianic So- ciety,! along with the tract called " Pursuit after Diarmuid ODuibhne and Graine, daughter of Cormac Mac Airt;" edited by Mr. Standish H. O'Grady. It is to be regretted, however, that the Society should have selected so bad a copy of this tale for their text ; they had not of course, at that time, access to the excellent and ancient copy now be- fore us; but in the "Book of Ballymote," in the Library of this Aca- demy, there is a copy much fuller and better than that which they have published. Fol. 62. h. col. 1. A legend entitled Qcpo anc aóbap panabap bomnach cpom bubh, " This is the reason why Crom Dubh Sunday was so called," beginning LaJ pobe cainDeach naerh anoilen popa [cpe] .... "One day that Saint Cainhech was in the island of Roscrea," he saw a great legion of demons flying over him in the air. One of them came down to the island, and Cainnech asked him where the devils were going. He replied that a good friend of theirs, named Crom-dubh, had died that day, and they were going to take possession of his soul. 'Go,' said the saint, ' but I charge you to return to me here on your way back, and tell me how you have fared.' The demon after some time returned, but limping on one leg * He is better known as the founder of f Society. Transact, vol. iii. (1855), Ath-cross-Molaga (now Aghacross, n. of p. 212. Fermoy), and Temple-Molaga. % The MS. is here illegible. THE BOOK OF FERMOT. 81 and groaning with pain. 'Speak/ said the saint; 'what -has hap- pened to you ?' * My Lord/ said the demon, * we seized upon Crom- dubh, certain that our claim to him was good, but suddenly St. Patrick, .with a host of saints and angels, appeared, who assailed us with fiery darts, one of which struck me in the leg, and has left me lame for ever. It seems that Crom-dubh's charities and good works were more than a balance for his sins ; so the saints took possession of his soul, and put us to flight.' " (VII.) The seventh stave contains now ten leaves, foil. 63-72 ; numbered as before ; written in double columns. Fol. 63. a. col. 1. A tract beginning Ochcepin U5upc ba haipt)pi an bomam ant) po geinip Cpipc, &c., "Octavianus Augustus was emperor of the world when Christ was bom, &c." This is a history of the birth, life, and death of our Lord, with the succession and acts of the Roman emperors, to the destruction of Jerusalem under Titus. The lower margins are much injured ; on the Upper margm of'foL 63. a. col. 2. is some writing in a hand of the sixteenth century, now nearly illegible. On the left-hand margin of fol. 64. a. is scribbled the name " uill ua heaspa, 1805," i. e. "Willialn Q'Hara, and on the lower margins of fol. 70. a. and b. is the same name without the date- On the upper margin of fol. 72.. a. is written " 6manuel," but not in the hand of the original scribe. This tract ends foL 72. a col. 1. line 10. • Fol. 72, a. col. 1. (line 11). A tract beginning Qpoile ©slach DO bf in abbaine bpumanaig, "A certain youth was in the abbey of Drumanach," now Drimnagh, county of Dublin. This is a foolish story. The youth, at Easter time, with a sword in his hand, lay down on the side of the hill upon which the abbey was built, and there fell asleep ; when he awoke he found himself transformed into a comely maiden. Fol. 72. h. col. 1. A tract begiiming t)a bpon placha nime, " The two sorrowful ones of the kingdom of heaven," viz., Enoch and Elias. This is a tale of which we have other copies. There is one, slightly defective at the beginning, in.the " Leabhar na hUidhri." 92 THE BOOK OF PERMOT. (VlII.) The eighth stave contains four leaves only. It is evi- dently very defective. The first page is marked 73, in a modern hand ; the remaining leaves are numbered in red pencil, in Mr. O'Curry's hand, 74, 75, 76 ; but there are traces of the older pagination which seems to have been 79, 80, 81, and 82. This Mr. O'Curry found to be wrong, and altered it accordingly. Fol. 73. a. col. 1, to col. 2. line 10, seems to be the conclusion of the tract on Enoch and Elias. See fol. 72. b. Fol. 73. a. col. 2. from line 11 to the end is in a different hand. It is a collection of extracts translated into Irish from St. Ambrose. It begins, t)piachpa annpo o Qmbpopiup, "These are the words of Ambrose." Fol. 73. b. is blank. Fol. 74. a. The remainder of this stave is written across the pages at full length, and not in double columns. On this page begins a poem of which the Academy possesses a com- plete copy in the O'Gara MS. From this it appears that the author was Donnchadh Mór O'Daly,* abbat of Boyle, in the first half of the thirteenth century. The subject of the poem is religious ; it consisted originally of seventy-one stanzas (284 lines), as appears from the 0*Gara MS., but there now remain in the present copy only thirty-one stanzas, owing to a loss of several leaves between fol. 74 and 75. The poem begins — 5abuTn bechmaft op ni)ana Oo t)ia map ap t)iri5mala. " Let us give tithe of our poems To God, as it is meet." Ends imperfect ; fol. 74. b. Fol. 15. a. A poem on the Signs of the Day of Judgment, by the same author..f It wemts nine stanzas at the beginning, as appears • (/Daly. See O'Reilly, "Transact f Author. See O'Reilly, ibid. p. xc Iberno Celtic Soc ," p. Ixzxviii. no. 1 7. V THE BOOK OF FEEMOY. ' 33 from the O'Gara MS. ; but twenty-six stanzas remain, ending on the ■present page, ninth line from bottom. ■ This poem began 5°P^ eipse i6na an bpaca " Fierce the uprising of the Signs of the Judgment." Ibid. Line 8 from bottom. A poem in praise of the B. V. Mary, beginning, Q liiuipe, a macaip ap nacap po cacais gac Docup, • ^ " Mary, Mother of our Father, "Who hast appeased ail grief." This poem is anonymous ; no other copy of it is known. It is of considerable length, and ends fol. 76. b.line 10. Several words in the last few lines are rubbed and illegible. * Fol. 76. i. line 11. A pbem headed TYlianna Copmaic mic Qipc, " The Desires of Cormac Mac Airt." It begins — TTlian Copmaic cigi cempa, oslac claic pe cigepna, "The desire of Cormac of the house of Tara, a soldier mild towards his Lord." The poem consists of twelve stanzas, and is here anonymous ; but O'Reilly* attributes it to Flaithri, son of Cormac's brehon Fithil, which is ridiculous. Copies of it are common, but this is an old and valu- able one. Ibid, line 12 from bottom. A poem of eleven stanzas, headed, ^epoit) lapla t)Ocum na puaca bega popip, " Earl Gerald that composed the little hateful things down here." This was Gerald, fourth Earl of Desmond, who succeeded his half-brother in 1349. He died, or was murdered, 1397.f The poem, which is anonymous, begins — puach lem puacha mic mic Cuinn, " Hateful to me what was hated by the son of Conn's son." It is very much rubbed, and difficult to read. * O'Reilly. Ibid. p. xxiv. Peerage, toI. i., p. 65. The Four Masters t He was celebrated for his learning, call hiih Ceroid an dana, " Gerald of the and was surnamed the Poet. Lodge, poems."' (A. D. 1583, p. 1796.) ^ 34 THE BOOK OF F££1I0T. (IX.) The ninth stave contains four leaves. The pagination has been altered as before, by Mr. O'Curry, who has marked the leaves in black pencil in the upper margin, changing to 77, 78, 79, 80, what were before 74 [an attempt seems to have been made to erase this number, and it is evidently not in the same hand as the other old pagination] 74, [repeated in the old hand], 75, 76. We shall here follow Mr. O'Curry's pagination. This stave is written in double columns, as be- fore. Fol. 'Jl. a. col. 1. A poem beginning O mnaib ainmnijéep 6pi, "From women Eri is named," alluding to Fodla, Banba, and Eri, the wives of the Tuatha De Danann Kings, whose names are fre- quently given by the bards to Ireland. The poem ends on the follow- ing page, col. 1, line 14. It is in many places illegible ; but it seems to be a panegyric on the daughter of O'Brien, who was married to David,* son of Morris Koche. Fol. 77. h. col. 1. line 15. A poem headed eojan mac con- chobaip hi t>alai$e. cc., "Eogan, son of Conchobhair O'Dalaighe, cecinit." This poet, Eoghan, or Owen, son of Connor O'Daly, is not mentioned by O'Reilly, or elsewhere, as far as I can find. The present poem is a panegyric on the same wife of David, son of Muiris Roche, to whom the preceding relates; but it gives us the additional informa- tion that her name was Mar, and that she was the daughter of Math- gamhain (or Mahon) O'Brien, of the county of Clare. The poem begins — Nf pd hmt)ifié ip meapca mop, r " Not for her wealth [only] is Mór to be estimated ;" so that she was probably a great heiress in her day. The poem ends fol. 78. a. col. 1. Fol. 78. a. col. 1. line 7 from bottom, a poem with the heading Cepboll mac conchobaip i balaige .cc., " Cearbhall, son of Con- chobhair O'Dalaighe, cecinit." . This poet must have been the brother of the preceding ; but I can find no account of him. The poem is an * David. See above, fol. 66. a. • \ Í ) THE BOOK OF FEEMOT, 35 elegy on the death of the above-mentioned Mór, daughter of Mahon O'Brien. It begins — Olc an cumchaó an curha, ' f " An ill covering is sorrow." This poem ends fol. 78. b. col. 2. Fol. 79. a. col. 1 . An anonymous poem of sixty stanzas (240 linei), beginning — a ce§ beg ciagaip a ce$ mop. " From a small house people go to a big house." This is a panegyrical poem on Diarmait O'Brien, son of the cele- brated Torrdealbhach, or Torlogh, the hero of the well-known historical romance called the " Wars of Torlogh," or " "Wars of Thomondt"* The margins are greatly injured, and in many places illegible; but there is an excellent copy of it in the O'Conor Don's MS. where the - authorship is ascribed to Godfrey Fionn 0'Daly,f a poet who died in • 1386, or 1387. Fol. 79. h. col. 2. A prose tract entitled Cach alrfiaine po, ** The battle of Almhain here." It begins t)oi cocal) ipop ecip caóal ttTc pinsuine pi lece mo6a -| pepgal mac maeilet)uin pi l€ce cuinl) pi pé cian, " There was a great war between Cathal mac Finguine, King of Leth Mogha [Munster], and Ferghal, son of Maelduin, King of Leth Cuinn [K. of Ireland] ; during a long time." This famous battle was fought A. D. 722 (see Tighemach'in anno), at the Hill of Almh- ain, now the hill of Allen, in the county of Kildare. See " Four Mas- ters," and "Chron. Sector." ad ann. 718. . There is another copy of this tract in the Library of Trin. Coll., H. * 2. 