Áed Uaridnach mac Domnaill [Áed Allán mac Domnaill] (d. 612), high-king of Ireland, was the son of Domnall mac Muirchertaig; his mother is said to have been Bríg, daughter of Archa (or Orcha) mac Caírthind. A partner of Áed Uaridnach, the mother of his son ...
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Áed Uaridnach mac Domnaill [Áed Allán mac Domnaill] (d. 612), high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Article
Áed mac Néill [Áed Findliath mac Néill] (d. 879), high-king of Ireland
Benjamin T. Hudson
Áed mac Néill [Áed Findliath mac Néill] (d. 879), high-king of Ireland, was the son of Niall mac Áeda (d. 846), king of Ailech and high-king of Ireland, and Gormflaith (d. 861), daughter of Donnchad mac Domnaill, king of Meath and high-king of Ireland...
Article
Áed Allán mac Fergaile (d. 743), high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Áed Allán mac Fergaile (d. 743), high-king of Ireland, perhaps ruled Cenél nÉogain from the death of his father, Fergal mac Máele Dúin, in 722 until his own death in 743; he was high-king from 734 until his death, in succession to his northern rival, ...
Article
Áed Oirdnide mac Néill (d. 819), high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Áed Oirdnide mac Néill (d. 819), high-king of Ireland, was the son of Niall Frossach (d. 778); he was king of Cenél nÉogain and subsequently the last king of Tara (high-king) before the viking attacks began to accelerate. In his rule can be seen a further development of the military power of the ...
Article
Áed Sláine mac Diarmata (d. 604), joint high-king of Ireland
Philip Irwin
Áed Sláine mac Diarmata (d. 604), joint high-king of Ireland, was the son of Diarmait mac Cerbaill (d. 565), high-king of Ireland, and of Mugain, daughter of Conchrad (or Conrí) mac Duach. His epithet means ‘of Slane’ (in Meath, on the River Boyne...
Article
Báetán mac Cairill (d. 581), king of Ulster
Philip Irwin
Báetán mac Cairill (d. 581), king of Ulster, son of Cairell mac Muiredaig (d. c.540), king of Ulster, was a member of Dál Fiatach, a dynasty in modern co. Down. He became king of Ulster after the death of his brother ...
Article
Blaímac mac Áeda [Blathmac] (d. 665), joint high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Blaímac mac Áeda [Blathmac] (d. 665), joint high-king of Ireland, was one of the numerous sons of Áed Sláine (d. 604), who was the founder of that branch of the Uí Néill which ruled Brega, a district stretching from the River Liffey to the southern part of what is now ...
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Brian Bóruma [Brian Boru] (c. 941–1014), high-king of Ireland
Seán Duffy
Brian Bóruma [Brian Boru] (c. 941–1014), high-king of Ireland, was born at Kincora, Killaloe, the son of Cennétig (d. 951), king of Dál Cais, king of Tuadmumu (Thomond, in north Munster), and rígdamna Caisil, ‘royal heir to’, or merely, ‘the material of a king of’, ...
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Cathal mac Finguine (d. 742), king of Munster
Philip Irwin
Cathal mac Finguine (d. 742), king of Munster, was a member of the Éoganacht Glendamnach dynasty. Like his father, Finguine mac Con-cen-Máthair, and his son, Artrí mac Cathail, he was king of Munster, and he was the first to be involved in warfare against the dominant ...
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Cathal mac Conchobair (d. 1010), king of Connacht
Seán Duffy
Cathal mac Conchobair (d. 1010), king of Connacht, was a member of the Síl Muiredaig branch of Uí Briúin Aí. He was son of the Conchobar from whom the Uí Chonchobair of Connacht, who ruled as kings of that province for much of the rest of the middle ages, take their name; though, as ...
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Cellach Cualann (d. 715), king of Leinster
Charles Doherty
Cellach Cualann (d. 715), king of Leinster, was the last of his people to rule the province. He was of the Uí Máil (the eponym of the glen of Imaal on the west of the Wicklow Mountains); the territory of Cualu is coextensive with the later diocese of ...
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Cellach mac Máele Coba (d. 658), joint high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Cellach mac Máele Coba (d. 658), joint high-king of Ireland, belonged to Cenél Conaill, the branch of the Uí Néill settled in what is now Donegal. His mother may have been Croinsech, daughter of Áed Find, king of Osraige, and he may have been married to ...
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Cellachán mac Buadacháin (d. 954), king of Munster
Benjamin T. Hudson
Cellachán mac Buadacháin (d. 954), king of Munster, was the son of Buadachán mac Lachtnai. He was a dynast of the powerful Éoganacht Chaisil, located round present-day Cashel, and was their last notable king until the twelfth century. His immediate family had not produced a ...
Article
Cenn Fáelad mac Blaímaic (d. 675), high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Cenn Fáelad mac Blaímaic (d. 675), high-king of Ireland, was the son of Blaímac mac Áeda (d. 665), joint high-king of Ireland. Blaímac and Diarmait, who both died in the great plague of 664–5, were first succeeded as high-king by Blaímac's son Sechnassach...
Article
Cerball [Cearbhall] mac Dúngaile (d. 888), king of Osraige
Benjamin T. Hudson
Cerball [Cearbhall] mac Dúngaile (d. 888), king of Osraige, was the son of Dúngal (or Dúnlang) mac Fergaile (d. 842). Most information about him comes from a historical saga embedded in the late medieval (or early modern) ‘fragmentary annals’. The early part of his career was involved with vikings. In 847 he defeated a viking force from ...
Article
Cináed mac Írgalaig (d. 728), high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Cináed mac Írgalaig (d. 728), high-king of Ireland, was the son of Írgalach ua Conaing (d. 702) and came from Síl nÁeda Sláine ('the seed of Áed Sláine'), the branch of the Uí Néill that ruled Brega, which stretches north from the ...
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Conchobar mac Donnchada (d. 833), high-king of Ireland
Benjamin T. Hudson
Conchobar mac Donnchada (d. 833), high-king of Ireland, was a son of Donnchad mac Domnaill, high-king of Ireland (733–797) and Fuirseach, daughter of Congal of the Dál nAraidi. His recorded career began in 802, when the high-king Áed Oirdnide mac Néill of Cenél nÉogain...
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Congal Cáech (d. 637), high-king of Ireland
T. M. Charles-Edwards
Congal Cáech (d. 637), high-king of Ireland, was killed at the great battle of Mag Roth in 637; the date of his birth is unknown and even his parentage is uncertain. He appears in the annals from 626 until his death in 637, and in the regnal list of the province of ...
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Congal Cendmagair (d. 710), high-king of Ireland
Charles Doherty
Congal Cendmagair (d. 710), high-king of Ireland, was of the Cenél Conaill. His father was Fergus Fánat (d. 654), who took his name from the Fanad peninsula lying between Mulroy Bay and Lough Swilly. Cendmagair, modern Kinaweer, lies at the head of ...