 - 536
-
Name |
Muirchertach macErcae O'Néill |
Suffix |
King of Ireland |
Gender |
Male |
Acceded |
507 |
Death |
536 |
Notes |
- «b»http://www.hull.ac.uk/php/cssbct/cgi-bin/gedlkup.php/n=royal?royal09602
Muirchertach mac Muiredaig«/b» (died c. 534), called «b»Mac Ercae«/b», «b»Muirchertach Macc Ercae«/b» and «b»Muirchertach mac Ercae«/b», was said to be «u»High King of Ireland «/u». The «u»Irish annals «/u» contain little reliable information on his life, and the surviving record shows signs of retrospective modification. The «i»Aided Muirchertaig Meic Erca«/i» takes as its theme the supernatural death of Muirchertach.
According to the «u»genealogies «/u» Muirchertach belonged to the «u»Uí Néill «/u» and was the son of «u»Muiredach «/u», son of «u»Eógan «/u», son of «u»Niall of the Nine Hostages «/u»; hence Muirchertach mac Muiredaig. His mother, "clearly legendary" according to «u»Thomas Charles-Edwards «/u», was said to be Erc, daughter of "Lodarn, king of Alba". From the «u»matronym «/u» comes his alternative name, Muirechertach Macc Ercae. However, Mac Ercae was a common enough first male first name.«u»[1]«/u» The annalistic entries for Muirchertach span fifty years, from 482 to his death in 534, using various names, including Mac Ercae, so that it is more than likely that two or more persons have been confused in the annals.
The first mentions of Muirchertach in the «u»«i»Annals of Ulster «/u»«/i», in 482 and 483, associate him, under the name Muirchertach Macc Ercae, with the defeat and killing of «u»Ailill Molt «/u» at the battle of Ochae, somewhere in the Irish midlands.«u»[2]«/u» One entry names «u»Lugaid mac Lóegairi «/u» as his ally there, the other names Fergus Crook-mouth, father of «u»Diarmait mac Cerbaill «/u».«u»[3]«/u» In 485 are mentioned the battle of Grainert, perhaps near «u»Castledermot «/u»,«u»[2]«/u» where «u»Coirpre mac Néill «/u», "or Mac Ercae… as other state", defeated the Leinster king Finnchad mac Garrchon.«u»[4]«/u» In 490 or 491, «u»Óengus mac Nad Froích «/u» is said to have been killed at the battle of Cell Losnaid, and the second entry reports that "Mac Ercae was the victor".«u»[5]«/u» Muirchertach Mac Ercae is said to have won the battle of Inne Mór against the Leinstermen in 498.«u»[6]«/u» Many of the entries from the 480s and 490s appear to have been modified, to give Muirchertach the credit for victories won by «u»Coirpre mac Néill «/u» and perhaps by Coirpre's son Eochu.«u»[7]«/u»
The obituary of Lugaid mac Lóegairi appears in 512, and in the following year the annalist reports the beginning of the reign of Muirchertach Mac Ercae. The next report is in 520, duplicated in 523, stating that Muirchertach was among the victors at the battle of Dethna. Another battle follow in 528, again repeated some years later, in 533, with more detail.«u»[8]«/u» Muirchertach's death is reported in 534, with obvious supernatural overtones: "The drowning of Muirchertach Mac Erca i.e. Muirchertach son of Muiredach son of Eógan son of Niall Naígiallach in a vat full of wine on the hilltop of Cleitech above Bóinn."«u»[9]«/u» Muirchertach was said to be followed as High King by «u»Túathal Máelgarb «/u». Muirchertach's descendants in time took the name «b»Cenél maic Ercae«/b» and were the dominant branch of the «u»Cenél nEógan «/u» by the middle of the 8th century.
The 12th-century «u»Middle Irish «/u» tale «i»Aided Muirchertaig Meic Erca«/i» is an account of the supernatural death of Muirchertach. Here Muirchertach dies in the House of Clettach, drowned in a vat of wine, burned by fire, and crushed by a falling roof beam, near «u»Brú na Bóinne «/u», beguiled by the illusions of the otherworldly maiden Sín into believing that he is being attacked by Túathal Máelgarb.«u»[10]«/u»
«b»Notes
«u»1. ^«/u»«/b» Charles-Edwards, "Muirchertach mac Muiredaig".
2. ^ «u»«sup»«b»«i»a«/u»«/sup»«/b»«/i» «u»«sup»«b»«i»b«/u»«/sup»«/b»«/i» «i»Onomasticon Goedelicum«/i».
«u»«b»3. ^«/u»«/b» «i»Annals of Ulster«/i», s.a. 482 & 483.
«u»«b»4. ^«/u»«/b» «i»Annals of Ulster«/i», s.a. 485; the duplicate entry s.a. 486 has "the first battle of Graineret in which Muirchertach Mac Ercae was victor".
«u»«b»5. ^«/u»«/b» «i»Annals of Ulster«/i», s.a. 490 & 491.