16. Fol. 80. b. col. 2. A legend of Longarad of Disert-Longarad, in Ossory, beginning, Lonsapab coippinb amuig cuachac : the story is, that Longarad refused to allow St. Columbcille to see his books, where- upon the saint of Hy prayed that the books might become useless to , every one after the death of their owner ; accordingly, on the night of Longarad' s death the satchels fell from their racks, and the books be- * Thomond. See 0' Carry's Lectures, thor, and notices several of his prodactiona, p. 233, sq. but not the present poem, t*bi supra, p. t ffDcUy, O'Reilly mentions this au- ciiL * « r ft 36 TUK BOOK OF FEUMOV. came illegible for ever. See Mart. Donegal, 3 Sept. p. 234. Reeves, Adamnan, p. 359, n. Book of Obits of Christ Church, Iiitrod., p. Ixxi. (X.) There is a loss of some leaves between this and the forego- ing stave. The tenth stave contains eight leaves, numbered in the old hand from fol. 85 to 92, written in double columns. Fol. 85. a. col. 1. A prose tract beginning peoóc tiaen Dan- t)eacba6 piaóna pinb mac baeoam meic mupcepcaij nic mupe- 6ai$ iiTc eojam iheic neiU abeipint» amacb co painic a lo6lant)aib. " Once upon a time Fiacna Finn, son of Baedan, son of Muirchertach, son of Muredach, son of Eoghan, son of Niall, went forth from Ire- land until he came to the Lochlanns." This is a copy — the only known copy — of the life of Mongan, son of Fiachna, King of XJlidia in the sixth century. It is mentioned in the list of ancient tales published by Mr. O'Curry,* from the " Book of Leinster," under the title of 66cpa TTlonsain mic piacbna, "Adventures of Mongan, son of Fiachna." The first part of the tract is occupied by the adventures of Fiachna, Mongan's father, who in his youth had visited the country of the Locli- lanns, or Scandinavia, where Eolgharg Mor, son of Maghar, was then king, and lying ill of a fatal disease. The physicians declared that no- thing could cure him but the flesh of a perfectly white cow, with red ears ; after searching the whole country, only one such cow was found, the property of an old woman, f whose sole possession it was. She agreed to accept four of the best cows in exchange for her own, provided the Irish prince Fiachna became security for the performance of the promise. To this the king's steward induced Fiachna to agree ; but soon after, the death of his father compelled him to return with haste to Ireland, to take possession of his inheritance as King of XJlidia. He had been scarcely settled on his throne when the old woman appeared before him, . * O" Curry. Lect. p. 589. Mr. O'Curry to Nia Corb {Mart. Donegal, Introd. p. aiida hi a note, " Tliis tale is not known to xxxvi.); and Matilda, wife of William de me." But there is an abridged copy of it Brao^a, is said to have offered 400 cows, all in Trin. Coll. Library. milk white, but with red ears, to Isabelle, t Woman. The original word cailleaó the queen of King John of England, in (ciicullata) may signify either a nun, or order to purchase her intercession with an old woman wearing a hood, or cowl. John. Leland, Hist, of Ireland, i., p. White cows with red ears are mentioned 191, quoting Speed (8vo. Dublin, 1814). more than once in Irish History. Catbair For these references I am indebted to Mr. AI6r, in his will, bequeathed 100 such cows Hennessy. THE BOOK OF FKHMOY; 37 j' to complain that the king's word had. been broken, and that she had never received the promised cows. Fiachna offered her eighty cows to make good her loss, but she refused to receive any such compensation, and demanded that he should invade Scandinavia with an army, and take signal vengeance on the king for his breach of faith. This Fiachna, in consequence of his promise, considered himself bound to do, and landed with an army in the kingdom of the Lochlanns, challenging the false king to battle. In a series of battles the Irish were defeated, owing tp Druidical influences which were brought to bear against them ; for we are told that flocks of poisonous sheep, who were really demons, issued every day from the Lochlann King's pavillion and destroyed the Irish soldiers. Fiachna, therefore, resolved to take the field against these strange enemies, and did so notwithstanding all his people could say to dissuade him. When he appeared at the head of his troops he beheld a knight approaching hÍEti in rich and gorgeous appareL The knight promised him victory over his Druidical enemies, provided Fiachna would give him a gold ring which he wore on his finger. Fiachna gave him the ring, and the knight produced from under his cloak a small hound with a chain, which he gave to the Irish king, saying, that the hound if let loose upon the magical sheep would soon destroy them all. The stranger knight then said that he was Manannan Mac Lir, the celebrated Tuatha de Danann Navigator and Kecromancer, and instantly. vanished ; immediately after, however^ he appeared in Fiachna's Court in Ireland, and presented himself to the queen in the exact likeness of her husband, wearing also his signet ring. The queen never doubted his identity, and admitted him without scruple to her bed. Fiachna, having vanquished his enemies, returned home, and found his wife pregnant from the stranger, but he had no difficulty in conjecturing from her story who the stranger was. In due time a son was born, and named Mongan, but three nights after his birth he was carried off by Manannan, who' kept him, and educated him until he was sixteen years of age. At that time Fiachna was deposed and slain by a pretender to the throne, and Manannan brought back Mongan to receive his reputed father's crown. What follows is the most curious part of this tale, containing the history of Mongan's dealings with Brandubh, King of Leinster, and recording several curious and seemingly authentic historical facts, with the origin of many legends and superstitions, frequently alluded to elsewhere, but of which this valuable tale contains the only ancient explanation. 9l THR BOOK OF FERMOY. This tract is well worthy of publication. It occupies eight pages of the MS., and ends fal. 88. b. col. 2. Fol. 89. a. col. 1. A tract begining peachc naen t)a poibe conn .0. cacha6 mac peifelimij peccmaip mic Cuachail cechcmaip mic pepaúaig pint» pechcnais, &o. v Conn of the Hundred Battles, when in the midst of his glory as King of Ireland (at the close of the second century), lost by death his wife Eithne,Tacbhfada[ofthe long side, i. e., the tall], daughter ofBris- lind Bind [the melodious]. King of Lochlann, or Scandinavia. To dispel his grief, he repaired to the hill of Howth, and derived some consolation from watching the sea. One day he beheld a boat approaching with rapidity without the agency of any rowers. It soon arrived, when a beautiful woman, in splendid garments, who seemed to have been its only occupant, stepped ashore, advanced to Conn, and sat fami- liarly beside him. She proved to be Becuma Cneisgel [of the fair skin], daughter of Eoghan, of Inbher [now Arklow], a famous Tuatha de Danann tchieftain, and wife of Labhraidhe Luaith-clamh-ar-cloidem [of the swift hand at the sword], another chieftain of the same race who dwelt at Inis Labhrada, in Ulster. Her history was this : she was found guilty by her tribe of a too great intimacy with the son of Manannan Mac Lir, whereupon, on the very day when she ap- peared before Conn, she had been expelled from her people by the great assembly of the Tuatha de Danann, who sentenced her to be sent adrift upon the sea in a self-moving boat ; and she was carried, as we have seen, to the place where Conn was sitting. After some con- versation, Conn proposed to make her his queen, but she declared that she preferred to marry his son Art, of whose fame she had heard, and whom she loved, although she had never seen him. Conn pressed his own suit, and the lady at length consented, on the condition that Art was to be banished from Ireland for a year. This was done, but on his return at the end of the year. Art was challenged by Becuma to play with her a game of chess. Art won, and imposed upon his stepmother the task of procuring for him the magical wand which the great Irish legendary hero Curoi Mac Daire used to carry in his conquests. Then are described the travels of Becuma through all the fairy mounds and mansions of Ireland in search of the wand, which at last she discovered, and brought to Ajt. This is a very curious portion of the tale, as illus- trating the fairy mythology of the Irish. Art, on receiving the wand, challenged her to another game, but this time he lost, and his stepmo- TEE BOOK O^ FEBIÍOT. 39 ther imposed upon him the task to seek for, and bring home with him, Delbh-chaemh [beautiful form], a lady of transcendent beauty, daughter of Mongan. Art inquired where Delbh-chaemh was to be found, but the only information he could get was, that she resided in an island of the sea. With this clue he set out in search of her, and his adventures are described. He brings her home with him at length ; and the tale concludes with the repudiation and banishment of Becuma. This tract is valuable, and ought to be carefully studied, if ever the history of the legendary lore and fairy mythology of Ireland should be written. Fol. 92. I. A poem headed TTlaelmuipe majpaic .cc., " Mael- muire Magrath cecinit." This poet flourished about 1390, according to O'Reilly, who does not, however^ention the present poem, which be- gins, TYlipi a aimi ap hinóaib péin, "I put myself, Emma, upon thine own protection." This is a panegyric upon Emma, daughter of the Earl of Desmond, and was evidently written during héí lifetime. This was Maurice, the first Earl, who was married in 1312 to Margaret, fifth daughter of Richard de Burgo, the red Earl of Ulster. At the end of the poem the scribe has signed his name TTlipi boriinall oleis " I am Domhnall O'Leig " the rest of the name is illegible.