Cook Family
Genealogy Pages

Home Page  |  What's New  |  Photos  |  Histories  |  Headstones  |  Reports  |  Surnames
Search
First Name:


Last Name:



Cairbre Liffeachair, King of Ireland

Male Bef 257 - 284  (~ 27 years)

Personal Information    |    PDF

  • Name Cairbre Liffeachair  
    Suffix King of Ireland 
    Birth Bef 257 
    Gender Male 
    Death 284  Aichle, Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Cause: Killed at the Battle of Gabhra Aichle, Ireland 
    Notes 
    • http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps11/ps11_009.htm


      117th Monarch of Ireland; son of King Cormac Mac Art: was so called from his having been nursed by the side of the Liffey, the river on which Dublin is built. His mother was Eithne, daughter of Dunlong, King of Leinster. He had three sons\emdash 1. Eochaidh Dubhlen; 2. Eocho; and 3. Fiacha Srabhteine, who was the 120th Monarch of Ireland, and the ancestor of O'Neill, Princes of Tyrone. Fiacha Srabhteine was so called, from his having been fostered at Dunsrabhteine, in Connaught, of which province he was King, before his elevation to the Monarchy. After seventeen years' reign, the Monarch Cairbre Lifeachar was slain at the battle of Gabhra [Gaura], A.D. 284, by Simeon, the son of Ceirb, who came from the south of Leinster to this battle, fought by the Militia of Ireland, who were called the Fiana Erionn (or Fenians), and arising from a quarrel which happened between them; in which the Monarch, taking part with one side against the other, lost his life.

      Monarchy: Under the laws of "Tanistry," the Crown in Ireland and Scotland was hereditary in the Family, but not exclusively in Primogeniture\emdash (See the Paper "Election of Kings, Princes, and Chiefs," in the Appendix). On this subject Sir Water [sic] Scott, in his History of Scotland, observes:\emdash
      "The blood of the original founder of the family was held to flow in the veins of his successive representatives, and to perpetuate to each chief the right of supreme authority over the descendants of his own line; who formed his children and subjects, as he became by right of birth their sovereign, ruler, and lawgiver. With the family and blood of this chief of chiefs most of the inferior chieftains claimed a connection more or less remote. This supreme chiefdom or right of sovereignty, was hereditary, in so far as the person possessing it was chosen from the blood royal of the King deceased; but it was so far elective that any of his kinsmen might be chosen by the nation to succeed him; and, as the office of sovereign could not be exercised by a child, the choice generally fell upon a full-grown man, the brother or nephew of the deceased, instead of his son or grandson. This uncertainty of succession which prevailed in respect to the crown itself, proved a constant source of rebellion and bloodshed: the postponed heir, when he arose in years, was frequently desirous to attain his father's power; and many a murder was committed for the purpose of rendering straight an oblique line of succession, which such preference of an adult had thrown out of a direct course."

      Part III, Chapter IV of Irish Pedigrees, by John O'Hart, published 1892, pages 351-9, 664-8 and 708-9.

      «b»http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O%27Boyle_Donegal

      «u»«/b»Cairbre Lifechair «/u»" target="_blank">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cairbre_Lifechair>«/u» (Cairbre II Lifiochair) King 279-296
    Person ID I60054  Glenn Cook Family
    Last Modified 19 Jun 2013 

    Father Cormac Ulfhada mac Art, King of Ireland   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Mother Eithne Ollamhdha   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Family ID F551617276  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Aine ingen Finn   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Children 
     1. Fiacha Srabhteine mac Art, King of Connaugh,   b. Abt 235   d. Abt 322, Criogh Rois, Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 87 years)
    Family ID F551616665  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 19 Jun 2013