«u»«b»6. ^«/u»«/b» «i»Annals of Ulster«/i», s.a. 498, s.a. 499 has "A battle in which Mac Ercae was victor". The entries for 501 and 502 have another doublet, one naming Mac Ercae, one naming Muirchertach Mac Ercae, for the battle of Segais fought against «u»Connacht «/u».
«u»«b»7. ^«/u»«/b» Charles-Edwards, «i»Early Christian Ireland«/i», pp. 447 ff.
«u»«b»8. ^«/u»«/b» «i»Annals of Ulster«/i», s.a. 512, 513, 520, 523, 528, & 533.
«u»«b»9. ^«/u»«/b» «i»Annals of Ulster«/i» s.a. 534; for supernatural aspects see, for example, Charles-Edwards, "Muirchertach mac Muiredaig" and Byrne, p. 103.
«u»«b»10 ^«/u»«/b» Byrne, pp. 100\endash 105; Wiley. Compare the death of «u»Diarmait mac Cerbaill «/u»; Byrne, pp. 97\endash 99.
«b»References
«tab»«u»«/b»The Annals of Ulster AD 431-1201 <http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T100001A/index.html>«/u», 2003, «u»<http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T100001A/index.html>«/u», retrieved 2007-10-24
«u»«tab»Byrne, Francis John «/u» (1973), «i»Irish Kings and High-Kings«/i», London: Batsford, «u»ISBN «/u» «u»0-7134-5882-8 «/u»
«tab»Charles-Edwards, T. M. (2000), «i»Early Christian Ireland«/i», Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, «u»ISBN «/u» «u»0-521-36395-0 «/u»
«tab»Charles-Edwards, T.M. (2004), "«u»Muirchertach mac Muiredaig (d. 534) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/19501>«/u»", «i»Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,«/i», Oxford: Oxford University Press, «u»<http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/19501>«/u», retrieved 2007-10-22
«tab»Connon, Anne (2005), "A Prosopography of the Early Queens of Tara", in Bhreathnach, Edel, «i»The Kingship and Landscape of Tara«/i», Dublin: Four Courts Press, pp. 225\endash 327, «u»ISBN «/u» «u»1-85182-954-7 «/u»
«tab»Guyonvarc'h, Christian-Joseph (1983), "«u»La mort de Muirchertach, fils d'Erc. Texte irlandais du très haut Moyen Âge : la femme, le saint et le roi <http://www.persee.fr/showArticle.do?urn=ahess_0395-2649_1983_num_38_5_410999>«/u»", «i»Annales«/i» «b»38«/b» (5): 985\endash 1015, «u»doi «/u»:«u»10.3406/ahess.1983.410999 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3406%2Fahess.1983.410999>«/u», «u»ISSN «/u» «u»0395-2649 <http://worldcat.org/issn/0395-2649>«/u», «u»<http://www.persee.fr/showArticle.do?urn=ahess_0395-2649_1983_num_38_5_410999>«/u», retrieved 2008-03-30
«tab»Hogan, Edmund (1910) ([«u»«i»dead link «/u»«/i»] \endash «u»«sup»Scholar search <http://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=author%3AHogan+intitle%3AOnomasticon+Goedelicum&as_publication=&as_ylo=&as_yhi=&btnG=Search>«/u»«/sup»), «u»Onomasticon Goedelicum <http://www.ucc.ie:8080/cocoon/doi/locus?section=N300A1>«/u», Dublin: Hodges Figgis, «u»<http://www.ucc.ie:8080/cocoon/doi/locus?section=N300A1>«/u», retrieved 2007-10-24
«tab»Lacey, Brian (2006), «i»Cenél Conaill and the Donegal Kingdoms AD 500\endash 800«/i», Dublin: Four Courts Press, «u»ISBN «/u» «u»1-85182-978-4 «/u»
«tab»MacKillop, James (1998), «i»Oxford Dictionary of Celtic Mythology«/i», Oxford: Oxford University Press, «u»ISBN «/u» «u»0-19-860967-1 «/u»
«tab»Mac Shamhráin, Ailbhe; Byrne, Paul (2005), "Kings named in «i»Baile Chuinn Chétchathaig«/i» and the Airgíalla Charter Poem", in Bhreathnach, Edel, «i»The Kingship and Landscape of Tara«/i», Dublin: Four Courts Press, pp. 159\endash 224, «u»ISBN «/u» «u»1-85182-954-7 «/u»
«tab»Wiley, Dan (2004), "«u»Aided Muirchertaig meic Erca <http://www.hastings.edu/academic/english/Kings/Aided_Muirchertaig.html>«/u»", «i»The Cycles of the Kings«/i», «u»<http://www.hastings.edu/academic/english/Kings/Aided_Muirchertaig.html>«/u», retrieved 2008-03-06
|
Person ID |
I9935 |
Glenn Cook Family |
Last Modified |
21 Nov 2009 |
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Sources |
- [S36] Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science, University of Hull, England(B.C.Tompsett@dcs.hull.ac.uk), Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, (This work is Copyright b 1994-2002 Brian C Tompsett).
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