* (XI.) The eleventh stave contains four leaves only, written across the page, and not in double columns. They are numbered in the old hand, fol. 93-96. This stave is very much injured, and in many places utterly illegible ; the application of tinc- ture of galls by some former possessor has blackened alto- gether several passages. Fol. 93. a. This is a poem of thirty-eight stanzas, written in a most beautifully regular hand. It is anonymous, and seems to "be a pane- gyric on David Roche of Fermoy. The first line is illegible. Ibid, (fifth line from bottom). A poem in the same hand, with the following heading, which gives the author's name : Comap, mac puai&pi mc biapmaba mecpaic .c5., "Thomas, son of Ruaidhri(or Rory), son of Diarmaid Magrath, cecinit" The poem begins, * Illegible. The name was probably of a scribe Domhnall hua Leighin in ano- (/Leighin, now Lyons. We find the name ther place. See fol. 96. a. 40 ' THE BOOK OF FEHMoy. Ceic oipbepc an inriiepig, \ Urn oipbopc pe hinoine 05 úiall. " The wealth of royal nobility, "With the nobility of wealth contends." This poem seems to be a panegyric, probably on the same David lloche, who is the subject of the preceding. It is greatly injured at the margins. Fol. 83. b. (14th line from bottom). A poem (anonymous) of thirty- three stanzas, in praise of the same David Roche, of Fermoy, The first line is illegible ; it is in the same beautiful hand as the foregoing. Fol. 84. a. (line 20). A poem in praise of David, son of Muiris Roche. It is anonymous, and in the same hand as the preceding, con- sisting of thirty- one stanzas, beginning, 5epp 50 laibeopaió an lia pdil, " It is short until the Lia Fail speaks." This means that the claims of David lloche to be King of Ireland will soon be acknowledged by the voice of the Lia Fail, or Druidical Stone of Destiny, at Tara, which was fabled to utter a peculiar sound whenever the true heir to the crown of Ireland was placed upon it. Fol. 94. b. (line 8). An anonymous poem of twenty-eight stanzas, in the same hand, in praise of the same David, son of Muiris Roche. The first line is illegible. li'ol. 94. b. (line 9 from bottom). A poem whose author is recorded in the heading, which is now nearly illegible, Donchat) mac Go$ain O Dalai6e .cc., "Donogh, son of Owen O'Daly, cecinit." It is in praise of the same David Roche, but the first line is illegible. The first half of the next page is blackened and rendered utterly illegible by tincture of galls. I cannot say wTiether it contains a continuation of O'Daly's poem, or a difíerent article. / FoL 95. a. (half down the page). An anonjanous poem of thirty- four stanzas in praise of the same David Roche, of Fermoy, beginning ba pi6i peolca ap pen ngall, "In two ways is woven the property of the foreigners." This poem ends on the next page, the second part of which is blank. T Fol. 96. a. Here is a very curious and valuable list of lands which ...V THE BOOK OF FEEMOT. - 41 once formed part of the vast estates of the Roches of Fermoy. It is in many places now totally illegible, but enough might still be recovered to be of considerable interest ; especially if it vp^ere decyphered with the aid of a local knowledge of the names of the places mentioned. The first line is illegible, with the exception of the words IS ipa The last nine lines of this page are less obliterated than the rest, and were thus translated for me by Mr. 0' Curry, soon after I obtained pos- session of the MS. J they are curious, as fixing the date of this inven- tory of the lands of the Roche family.* " [It was in the time of] Daibith mor mac Muiris do Roidsigh [David the great, son of Morris Roche], that Domhnall h. Leighinf wrote this first ; and I, Toma, son of Torna h. MaoilconaireJ wrote this present chart for David, son of Muiris, son of David, son of Muiris, son of Daibith mor ;. and for Oilen, daughter of Semus, son of Semus, son of Eman, son of Piarois [Pierce], at Baile Caislean an Roit6Ígh,§ the fortress of the authors and ollavs, and exiles, and companies of scholars of Ireland ; and from which none ever departed without being grateful, \ * From this curious document it appears that an inventory of the lands belonging to the Roche ftunily was made in the time of David Mor, or the Great, son of Morris Roche, by Donnell O'Leighin, or Lyons. Of this older document the present page is a copy made by Torna, son of Toma O'Mulconry, for another David, whose de- scent from David M6r mac Muiris is thus given : — David M6r mac Muiris. I • Muiris. I David. I Muiris. David, who was, therefore, the great- great grandson of David Mor; he was married to Oilen, or Ellen, daughter of James, son of James, son of Edmund, son of Pierce Butler ; and it would seem that this branch of the Butler family bore the name of Mac Pierce, to distinguish them from other branches. The chart, or char- ter, as it is called, was transcribed in the year 1561, at Castletown Roche, then the seat of the Roche family, where scho- lars, poets, ollaves, exiles, &c., were re- ceived with hospitality, and invited to consider it as " their fortress." The names of the witnesses who were present at the transcription of the document are then ap- pended to it. These are, William, son of James, who is called Sionanach, or of the Shannon ; Edmund Ban (or the white), son of John Ruaidh (or thered), son of ... . Garoid (ur Gerald), son;' of Edmund, who iis called the Ceithemacl^ 70^ Kerne [i. e. soldier or champion] oftheH^use of Roche; Godfrey O'Daly, son of Certíhaill (or Car- roll) Beg (the little), " witii many others;" whose names are not given. + Domhnall O'Leighin, now Lyons. J Mulconrj'. § Now Ca.«tletown-Roche, barony of Fermoy, county of Cork. 42 THE BOOK OF FEBMOY. according to the laws* oi Laoich-liathmuine, to this couple, i. e., to the Roche and to the daughter of Mac Piarois ; and may God give them counsels for prosperity and for light a long time in this world, and the Kingdom of God in the next, without termination, without end. And these are the witnesses that-were present at the writing of this out of the old charter, namely, the Sionanach.f i. c. William Mac Semuis, and Emann Ban, mac Scain Ruaidh, mac [a name erased here], Garoid mac Emaind, i. e. Ceithcmach of the House of Roitscch ; and Diarmaid h. Leighin, i. e. the OUuv of the Roitscch ; and Gotfraid h. Dalaighe, mac Gcrbhaill beg, and many others along with them. Anno Domini 1561 is the age of the Lord at this time." On the next page is a similar document in the same handwriting, considerably damaged at the margins ; it appears to be a schedule of the rents in cash payable to the Roche, for certain denominations of lands enumerated. A careful search ought to be made amongst our MSS., both in the Academy and in Trinity College, for another copy of these curious do- cuments. A second copy would materially assist in decyphering them, and they are of great interest and curiosity, not only to the family his- tory of the Roche, but to the local topography of the country. Fol. 97 is wanting. (XII.) The twelfth stave contains five leaves (including jone leaf loose), numbered 98-102. This stave is in double columns. Fol. 9S. a. col. 1. The first five or six lines are injured by the ap- plication of galls. In the first line the following words are legibj^ : — be. op mile lappin popgab papcalon The tract begins imperfectly ; it gives an account of the early colo- nists of Ireland, and of Tuan mac Cairrill, who survived the deluge, and remained in Ireland to the coming of St. Patrick. The tract ends fol. 98. b. coL 1. .^ • The laws of Laoch Liathmuine, i. e., of Kilgullane, barony of Fermoy. See Four the laws of the most unbounded hospitality. Masters, A. D. 640, and O'Ddnoyan's Cuana, son of Ailcen or Cailchine, lord of notes. Fermoy, was called Laoch Liathmuine, -f This seems a kind of nickname, signi- or Hero of Cloch Liathmuine, in the parish fying " of the Shannon." TlIU BOOK OF F££MOT. 43 Fol. 98. b. col. 1. A poem often stanzas (anonymous), on the re- lative length of life of man and other animals, as well as the time allowed for the duration of fences and tillage in fields. It begins : — t)liat>an t)on cuaille co cepc Q cpi t)on 5upc na slapbepc Na éup -| na at cup Qn qiep na cpepcup. - " A year for the stake by right, Three for the field in its green bearing, In fallow and in second fallow, And the third in its third fallow." Fol. 99, a. col. 1. There is here a loss of one or more leaves, not noticed in the pagination. On the comer of the upper margin is the number 208, which would seem to show that more than 100 pages of the volume are lost. Fol. 99. a. contains the last page of the tale of the Lady Eithne, daughter of Dichu, of whose history we shall speak at fol. 111. a. infra. Fol. 99. b. col. 1. An anonymous poem, of which the first thirty-four stanzas now remain, a leaf or more having been lost between what are now fol. 99 and 100, although not noticed in the pagination. It is a dialogue between the aged Eagle of Ecaill (Achill island) and Fintan, who had preserved the history of Ireland since before the Deluge,* in which Fintan gives an account of the primitive history of Ireland and its early colonists. The poem begins : — ■i Gppait» pin a com eacla ! inDip t)uin abbup heaócpa oca agam gan cpéna casulluim a hem bepla, , " It is old thou art, Bird of Eacaill, . Tell me the cause of thy adventures ; I possess, without denial, The gift of speaking in the bird language." Fol. 100. a. col. 1. The last seven stanzas of a poem, imperfect, owing to the loss of the leaves already noticed. The names of " Cor- Aac," and also that of " Diarmaid mag Carthaigh," occur in it. * Deluge. See above, fol. 57, a. col. 1. 44 TUE BOOK OF FEUUOY. Ibid. Then follows a collection of eighteen short poems, ending on fol. 103. b., intended, apparently, for the instruction of Cormac, son of Diarmaid Mac Carthy. These poems are driftless and unintelligible ; Mr. O'Curry thought that they may have been school lessons, or exer- cises for the Young Mac Carthy, for the author seems to have been his tutor. They are not worth the time it would take to catalogue them more minutely. In some of these poems the O'Briena of Cluain-Ramh- fhadu, now Clonrood, near Ennis, arc mentioned. On the corner of the margin of fol. 100. a. is the number 2012, probably intended for 212. On the corresponding margin of fol 101. b. ia what seems the number 204 ; and there is a similar pagination which seems to be 209 on fol. 102. a. ; but the last figure in all these paginations is very uncertain. (XIII.) The thirteenth stave contains eight leaves, numbered foil. 103 to 110; the folios 105 to 110 have a second pagi- nation in the upper margin, 154 to 159. The first two leaves of this stave are written across the pages, and not in double columns. Fol. 103. a. A poem whose author ia announced in the following heading: — rnuipcheapcoch O pioinn .cc., " Muircheartach (or Mur- toch) O'Flynn, cecinit." This poem is in praise of two ladies, Mór and Johwjua, who appear to have been the daughters of Owen Mac Carthy, and t^ have been in some way connected with the family of Roche, of Fermoy. It begins, Ceac Oa Ocngan paic Caipl. " The Rath (or fort) of Cash el is a house of two fortresses." Ends' next page. *) Fol. 103. h. A poem of fifteen stanzas, headed, Gogan mc aenjup iDalaiJ .cS., " Eoghan, son of Aongus O'Ddy, cecinit." This poem is in praise of Johanna, wife of David Roche, of Fermoy. It begins, Nel pijna 6p paic lusaine, "There is a queenly cloUd over Rath Ugaine." Fol, 104. a. & Í. Here are six more of the short, meaningless poems which were already noticed, fol. 100. a., and which Mr. O'Curry thought were written for Cormac son of "Diarmaid Mac Carthy. These are in the same handwriting, and relate to Diarmait's son as well as to some female of the family who is not named. Except for the language, they are quite worthless, Fol. J 05. a. col. 1. Here begins an ancient religious tale, or legend. -V TUE BOOK OF FKUMOY. 45 known under the name of Impuim 6upai$ ua coppa, " Navigation* of the curach [canoe or boat] of O'Coira." It begins piachbpujgi6 cetjach compamaé poóineapap Do cuiseaD conaóc. As Mr. O'Curry has given a full and minute account of the contents of this tale (Lect. xiii. p. 289. sq.), it will be unnecessary to say any- thing on the subject here. The O'Corra, and the company of nine who formed the crew and passengers in their boat, are invoked in the Litany of Aongus the Culdee. If that work be genuine, and written, as Mr. O'Curry supposed, about 780 (a date scarcely credible), this would give a very high antiquity to the legend ; not that the tale or legend, as here given, can pretend to such antiquity, for it is manifestly of a much later date, but Mr. O'Curry'a argument is, that the O'Corra, if they have been invoked as saints in a litany of the end of the eighth century, must have lived long before that time ; this, however, assumes the litany to have been written at the date he assigns to it, and that we have it now uninterpolated, and inj-lts original state ; both these as- sumptions, I need hardly say, are extremely improbable. 109. col. 1. A short tract entitled, "Rigao nell noi5iallai$ op clann Gcbaó, afipo, " Inauguration of Niall of the Nine Hostages over the clann Eochaidh here." It begins, boi 6ochat) muismebin pi Gpenn maóun i cpich conachc i coriipoccup Do lochuib Gpne. The object of this tract is to show how it came to pass that Niall succeeded his father as King of Ireland, although he was the youngest of his father's sons. The original ink having become faint, has been gone over in some places with black ink. Fol. 110. a. col. 2. A tract headed Cepca spega anDpo, "Greek questions here." This seems a silly and worthless production. (XIV.) The fourteenth stave contains six leaves, numbered from 111 to 116, written in double columns. Fol. 111. col. 1. A tract without title, beginning Qpt>pi$ cpoba cop5pach clann. It contains the legend of Eithne, daughter of Dichu, a very curious addition to the Tuath De Danaan mythology of Ireland ; * Navigation. Lit. roving. In the list entitled Impam hua Coppa. " Row- of ancient tales published by Mr. O'Cany, ing [or Navigation] of O'Corra." Lect. from the Book of Leinster, this tale is p. 587. 46 TU£ BOOK OF FEBMUV. for this tract has hitherto been unknown to us, and no other copy of it is kiiown to exist. The tale opens by an account of the Milesian invasion of Ireland, and their overthrow of the Tuatha Do Danaan, the joint reign of the brothers Heber and Hereraon, and the battle of Geisill, in which Heber fell, and Heremon became sole monarch of Ireland. After this the chiefs of the Tuath De Danaan appointed over themselves two supreme chiefs, viz., Bodhbh Dearg and Manannan Mac Lir. The latter being the groat astrologer and magician of the tribe, wm entrusted with the duty of selecting for them habitations where they might lie concealed frtfm their enemies. Accordingly he settled them in the most beautiful hills and valleys, drawing round them an invisible wall impenetrable to the eyes of other men, and impassable, but through which tliey them- selves could see and pass without difficulty. Manannan also supplied them with the ale of Goibhnenn, the Smith, which preserved them from old age, disease, and death ; and gave them for food his own swine, which, although killed and eaten one day, were alive again, and fit for being eaten again, the next, and so would continue for ever. The story then goes on to tell how the great Tuatha De Danaan mansion of Brugh na Boinne, near Slane, on the banks of the Boyne, had passed frorii the possession of Elcmar, its trueowner, into that of Aengus, youngest son of the Daghda Mór, or great king of the Tuatha De Danaan. Elcmar was the foster-father of Aengus, and Manannan Mac Lir suggested to him to ask his foster-father for" the palace. Mean- while Manannan, by his art, deprived Elcmar of the power of refusing, and drove him forth, with all his family, to seek other habitations. Thus Aengus took undisputed possession of the palace, and there he dwells to this day, surrounded by an impenetrable and invisible wall, drinking Goibhnenn Smith's ale of immortality, and eating the never-failing pigs. But it so happened that when the spell was put upon Elcmar and his family, which compelled them to abandon their home, part of the household was absent. This was Dichu, Elcmar's chief steward, "with his wife and son. They had gone to seek some additional dainties for the distinguished company that Elcmar was then entertaining, one of whom was Manannan himself. The steward finding his old master gone, entered into the service of Aengus, and things went on as before. Soon after this á daughter was bom to Manannan, to whom he gave the name of " Curcog," from a tuft of golden hair which appeared on THE BOOK OF FEEMOY. 47 the crown of her head when she was bom. On the same night a daughter was also bom to the steward, Dichu, and she was named Eithne.* Aengus, according to the old fosterage customs, received both daughters to be brought up at his court. "When the girls grew up, Eithne was appointed one of the maids of honour to wait upon Curcog; but she refused to eat; and nevertheless continued in good health and plumpness. This was a great mystery, and gave much uneasiness to her friends ; butManannan discovered the cause. It appeared that on a former occasion she had received an insult from Finnbar, a Tuatha De Danaan chieftain of the hill Cnoc Meadha, who had been on a visit at her foster-father's. Her pure soul so resented this insult that her guardian demon fled from her, and was replaced by a guardian angel sent by the true God. From that time she was unable to eat any pagan food, and was miraculously sustained by the power of God. Aengus and Manannan had • at this time two lovely milch cows, giving an inexhaustible supply of milk. These cows they had brought home from India, whither they had gone dn'lsome necromantic voyage; and as India was then a land of righteousness, it was proposed that Eithne should live on the milk of these cows, which she consented to do, milking them herselff Things went on so, and Eithne continued to live with, and wait upon the lady Curcog, at Brugh na Boinne, from the days of Heremon to the reign of King Laeghaire, son of Kiall, and the coming of St Patrick, J a period of about 1450 years. At this time, St. Patrick still living, Curcog and her ladies, finding the weather sultry, went to bathe in the Boyne, after which they re- turned home, all except Eithne, whose absence they did not at first per- ceive, as neither did Eithne perceive that she had wandered from them. Her astonishment was great, when she returned to the shore, to find her companions gone. The fact was, that the influence of the true faith * Eithne. " Sweet kernel of a nut." the stoiy, as it is told in the Book of Fer- f- Herself. It seems that she was wont moy. to ifaUk her two cows in two golden me- % ^^' P^tf'icJi- Tn Uie text he is called dars, or metbers; and that this tale was, incailgin, "the shaven head," fol. 115. therefore, called Qlcpom cige t>a itie- a. col. 2. line 8 and 17; in another place t)aji, i. e. *' The fosterage of the house of (ibid, line 5 from bottom), he is called the two medars." But the medars do not Patrick Mac Alpoim." St. Patrick, Apoat, seem to occupy a very prominent place in of Ireland, p. 411. 48 THE BOOK OF FBBMOT. was now in the land, and had destroyed the power of her feth-fiadha, or veil of invisibility, when she threw it oflf with her other garments on going into the river. She therefore became an ordinary woman, un- able to see through, or penetrate the invisible wall which protected her former associates from mortal gaze. She wandered on the north side of the Boyne, in great perplexity, ignorant of the cause of her dilemma ; every thing to her eye was changed, and she could no longer find those paths and places which had been for so many centuries familiar to her. At length she came to a walled garden, in which stood what seemed to her a dwelling-house. A man, in a garb which was new to her, sat at the door and was reading in a book. He proved to be a recluse, and was sitting at the door of his church. She spoke to him, and told him her history. He received her kindly, and brought her to St. Patrick, by whom she was instructed and baptized. One day she was sitting at the church of the recluse on the Boyne, when a great noise and clamour, as of a great multitude surrounding them» was heard, but it was not seen from whence the voices proceeded. Eithne, however, at once recognized her former friends, and discovered that Aengus and his household had gone forth in search of her, and when th'fey could not discover her (for she was now invisible to them) they set up a loud wail and lamentation. At this she was so deeply affected that she swooned away, and was at the point of death. This shock she never recovered. She died, her head leaning on St. Patrick's breast, and was buried with due honour in the little church of the re- cluse, which from that ti|tne received the name, of Cill- Eithne, or Eithne's Church. The hermit's name w^s Ceasar ; he was son of the King of Scotland, and one of St. Patrick's priests. He abandoned his little church on the death of Eithne, andf retired to the wood of Fidh-Gaibhle, in Leins- ter, where he cleared jfor himself a field, in which he built another hermitage, called, from his name, Cluain-Ceasair. , The story of Eithne is continued on ibl. 115. a. col. 1, in a quite different hand, and ends fol. 116. b. col. 1, line 12 from bottom. Several poems are inserted into the latter part of the tale, viz. : — t)ena bam a cana pen. Fol. 115. a. col. 1. line 7 (a poem of three stanzas). ^ ! Oenum impo6 inipnimuch. Fol. 116. a. col. 1, line 28 (seven stanzas). 1 * THB ^OOK OF FERMOy.i* Í' ' 49 5oipit) The a mumcip niriie. " Call me, ye people of Heaven." Fol. 116. a. col. 2, line 14 (six stanzas). Cluiccip lib pepc piail eéne. " Let the generous Ethne's grave ^ be dug by you." FoL 116. b. col. 1. line 30 (thirteen stanzas). Fol. 116. h. col. 1. (line 10 from bottom). A poem with the title eojan mop u Oalaig .c5., " Eoghan mor O'Daly cecinit." It begins Ceasapc mipi a TTluipe, " Teach me, Mary." The first four or five stanzas are greatly rubbed, and in part illegible ; the entire poem . seems to have consisted of nineteen stanzas. (XV.) The fifteenth stave contains seven leaves, numbered from fol. 117 to fol. 123. ^On the upper margin of fol. 117, a. col. 1, are the words ihp mapia, "Jesus Maria." Fol. 117. a. col. 1. A poem of thirty-seven stanzas (anonymous), on the Crucifixion of our Lord, His descent into Hell, His Resuirec- tion, and His Ascension into Heaven, accompanied by the souls whom He had delivered from the Limbus patrum. The poem begins, Gipeipsi t)o eipi5 Dm, *' A resurrection in which God arose." It is written in a very beautiful and. remarkable hand. Fol. Wl.h. col. 2. A poem with the heading bpian o huijinn .cc., " Brian O'Higgin, cecinit." This is a panegyric on David, son of .; Muiris, or Maurice Roche, of Fermoy, enumerating all the places in Munster from whence he had carried off plunder and spoiL The poem contains sixty-two stanzas ; it begins, Cmbup iccap pet> puipji, " How is a gift of courtship paid." Brian O'Higgin is not mentioned by O'Reilly. But the Four Masters record the death of Briian, son of . Fergal Ruaidh TJi Uiccinn, or O'Higgin, "head of his own tribe, i oi6e, or Superintendent of the Schools of Ireland, and^rec^ptor in poetry," — on Maundy Thursday, 1477. He seems to have been a Con- naught poet. The poem ends fol. 119. a col. 1. '* Fol. 119. a. col. I. A poem (of thirty-six stanzas), whose author is given in the following title : Seaan 05 mac paic .cc, "Shane (or * Magyath. Not mentioned by O'Reilly. 50 THE BOOK OF FEBMOT. John) Og [i. e. Junior] Mac Raith, or Magrath,* cecinit" It begins, 5ach ponn gupepuib muije, " All lands are good until [compared with] Fermoy." This is a poem in praise of the territory of Fermoy and its lord, David, son of Morris Eoche, and his wife Joan. It ends foL 120. a col. 1. Fol. 120. a. col. 1. A poem headed, OTTlaochasan .cc., "O'Mao- thogan, cecinit." This poet is not mentioned by O'Reilly, but he was certainly of Munster. His poem begins, paba ip mnd maici mnd TTluman, " Long have the women of Munster been noble women." It is a panegyric on Cathilin, who seems to have been the mother of David, son of Morris Roche, of Fermoy. The poem consists of thirteen stanzas of, an unequal number of lines. It ends fol. 120. b. col. 2. Fol. 121. a. col. 1. A poem headed Copmac mac Gojain u T)alai5, .cc, " Cormac, son of Eoghan O'Daly, cecinit." A panegyric on Cathilin, daughter of Tadhg Mac Carthy, and on David, son of Morris Roche, who seems to have been her son. The poem begins, t)li$im ic ap mpeapaóc 5pdi6, "I am entitled to payment in right of my oflSce." This poem consists of thirty -nine stanzas of the usual number of four lines each. Fol. 121. h. col. 1. (eight lines from bottom). A poem headed, Ua maecagan, .cc., i peaan " OMaethagan, cecinit, i. e. John." This is a panegyric on Morris, son of Morris Roche, of Fermoy, and his son David. It begins, popmat) 05 ca6 le clu ITIuipip, "All men envy the fame of Muiris." It consists of twenty stanzas of an unequal number of lines, and is written in a good hand, but in faint ink. The poem ends fol. 122. a. col. 2. After which, in a space that was origi- nally blank, is written, apparently by the same hand that wrote the pagination, these words in English : " The former pages of this Book, from the beginning to this page, was 288." Fol. 122. b. This page was originally blank, but is now covered with idle scribbling. Amongst these are the following: bo bi an leabap po ap na apcpibaO le uiUiam ua heagpa anno bni 1805, ambaile aca cliac, " This book was re- written by William O'Hara, -r THE BOOK OF FEKMOT. 51 A. D. 1805, in Baile-atha-cliath, i.e. Dublin." Again, 'uill. ua heaspa Q.C. 1806, Jan. 29, 1806." I am sorry to be obliged to add that Mr. 0' Curry condescended to write his respectable and honored name amongst such wretched scrib- bling, thus: eógan 6 Coriipaióe, TTlOcccluin. Another note is this : Ceabaip beannaóc ap anmam ppoinpiap ui locióe ap pon t>e pna cceappab, " Give a blessing on the soul of Francis O'Hickey, for the sake of God, and his friends (?)." Fol. 123. a. (written across the page, without columns). An anony- mous poem of fifty-two stanzas, in praise of Cathilin, daughter of Tadhg Mac Carthy, who has been already mentioned. It begins, Oilep gac en t)uine a eiópeéc, " Every one has a right to his inheritance." Fol. 123. h. (13 lines from bottom, very much rubbed, and in many parts illegible), is a poem of which the author is named in the title, TTlaichiap mop o cillin .cc., after which we have the words in a later, but contemporary hand, uile cpio6 op pap. The writing is so effaced that neither the number of stanzas nor the first line can be ascertained. (XVI.) The sixteenth stave consists of five leaves, numbered by Mr. O'Curry (in entire disregard of the old pagination), fol. 124, 125, 126 [127 omitted], 128, 129. On fol. 125 the old pagination seems to have been 77 ; on fol. 126 it is clearly 94, and on 128, 78. On the other leaves it is obscure. This stave is written in double columns. Fol. 124, 125, 126, contain fragments of the ancient tale Codmapc 6imipe, " Courtship of Eimire," or Eimer, by the celebrated Ulster champion Cuchullainn (ob. AD. 2). Mr. O'Curry gives a full abstract of this tale (Lectures, p. 378, sq.) A perfect copy of this curious legend is in the British Museiu^, from which Mr. O'Curry tells us he made a careful transcript for his own use (ibid. p. 282). Two other copies be- ) - -'■ 52 THK BOOK OF FKRMOY. long to the Royal Irish Academy, one in the Leabhar na h-Uidhré, and the other partly on paper and partly on parchment. Both are im- perfect, as is also the copy now before us. There is also in the Royal Irish Academy an indifferent modern copy made from the British Mu- seum text. Fol. 127. Mr. 0' Curry appears to have omitted to number this page by mistake. It is not likely that a leaf could have been lost since his pagination was written, as the book has never since been out of my possession. Fol. 128, 129. These leaves contain a fragment of the old historical tale of bpuigean Da Deapsa (" Palace of Da-Dearga"), or the death of Conaire M6r, King of Ireland, at the house of Da-Dearga, a farmer of Leinster of noble birth, who kept a mansion celebrated for hospitality, at a place in the upper valley of the Dodder, the name of which is yet partly preserved in that of Bothar na Bruighne, * ' Road of the Bruighean, or Palace," on the River Dodder, near Tallaght, in the county of Dublin. At this place Conaire Mór was slain, and the palace burned by a party of pirates, in the 60thyear of his reign (A.D. 60, according to 0' Flaherty's date, 0|^y^. p. 138, 273).* The remainder of the volume consists of some fragments of medical MSS. in a very much injured condition. These fragments do not ap- pear to have formed any part of the collection now called the Book of Fermoy. (XVII.) This stave consists of four leaves marked on the lower margins 6 1, 6 2, 6 3, 6 4. The upper margins are greatly injured throughout, and no traces remain of any older pagi- nation. This is a fragment of a medical MS. imperfect at beginning and end. It never formed a part of the Book of Fermoy. "We have found the * O'Curry, {Leet. xii. p. 258, aq.). O'Donovan'e note, p. 90. Conf. Four Masters, A.M. 6160, and ■"'íW THE BOOK OF FEEMOY. 53 name of O'Hickey scribbled more' than once on the margins and else- where in the Book of Fermoy, and, as the O'Hickeys were hereditary physicians, we may fairly conjecture that this is a fragment of one of their professional MSS. which has got mixed up with the Book of Fermoy. (XVIII.) A fragment in a small and beautiful medical hand, consisting of two leaves, marked both on the upper and lower margins, 6 5, and 6 6. This fragment seems to contain part of a treatise on the liver and organs of generation. On page 2 of 6 5, begins a tract, the first sentence ^f which (as is commonly the case in medical MS.) begins with some words in Latin : t)e epOCe [hepate] eC 06 61US UaR6Cace [sic] C0TnpL6;ri0NeS [sic] loquamup ; the tract then translates this into Irish, and proceeds in the same language. Perhaps these Latin sentences may indicate that the work was trans- lated from some Latin original. It would be of great importance to philology, and enable us, no doubt, to fix the true meaning of many old Irish names for plants and medicines, if the original Latin could be discovered. On page 2 of 6 6 is a tract beginning, 06 membRORUTTl SeNeRaciuoRum [op6RO]ciONii)US 6[c 60RUTn] qua- LlCQClbUS, which then proceeds in Irish, as before. (XIX.) A fragment imperfect at beginning and end, consisting of two leaves, in a good medical hand. Mr. O'Curry did not put any paging on these leaves, nor are the xemains of any former pagination now visible. On the first page of the second leaf begins a tract on the liver, with these words: UlRCUS NaCURQLlS 6SC IN 6paC6 qU6 CUTTl P6R uenap at) membpa in qiep biuibicup uipcucep -c. 54 THK BOOK OF FEKHOT. (XX.) A fragment, five inches by four, containing the conclusion of what seems to have been a religious tract. It was evidently i " . cut from the upper part of the leaf of some book for the sake of the blank parchment that surrounded it. W v, It contains twenty lines, ending with the word pinic, and is written in a very good and scholarlike hand. The back of this fragment was originally blank, and now contains * some scribbling, of which I can read only the following words : — / Qn ainm t)ia [sic] l)on cen CoppOelbach ui DomnaiU maille le peil riioichecae pope \ r ■ IN D EX. a caemain ólaip cuint) caempinb, " Ye nobles of the feir-sided x^lains of Conn," 7. a ceS beg ciasaip a ce$ mop, 35. a riiuipe, a macaip ap natap, "0 Mary, Mother of our Father," 33. Acaill, or Aicill. See Aicill. Achill island. See Eacaill. Qcpo ancaftbap panabap bomnach cpom bubh, 30. Aedh Bennain, King of Munster, father of Mór-Mumhain, 8. ^Aedh, King of Conacht, 10; his descent from Cathal Croibhdearg, ti. ; confu- sions consequent on his death in 1 274, ib.; three successive Kings of Conacht in that year, ib. ; their descent and relationship, ib. Aedh Oimighe, King of Ireland, Poem of advice to, by Fothad na Canoine, 19. Aodh Slaine, seven sons of, death, and places of interment of, 19; Poem on, by Cinaedh O'Hartigan, ib. Aengus, youngest son of the Daghda, ob- tains possession of Brugh na Boinne,46. Aengus Gaeibuibhtech avenges the in- sult offered to his niece, 25 ; his ge- nealogy from Feilimidh Rechtmar,í6. ; kills Cellach in presence of ]iiai|i- ther Cormac, 26 ; blinds Cormac, ii. ; and kills Setna, ib. See Aongus. Aicill, now the hill of Skreen, 26 ; Bo(& of, compiled by King Cormac mac Airt, ib. ; its contents, ib. ; Preface of, ib. Qiceach, or Qchech, a farmer, 17, n. Qifeeb TíuióceapTia pe Cuana toqc Cailcin, " Elopement of Ruithceama with Cuana mac Cailcin," 9. Almhain (now Allen) Hill of; battle of, 35 ; date of, ib. aicpom ci§e ba riiebap, " Fosterage of the house ofTwo Mether8"-^ano- " ther title for the stor^ of Eitbne, 47. Ambrose (St.) extracts from, 32.' . Qni biapoibe in cep pop ulcaib p6 pip, " This was how the debility came on the Ultonians," 17. Annoid, son of Cato, survived the De- luge, and preserved the history of the South, 28, 29. Aongus the Culdee, Litany of (supposed by Mr. O'Curry to have been written about 780), 45. See Aengtu. Qpbpig cpoba copspach clann, 45. Qpsam Caipppe-Cinn Caic pop paep olamiqib hCpenn, " Slaughter of the free clans of Erin by Cairpre Cinn-chait," 17. Qpoile buine cpuajh bo6c, 28. Qpoile oslach bo bi m abbame bpumanach, 31. Qppaib pm a eoni Gacla ! inbip bum Qbbup heaó cpa, 43. Art, son of Conn, his adventures with his step-mother Becuma Cneisgel, 38 ; adventures in search of Delbcaemh, daughter of Mongan, 38, 39. Art Aonfir, why so called, 24. 66 INDEX. Art, son of Con, King of Ireland, father of Cormac, 13 ; slain at the battle of Magh Macruimhe by Lugaidh Laga, ib. Artigan. See 0' Hartigan. Athacb, or Fathach, a giant, 14, n, Ath- cross- Molaga [Ford of St. Molaga's Cross], now Aghacross, 30, n. Atheac-tuatha, insurrection of, against the nobles, 13-15; not mentioned by Tighemach, 16; the name variously interpreted, 14 ; not the Attacotti, ib. ; translated by Keating, baop clanna, "free clans," ib.; Dr. 0' Conor ren- ders it gigantea gens, 14, n. ; Mr. . O'Curry, " Rent-paying tribes," 14. ' f / Baath, grandson of Japhet, 5. boat mac goimeii mc lapec ir uat) gaebil, " Baath, son of Gomer, son of Japhet, from him are the Gaedil," 6. Babel, Building of Tower of, 5. , Bacht, a fairy lady, who related the wonders ^t Conn's death to Fingan mac Luchta, 9. bai pi amyia pop hepenn, i. copmac mac atpc mac conceb chatais, 12. bai pmsen mac lucca ait»6i pamna m bpuin pinsm, *' On Samhain's night (i. e. All Hallow Eve), Fin gen Mac Luchta was at Drum-Fingin, 9. Baile Caislean an Roitsigh (now Castle- town Roche), 41 ; its hospitalities, 41, 42. baile puchain pit emnh, "A mansion of peace is Sith Emna" [the fairy hill of Emain], 1 1. Barre, bishop of Cork, his Life, 29. bea6a baippe Copcai&e, 29. beaca TTlolasa, "Life of St.Molaga,"29. BecumaCneisgel, her history and roman- tic meeting with Conn of the Hun- dred Fights, 38 ; her adventures with Art, son of Conn, ib. ; her travels, ib. bepla in bomain beóaiD lib, " Re- gard ye the languages of the world, " 6 . Blathmac. See Diarmaid. bliaban bon cuaille co cepc, Qcpi bon 5upc na slapbepc, 43. Bodhbh Dearg, chieftain of the Tuatha De Danaan, 46. boi cocab mop ecip Catal mc pin- 5uine, pi lete mobaT pep5almao maelebum, 35. Bothair na Bruighne, or "Road of the Palace," preserves the name of Brui- ghean da Dearga, where King Conairo Mor was slain, 52. Brondubh, King of Leinster, 37. Brendan, St., account of Judas Iscariot in connexion with St Brendan's voy- ages, 29. Bres mac Firb, King of Ulster, 13. bpiachpa armpo 6 Qmbpopiup, 32. British Museum, Harleian MSS., 5280, contains the story of Crunnchu, 19. bponan pola peip cpojam (6 stan- zas), 27. bpuiben mc bapeó anpo piopana, " The court of the son of Daire down here;" called afterwards Magh Cro, " Plain of blood," 15. bpui§ean ba Deapga, "Palace of Da Dearga," tale of, 52. Brugh na Boinne, the great Tuatha De Danaan mansion on the Boyne, 46 ; passes from Elcmar, its true owner, to Aongus, son of the Dagda m6r, 46. bui pobopc mop ic aóeó-cuataib Gpenn an aimpip cpi pig Bpenn, " There was a great.conspiracy among the Athech-tuathaf- of Erinn in the time of three kings of Erinn," 13. but coipppe cpom mao pepabaig mic lusach mic balldin mic bpe- pail mic maine moip, a quo .i. maine Connachc, " Coirpre Crom was the son of Feradach, son of Lu- gaidh, son of Dalian, son of Bresal, son of Maine m<5r, a quo Hy Maine in Connacht," &c., 23. 1 I -■ J» ■ .<í INDEX. 57 Cain poiTib bo pmbf amaip, 6. Cainnech (St.), and the soul of Crom- dubh, legend of, 80. Gairbre Luacbair (now Kerry), why so called, 8, n. Gairbre Niafar, called King of Ireland, but really of Leinster, 22 ; cause of the mistake, ib. ; his date, ib. ; story of his foster daughter Treblainn, and Fraoch of Connaught, 23. Gairpre Grom, King of Hy Maine, story of bis diurder and restoration to life, 23 ; why called Grom, 23, 24 ; town- lands conferred by him upon St. Gia- ran, 24 ; his genealogy, 23. Gaiipre Gind-Ghait, King of Ireland after the plebeian insiirrection, 15, 16. Gaithilin [daughter of Tadg Mac Garthy] mother of David, son of Morris Roche ; panegyric on, by Maothagan, 50 ; by Gormac mac Eoghan 0' Daly, ib. Capa ip laigni if luayab gpint), 6. Gam Guili Gesrach, " Cam of Gessar's wood," in Gonacht, 7. Cas-fiaclach (Fergus), 13, n. Gastletown-Hoche. See Baile Caislean an Jtoitsi. Cach aiTTiame. See Almhain. Cach Cpinna. See Crinna. Gathair Mór, his will, 36, n. Gathal mac Finguine, King of Munster, 35 ; battle with Ferghal, son of Mael- duin, at the Hill of Almhain (now Al- len), ib. ; marries M6r-Mumhan, 8. Geasair, a recluse, son of a king of Scot- land, one of St. Patrick's priests, 48 ; retires to the wood of Fidh-gaibhle, and builds a hermitage called Gluain- Ceasair, 48. Cearraip canap cainic f i, " Ceassair, whence came she ?" 6. Cea88air,grand-daughterof Noah, 6; her death at Gam Guili Gessrach, 6. Ceicpe haiplji an bomain .i. coip, t ciap, cep, T cuaish, " The four car- dinal points of the world, viz. East and West, liorth and South," 28. Cellach, son of Gormac mac Airt, sent to c(dlect the Boromean tribute, 25 ; carries off 1.50 maidens, ib. ; slain by Aengus Gaei-buaibhtech, 25. Gennfebrath, battle of, 24, n. ; date of, ib. Cepc cech pig co péiU, bo clannaib neill naip, " The right of every king clearly, of the children of noble NialL" Ges Naoidhen, infant, or child-birth suffering of the Ultoniana, 18 ; its du- ration, 18, n. Cepca gpesa, " Greek questions," 45. Cecpaóa cpaó bon cup cinb po ppic epenn pe nbilinb, 6. Ghronology of the kings of Ireland during the period of the plebeian in- surrection, 16. Cia po agpap coip urn cpuachain "Who is it that asserts a right to Gmachan ?" 9. * Ciaran (St.) restores Gairpre'' Grom to life, and replaces his head, 24 ; re- ceives in gratitude seventeen town- lands, 24. Cib biapaibe an cep pop ulcoib .mn., " Whence [proceeded] the debi- lity that was on the XJltíHÚans? not difficult to tell" 17. Gill-Eithne, 48. Cinbup iccap "^ puipsi, "How is a gift of courtship paid ?" 49. Gluain-Geasair in the wood áf Fidh Graibhle, in Leinster, 48. Gluain-Ramhfhada, now Clonrood, near Ennis ; 0' Briens of, 44. Cluiccip lib pepc pial Bene, " Let the generous Ethne's grave be dug by you," 49. Cnoch Meadha, 47. Goenchomrach, bishop of Clonmacnoise, 21 ; date of his death, ih. 58 INDEX. ^ ColuftiiS^, wanderings of two of his clcrksr 29. Conaing's tower in Tor-inis, taking of, 7. Conaire Mór, King of Ireland, death -of, at the House of Da Dcarga, 52. Concho])hair Mao Nessa, King of Ulster, 17 ; *date of his reign, 18, n. Confusion of tongues, and list of the seventy-three languages, 6, 6. Conn of the Hundred Battles, an account of his reign and death, 24 ; date of his death, according to O'Flaherty, »4. ; chronology of the reigns of his suc- cessors, ib., n. ; legend of his wife Becuma Cneisgel, 38. Cormac mac Airt mac Con, King of Ire- land, 12 ; makes alliance with Tadg, sonof Cian, and Lugaidh Laga, 13 ; defeats the three Fergusses at the battle of Crinna, 13 ; history and date of his reign, 24, w. ; O'Flaherty's pa- negyric on, . ib. ; blinded by Aengus Gaei-buaibhtech, 26 ; legal proceed- to recover damages for loss of his eye and death of his son, 26, 27 ; poem entitled " Desires of Cormac mac Airt," 33; event which lost him the crown, 25, 26 ; choked by a salmon bone, 26 ; compiled the Book of Acaill, ib. ; romantic fairy tale of his adventures, 30. Coroi Mac Daire, his magical wand, 38 ; travels of Becuma in search of it, ib. Courtship of Eimire, 52. Courtship of Treblainn, 22. Cow, white, with red ears, 36 ; such cows mentioned in Irish history, t^. Crinna, battle of, 24, n. ; an historical tale in prose, 12 ; copies of, 13 ; occa- sion of the battle of, ib. Cromdubh Sunday, 30. Cruachan, now Bathcroghan, ancient fort of the Kings of Conacht, 9. Crucifixion, an anonymous poem on the, 49. See Resurrection. Crunnchu, son of Agnoman, 17. Cuana, son of Calchin, King of Fermoy, his elopement with Ruitohem, 9. See Laoch-Liaihmuinei Cummian (St.), date of his Paschal Let- ter, 20, M. ; written only two years before the banishment of St. Carthach from Rahan, ib, Curcog, daughter of Manannan mac Lir, 46 ; why so called, 46, 47 ; Eithne made one of her maids of honor, 47. Oa bliaóan ceachpachat» babap na huibaibi, &c., " The Jews were 42 years," &c., 22. Da ííibi f'eolca ap fen ngall, 40. t)a bpon plata nime, "-The two sor- rowful ones of the kingdom of hea- ven," 31. Da Dearga, palace of, on the Dodder, near Tallaght, 52. Daghda M6r, King of the Tuatha De Danaan, 46. Daire, youngest son of Cormac mac Airt, meets an assembly on the hill of Uis- nech, to demand reparation for the loss of his father's sight, 27; condi- tions of his demand, ib. t)a mac ampa la bb. "Two famous sons had David," 29. David, King of Israel, story of, 28, 29. David Mae Muiris Roche. See Roche. David, soh of Thomas O'KeefFe. See &Keeffe. Deece, barony of, origin of the name, 25. See Beisi. Deisi, why so called, 25; signification of the word, ib. ; refuse reparation to King Cormac for loss of his eye, 27 ; expelled fromMeath, ib. ; two baronies in Waterford take their names from them, ib. Deisi-Temrach, ib. Delbh-chaemb, daughter of Mongan, 38, 39. INDEX. 5 «J Deluge, four persons who survived the, 28. Diarmait and Blathmac, Kings of Ire- land, blamed for banishment of St. Mochuda, 20. Debility of the Ultonians, story of, 17. Dichu, steward of Elcmar, 46 ; his daughter Eithne bom, 47. See Eithne. Dilep gac en buine a eiópeóc, " Every one has a right to his inheri-: tance," 61. Dinnseanchus, gives the story of Cninn- chu's wife, 19; published by Dr. Reeves from, 19, « ; versified by Dr. S. Ferguson, ib. ; 'states that^Crunn- chu's wife was named Macha, 19 ; one of three ladies so called, ib. Oleasap cunt)pa6 bo ooiiiall, " A covenant must be fulfilled," 28. Dligim ic ac mpeapaóc 5pái&, " I am entitled to payment in right of my office, 60. Do bi apaile uppaige, 29. Dodder, river, 52. Ooluit) aillill ip in caillit» i cul- bpeab, " Ailill went into the wood in Cul-breadh," 19. Domhnall Cnuie an Bhile Mac Carthy, 1 1 . Drumanach, abbey of, now Drimnagh, Co. of Dublin, 31. Dubhdedach (Fergus), 13, n. eaócpa-clepech Choluimcille, 29, «. eaócpa Copmaio fnc Qipc, " Ad- ventures of Cormac Mac Airt," 30. eaécpaTnonsaimnicpiachna, "Ad- ventures of Mongan, son of Fiachna," 36. Eacaill, now Achill, island, 43. Eagle (The) of Ecaill, now Achill Is- land, a dialogue between him and Fintan, 43. Ecaill. See Eacaill. Eimire, or Emir, courtship of, 51. 6ipeip5i bo eiptg t)ia, "A resurrec- tion in which God arose," 49. Eithne, daughter of Dichu, legend of, 43, 45, tq. ; refuses to eat, but con-< tinues in health ; reason of this, 47 ; fed on the milk of two Indian cows, ib.; lives 1500 years from Heremon to the coming of St. Patrick, ib. ; is released from Pagan spells, and loses her companions, ib. ; is instructed by a recluse named Ceasair, and baptized by St. Patrick, 48 ; dies on St. Pa- trick's breast, ib. ; is buried in the church called from her Cill Eithne, ib. See Curcog. Eimir. See Eimire. Elcmar, Tuatha De Danaan, chieftain of fimgh na Boinne, 46. Emain, fairy hill of. See Sith Emna. Emhain Abhla, royal residence of the Kings of the Hebrides, 11. Emma, daughter of Maurice, first Earl of Desmond, panegyric on, 39. Enoch and Ellas, romantic Tale of, 31. Eolgarg Mór, King of Scandinavia, 36. Cpi ce lappaigcapbim, " Erin, if it be asked of me," 6. eppuc ampai bo hicluam ific noip, " There was a noble bishop at Cluain- mic-nois," 21. paba ip rtma maici mna TTluThan, " Long have the women of Mun^ter been noble women," 50. «í peachc naen banbeachab piaéna pinb mac baeoain, -jc, 36. peachc naen ba poibe Conn c. ca- chai5, "jc, " Once upon a time Conn of the Hundred Fights was," &c., 38. peaócup bo bi Copmac hui Cumn aliacpuim, 30. Ferchis, son of Gomain, a Droid, 24, n. ; King Liigaidh Laga slain by, ib. Ferghal Mac Maeleduin, King of Ire- C: 60 INDEX. land, battle with Cathal, King of Munster at the Hill of Almhain, now Allen, 35. Fergus Dubhdedach, usurps the king- dom, 24, n. ; slain at the battle of Crinna, ib. Fergus, three Ulster princes so named, 13 ; their surnames, ib., n. Ferguson (Dr. S.), "Lays of the Western Gael," 19, n. Fermoy, Book of, its title not authentic, iii. ; account of the MS. of, by Ewd. O'Reilly, ib. ; purchased in London at the sale of "W. Monck Mason, ib. ; its contents, iv. ; papers relating to, deposited in Trinity College, Dublin, by Dr. John O'Donovan, iii., n. ; once in the. possession of the O'Hickey fa- mily, iv. ; consists of sixteen staves, in hands of 15th century, 7, 8; twenty-two folios lost since the leaves were numbered, 8. Feth Fiadha, Pagan spell, or veil of im- mortality, 48. Fiac Caech, see Fiac mae Fidkeie. Fiac mac Fidheic (or Fiac Caech), King of Munster, 13. Fiacha, or Fiacho Finnolaidh, King of Ireland, 13, 16 ; various accounts of his death, 16, 17, 17, n. Fiacha Suighde, ancestor of the Deisi, 26. Fiachna Finn, King of Ulidia, his ad- ventures in Scandinavia, 36. Fidh-Gaibhle, wood of, in Leinster, 48. Finbar, Tuatha De Danaan, chieftain of Cnoc Meadha, 47 ; insults Eithne, ib. Fingen Mac Luchta, K. of Munster, the wonders at Conn's death, narrated to, 9. Fintan mac Bochra, said to have sur- vived the deluge, 6, ' «. ; poems at- tributed to, 5, 6 ; dialogue between him and the Eagle of Achill island, 43. Fintan, son of Lamech, survived the Deluge, and preserved the history of the West, 28. Firen, son of Sisten, grandson of Noah, survived the Deluge, and preserved the history of the North, 28. Fithal, Cormac's brehon, 26. piaclibpugaib cebach comTiamaó poomearaji "oo cuisab conaóc, 46. Flaithri, son of Cormac's brehon Fithil, 33. Foltleabhar (Fergus), 13, n. Forrach, carried off by Gallach, 26; pro- ceedings of her uncle to avenge her, ib. ; her genealogy and relationship to the Deisi, ib. popmat» 05 cat le clu ITIuiinT» '' All men envy the fame of Morris," 60w 1 Fors, son of Electra, son of Seth, sur- vived the Deluge, and preserved the history of the East, 28. Fothad na Canoine (or of the Canon), why so called, 19 ; poem by, addressed to Aedh Oimighe, 19. Fraoch, son of Fidach of the red hair, his courtship of Treblainn, foster daughter of Cairbre Niafar, 22; his story, 23. Ppoech, mac Pibmg pole puaig o pi6 pibaig ■] o loo pibaig, 22. puach lem puacha mic mic Cumn. " Hateful to me what was hated by the son of Conn's son," 33. puil 6uinb bo 6uai§ potalmain, 27. 5abum bechmaó ap, nbana, Do t)ia map ap biTismala, "Let us give tithe of our poems to God, as it is meet," 32. 5ach poTin 5U pepaib muige, "All lands are good until compared with Fermoy," 49. / 7 INDEX. 6) 5aet)il glaif ocaic 5aet>il, " Gaedhil Glas (ancestor of the Milesians), from whom are the Graedhil," 6. Sapb eiTi5e iftna an bpaea, " Fierce the uprising of the signa of Judg- ment," 33, Geisill, battle of, 46. Generativorum membronim operacioni- bus (De), 63. George (St.) Life of, 20. Gerald, fourth Earl of Desmond, sur- named the Poet, poem by, 33. 5epp 50 laibeopaift an lia pail, " It is short until the Lia Fail speaks," 40. 5epp óbab mSill mna murhan, " It is a short time since the women of Munster were pledged," 12. 5epoit) lapla t>o 6um na puaéabega popip, 33. See Gerald. Gilla Caemhain, poem by, 6. Godfrey, sumamed Mearanach, K^iiig of Dublin, and of the Hebrides, 1 1 ; died of the plague, 1095, ibid. Goibhnenn, the smith, ale of, 46. goipib me a muincip niriie, " Call me ye people of heaven," 49. Greek questions, 45. Hebrides, kings of, their royal residence, 11. «Hennessy (Mr. W. M), 12, 23, 36, «. Hepate (De), 60 ; virtus naturalis est in, ib. Hy Cuscraighe, tribe of, 30. Hy Maine (Cairpre Crom, king of,) 23, 24. Impuim óupaig ua coppa, "Navi- gation of the curach of O'Corra," 46 ; one of the tales enumerated in the Book of Leinster, ib., n. ; summary of it by Mr. O'Curry, ibid. lar [or West], Luachair, why so called, 8, «. India, a land of nghteousuMs, 47 ; milch cows from, ibid. Ireland, bardio names of, from Fodla, Banba, and £ri, queens of the Tuatba De Danaan, 33. Japhet, establishment of his descendants in Europe, 6. Jerusalem, Tract on Destruction ofi 22. Joan, wife of David, son of Morris Boche, poem in praise éfher, 49. Johanna, daught^£iuR)wen Mac Carthy, "Krife of David Boche, poems in praise of her, 44. Judas Iscariot, account of, 29. Judgment, Day of, poem on the signs of, 32. Juliana (St.), her life and martyrdom, 29. t- ■ • Kerry, ancient name of, 8. Kilkep^y, Archaeological Society of, 21. ■ -i • ■ "• La .% . pobe Cainbeach naeih anoi- len popa cpe, " One day St. Canice was in the island of Eoscrea," 30. Laoch-Liathmuine(hero ofLiathmuine), L e. Cuana son of Calchin, 43 ; his laws [of hospitality], ibid. n. Leabhar Gabhala, iv., 6. Lia Fail, 11. Liatruim i. e. Tara, 30. Life, relative of man and other animals, poem on, 43. :,;= Lismore, banishment of S. Carthai^ from Rahan to, 20, n. ; church and school of, founded by St. Mochuda, or Carthach, in the 7th century, 20. Litany. See Aongtu the Culdee, 46. Lonsapat) caippinb amuis cuachac, 35i ^ Longttrad (St.) of Disert-Longarad ; leg^d of his contest with St. Colom- ciliei 36. Luachair, district o{,8, n. t 1> 1 5 62 INDEX. Lagaidh Laga, or Mac Con, King of Ire- land, 24 ; kills Art Mac Con, King of Ireland, at the battle of Magh Ma- cruimhe, 1 8 ; slays the three Fer- guses, at the battle of Crinna, ib. ; expelled by Cormac Mac Airt, 24, m. ; murdered by the Druid, Ferchis, 24, n. Luigne (now Leyney, in Sligo) ; O'He- gra, or O'Hara, kings of, 20. Lyons. See O'Leighin. Macha, three ladies so called, from whom Armagh may have had its name, 19. Mac Carthaigh, or Carthy, Cormac, son of Diarmait, 43 ; poems composed as school exercises for, 44 ;. elegy on the death of his daughter, Siubhan, or Jo- hanna, 12 ; Diarmait, 43, 44 ; (Dom- nall Cnuic an Bhile), poem by, 11 ; Owen, poem in praise of his daugh- ter, 44. Mac Con (Art) slain at battle of Magh Mucruimhe, 13. Mac Dareo, court of, 15. Mac Domhnall (Tadg), junior, poem by, 12. Mac Pierce, or Mac Piarois, a branch of the Butler family so called, 41, n. Mac Raith, or Magrath, Shane óg, poem by, in praise of the territory of Fer- moy, and its lord, 49. Macha, name of Cruinn's, or Crunn- chu's, wife, 19. Magh Cro, 15. Magh Fene, 30. Magh Itha, battle of, 7 , first battle ever fought in Ireland, 7. Magh Macruimhe, battle of, 24 ; near Athenry, Co. of Galway, 13 ; Art mac Con slain at, ib. Magrath, Thomas, son of Ruadhri, son of Diarmaid, poem by, 39. Margaret, daughter of Richard de Burgo, Red Earl of Ulster, married to Mau- rice, first earl of Desmond, 39. Magoth, son of Japhet, poem qn, 5. ÍTlagoí; mac an lapet aca cmci a ólann, "Magoth [read Magog], son of Japhet, well known are his de- scendants," 6. Magrath, Shane og. See Mac Raith. Magrath (Maelmuire), poetical pane- gyric by him on Emma, daughter nf Maurice, first Earl of Desmond, 39. Manannan Mac Lir, chieftain of the Tuatha de Danaan, 46 ; his swine, ib. Maryv B. V., poem on, by Eoghan m6r O'Daly; 49. Matilda, wife of William de Braosa, oflFers 400 white cows with red ears to the Queen of King John, 37. Maiirice, first Earl of Desmond, pane- gyric on his daughter Emma, 39. TTIeapusat» clepech Coluimcille "Wandering of Columcille's clerks," 29. Mearanach. See Godfrey. Medars, golden, in which Ethne milked her cows, 47. Medical MSS., fragments of, 50. TTIian CojitTiaic ci$i cempa, 33. TiliOTina Copmaic rmc Qipc, " Desires of Cormac mac Airt," 33. Tnipia Qimi ap hinéaib pein, " I put myself, Emma, on thine own pro- tection," 39. nriobaippe t)a. bo chonnaccaib bo lapcmeol, tc, " Mobairre was of the Connachtmen by family," 29. TTlobaippe bna. bo chonnaocaib bo lapcmeol, 29. Mochuda, St, called also St. Carthach, ba- nishment of, from Rahan to Lismore, 20; names of the clergy who took part in it, t^. ; had some connexion with the Paschal controversy, 20, «. ; Tighemach's record of it, ib. TTlochucca mac pjnaill bo ciapaigi tuacpa a cenel, " Mochuda, son of INDEX. Finall, of Cianaghe Luachra [now Kerry] was his family," 20. TTlolaga bi. bpepaib Ttiui§i pene a cenel, .1. be uib cupcpaió, -[c, " Now Molaga, his race was of the men of Magh Fene, 1. e. of the Hy Cusgraighe," 30. TTlolaga bin bpepaift muige pene a cenel, .i. be uib cupcpaib, 30. Molaga (St), Life of, 29. Mongan, son of Fiachna Finn, adven- tures of, 86. TTlop oicep luchc an inbluis, "Much do slandering people destroy," 11. M6r-Mumhan, legend of, 8. Mor, daughter of Owen Mac Carthy, poem in praise of, 44. Mdr, daughter of Mathgamhain (or Mahon) O'Brien, wife of David, son of. Morris Roche, panegyric on l^er, 34 ; elegy on, ib. Muircheartach, son of John O'NúIl, - poem urging him to assert his right to the throne of Conniicht, 10 ; his mother's genealogy, ib. Muile, isle of (now Mull), 11. Mull. See Muile. Ni pdhmbme ip meapca TTlop, " Not for her wealth only is M<5r to he esti- mated," 34. Nel pi$na 6y paic lugaine, 44. Niall of the Nine Hostages, why he succeeded his father, although the youngest of his father's sons, 45. O'Briens of Cluain B,anihfhada, 44. O'Brian, Diarmaid, son of Torrdealhach (or Torlogh), panegyrical poem on, 35. O'Brian (Mahon), daughter of, married to David, son of Morris Boche, 34. See Mor. O'Cillin, Mathias [or Mathew], mor, poem hy, 61. I 63 of historical O'Conor Don, his MS poems, 35. O'Coma, navigation of, 46; one of the ancient tales enumerated in the Book of Leinster, té., n. ; the O'Corras and their nine companions invoked in the Litany of Aengus, 46 ; Mr. O'Curry's inference as to their date, inconclu- sive, ib. n' Octavian Agustus, 31. Ochcepin ugupc ba haipbpi an bo- main anbpo 5einipCpipc,TC., "Oc- tavianus Augustus was emperor of the world when Christ was bom," &c., 31. O'Dalaighe. See (/Daly. O'Daly, or O'Dalaighe, Cearbhall, son of Conchobhair, poem by, 34. O'Dalaighe, or O'Daly, Eoghan, son of Aonghus, poem by, in praise of Jo- hanna, wife of David Boche, 44. O'Dalaigh, or O'Daly, Eoghan mor, poem by, in praise of the B. V. Mary, 40. O'Daly, Godfrey Fionn, poem ascribed to, 35. O'Daly (Donchad, son of Eoghan), poem in praise of David Boche, by, 40. O'Daly, Cormac, son of Eoghan, pane- gyric on Gathilin, daughter of Tadg Mac Carthy, 60. 0'Daly(Donnchadh mor), abbot of Boyle (13th century), poems by, 32. O'Daly (or O'Dalaighe), Cearbhall, son of Conchobhair, poem by, 34. O'Flynn, or Ua Floinn (Eoctaidh), poems by, 7 ; Muircheartach, poem by, in praise of Mor and Johanna, daughters of Owen Mac Carthy, 44. Ogham, 7. 0' Grady (Standish H.), 30. O'Hartigan (Cineadh), poem by, 19 ; date of his death, ib. O'Heagra, or O'Hara, 31 ; chieftain of Luigne, Sligo, 20 ; William, writes his name on a mai^;in of the MS. MS. in 1806 and 1806, 20, 60, 51 ; ■'1— 64 INDEX. this book rewritten by him, Dublin, 1806, 60. O'Hiceadha, or O'Hickey ("William), scribe of the Life of St. George in this MS., 21 ; wrote it for David, son of Morris Roitsi [Roche], 21; date of, 1461, 21. O'Hickeys, hereditary physicians, iv., 60. 0' Hickey. See Clocidhe and O'Hiceadha. O'Huiginn, or O'Higgin, Brian, pane- gyric by, on David, son of Muiris Roche, 49. O'locidhe, or O'Hickey, Francis, 60. O'Keeffe, David, swi of Thomas, poem addressed to, 11. Olc an cumchaó an cuma, 36. O'Leighin (or Lyons), Domhnall, 39, 41, n. O'Maoilconaire [or Mulconry] (Toma, son of Toma), transcriber of inven- tory of the Roche estates in 1661, 41. O'Maothagain, or O'Maethagain (Seaan, or John), his panegyric on Morris, son of Morris Roche, of Fermoy, and his son David, 50 ; his panegyrical poem on Cathilin, mother of David, son of Morris Roche, 50. Omnaift ainmnigtep Gpi, "From wo- man Eri is named," 34. Ossianic Society, their publication of the Adventures of Cormac Mao Airt, 30 ; and of the "Pursuit after Diarmuid O'Duibhne and Graine, daughter of Cormac," 30. O fcaimc t)epea5 pise i plaiterhnup boinnaiU mc aet)a, fnc ainmipeoh, S9. O ceg beg ciasaip a ces mop, 35. Partholan, arrival of, 7 ; poem describ- ing his adventures, 7. Pap6alan canap cainic, 7. Patrick (St.) receives Eithne and bap- tizes her ; she dies on his breast, 48, called in cailsin, 47, «. Petrie (Dr.), his woodcut of circular window in church of Rahan^ 20, ft. Pig's Psalter, 21. Quintus Centimachus, Latin name given by 0' Flaherty to Con ced cathach, 24. Rahan, circular window in chtuxh of, 20, M. Randal, son of Godfrey, .King of the He- brides, panegyric on, 1 1 ; his descent, ib. Rathcroghan. See Cruochan, 9. Reeves (Rev. Dr.), " His Ancient Churches of Armagh," 19, n. ; his opinion that the banishment of St. Carthach to Lismore was connected with the Paschal controversy, 20, n. Resurrection, an anonymous poem on the Crucifixion ; Descent into Hell ; Resur- rection, and Ascension of our Lord, 49. Til mac i^ei6limi$ ampa conn, 28. ■Rigaft nell Tioi5iallai§ op clgnn Gchac, 46. R15 uapal oipmibneaó oipeóóa t)o gab plaiceriinup pobla pecc naill .1. cont) .c. cachaó maó pei&limig peccmaip, " A noble, venerable, fa- mous king assumed the sovereignty of Fodla [L e. Ireland], viz., Conn of the Hundred Fights, son of Fedh- limigh Rechtmar," 24. Road of the Bruighean. See Bothar na Bruighne, Ro bo mai6 in muincip mop, " Good were the great people," 7. Roche, or Roitsi, inventory of their estates, made for David M6r, 41 ; co- pied for David, great-great grandson of David M6r, in 1661, ibid. n. ; wit- nesses to this transcript, ibid. Rents payable to, 42 ; (David), panegyrics on, 39, 40 ; David, gr. grandson of # 1^ p^\ INDKX. m David M6r, married Ellen, daughter' of iam(;e, son of Edmund, sort of Pierce Butler, 41, w. ; (David Mac Muiris), panegyric on, 28 ; on his wife Johanna, 34 ; poem in praise of him and his wife, 42; panegyric on, hy Brian O'Higgin, 49 ; (David), son of Morris, son of John (A. D. 1467), 21. Ruitchem, sister of M6r Mumhan, ab- duction of, 9. SceX ralcpach na muice annro fior, " The story of the pigs' Psalter, down here," 21. Scuipim bo pcelaib na nsaetnl, I have done with the Stories of the Gaedhil," 6. Senchas na relic [History of the Ceme- teries], first published by Dr. Petrie, 25. SftinH. King Cormac's steward, slain by ^I'i 1^.18 Gai-buaibhtech, 26. bjiji-i iiaifi%> fairy mound, now Knock Ahi'j, county oT^-imi-rick, 9. Siiibhani dau{;l Un- ofiTSr^iac M:ic Car- rhy, elegy on htr death 12. s, Synj mac Cppu mac giicOil ipe^T- pae t»o 5aebilib, "Sru, son of E^ru, son of Gaedil, was the leader oftlí^ Gadelians," 6. Sru, scp of Esru, son of Gaedil, 6. Cea6 t>a bangan paic Caip il, 44. Ceasopc mip i a TTIuipe, " Teach me, Mary," 49. Tadg Mac Domnall Og, poem by, 12. CailsiTi, " shaven head," a name for St. Patrick," 47, n. Tain bo Fraoch, 23. Tech Molaga, now Timoleague, 30. Ceic oipbepc an in mepiS,- . "The wealth of Royal nobility," 40. Temple Molaga, 30, n. Tene-fo-Breagha(Fergu8); why so called, 13, «. Thomond, wars of, 35. Tighemach, his record of the banish- ment of S. Carthach, 20, «. C1516 ariina imcolaifi 6uinb (9 stan- zas), 27. Cochmapc Cpeblainne, 22. Cochmaipc mna Cpuinn, " Courtship of Crunn's wife," ancient tale of^ 18 ; J!d:S. in Trim CoU., H. 3, 17, 18, n. lS>6mapc eimipe, " Courtship . of Eimire," 61. Tor-inis, now Tory island, Conaing's tower, in, 7. Treblainn, Courtship of, 22 ; foster- daughter of EingCairbreNiafar, ibid., daughter of a Tuatha Danaan chief- tain, 22, n. ; her story, 23. Cpi nnc a cunn poóuala, 28. Cpi pludibig 506 en bliaban,27. Tuan mac Cairill, who survived the De- luge to the coming of St. Patrick, 42. Cuapupcbail luboip Ipcaipioc, 29. Tuatha, people, tribes, 14. Tuatha de Danaan kings, Ireland, named Fodla, Banba, and ^ri, from their Queens, 34. '^ lla heaspa. See O'Hara. Uh Dalaigh. See ffDaly. XJltomfp^s, debility 0^ 17. Ui Uieeinn, or O'Higgin ; Brian, son of Fergul Roe, poet, death of, 49 ; his pane^Tyric on David, son of Muiris, or Maurice Roche, 49. Uile cpioó op ■paj', 61. Waterford, two baronies of Decies in the covmty of, 27- . THE END. -i ■^^ BT THE SAME AUTHOR. DISCOURSES ON THE rROPIIECIES RELATING TO ANTICHRIST in ♦he WRITINGS of PANIKI. nnd ST. PAUL. Prcaclied before tlic University uf Dublin, at tlio Donnelivi Lecture. Kvu. Dutilhi, 18«). 14«. From a Mter o/ liishop CoplesUmMldreiiicd to A relibinhop Whately, dated January 27, 1841 . " I hnvc rosmni'cl flic publication of i wo antlimvul normoiin, prearlicd nt Newport ... I Iml ini^.ndeil to Introiluco my own vlfw», ji<'nf Todd's view. ! i« has certainly thrown «rent llnht upon the historical view of the question, and ban compelled mo to Ri.-e up the ÚTuAiii'trupoc friTtiitij;, to wldcli we have l)e<'n ho lonn prone. tMkinR for «ranted Mede's thi ovy, and looking no fiirther back tlum bis expositiiois for flic principles by whldi to Kul Wy.liffo. Now first printed ftwn a MS. In the Library of Trinity College, Dublin ; with an IninKiuctioa a*. -I Notes. 4to. London, 1842 (for the Camden f?ociety). THE ROOK OF ftBITS and MA RTYROLOC.Y of the CATHEDRAL CHl^U'H of the HOLY TIIINÍTV, DUIU.IN. Kdited, fVom a MS. In the Library of Trinitv OulioK'. Dulilin. by Hkv. J. C. Cro.stiiwaite, A. M. With an Introduction by J. 11. Todd, D. D. -Ito. liuljlin, lm4 (f'or the Irish Archoiologlcal Society). REMARKS ON SOME STATEMENTS nttribiitod to THOMAS WY., 1844. 8vo Dublin, 1844. DISCOURSES ON THE PROPHECIES RELATING TO ANTICHRIST in the APOCALYPSK of .ST. JOHN. l»reochcd before the University of Dublin, at the D.,nii:IUn I^eotuiv. 8vo. Dublin, 184G. 10.«. M. HISTORIA BRITONUM OF NENXIUS. Dublin, 1848 (for the Irish Archaeological Soc otv;. « ^ THE IRISH VERSION OF THE Kdlt«d, with a Translation and Notes. 4to. [TKc Ii^troductlon and Additional Notes by the Hon. Algernon Herbert.] THE SEARCH AFTER INFALLIBILITY : Remarks on the Te-^^ftiSony of tli»iíÍ Fathers to the Roman Dogma of Infallibility. 8vo. London, 1848. 24. 6 juxta Dublin adservatorum. Tomus I. (A et B.) £1. THE WARS OF THE DANES AND NORSEMEN IN IRELAND; from tb^-ir first Appearance in the Eighth Century to the Battle of Clcntarf, a. d. 1014. From MSS in the Kur- Kundian Library, Brussels, and in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin. With an lntro