Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2022

Seanchas in ancient Ireland

This verse was written in a text of Féineachas in the 8th Century and describe the three most important groups in ancient Ireland:
Batar trí prímcheinéla i nHére, .i. Féini 7 Ulaith 7 Gáilni .i. Laigin.
There were three primary kinships in Ireland, i.e., the Féini and Ulaidh and Gáilióin, i.e., the Laighin.

But, what does it mean? In 2011, Gerald A. John Kelly M.A. Celtic Studies IrishTribes.com prepared a 70 page document about the Hoy/Hoey family as well as dozens of emails. This information comes from of his work. This list explains this quote.

  • Féineachas is Brehon Law.
  • nHére or Érainn. This originally referred to a single group of people who were noted on Ptolemy's Map of ireland. The Dál Fiatach were one of them.
  • The Féini. These were a non-Érainn people who lived in the west of Ireland. They became the O'Neills.
  • 7 is an abreviation for agus or in Béarla (English), 'and'.
  • Ulaidh was the kingdom of Ulster which was originally all of the north until forced east by the Féini who became the Northern O'Neill. The Dál Fiatach were the principal tribe of the Ulaidh in historical times.
  • The Laighin occupied the center of Ireland until driven south by the Féini who became the Southern O'Neill.
 Until the 17th Century, Seanchas was defined as the combination of law, history, and genealogy - the interwoven foundation of Gaelic society.

The Derbfhine

In early Ireland and Gaelic Scotland, the normal property-owning unit and unit for dynastic succession was the Derbfhine. For a royal Derbfhine, any male member of a king's derbfhine: son, uncle, brother, nephew-might succeed him. The members of the Deirbhfhine (those who could be elected as next King/Chief) were classified as Flaith (Princes). The title and authority were not inherited by primogeniture.

It was the basic unit of society, comprising all the patrilineal descendants over a four-generation group, i.e., back to common great-grandfather. The derbfhine held typical five or four rath/tech i.e. homesteads, which formed a Baile. Twenty Baile form a Tuath or Tricha Cet, the basic small kingdom level.


The Family of Hoy/Hoey - Sloinne Ó hEochaidh

The royal derbfhine of the Dál Fiatach, first took a surname soon after 1000 AD to honor their king Eochaidh who had died at the battle of Cráeb Tulcha in 1004 AD against the Northern O'Neill. They became the Desendants of Eochaidh - the Ó hEochaidh. In the 1659 'census', the English wrote it as O'Hoy which became Hoy and finally Hoey.

The first known reference to a person using the surname Hoy was Flagherty Ó hEochaidh in 1019 AD.

Some early spellings of the name often seen in the Irish Annals are these:

  • Ua hEochaidh
  • Ua hEochada
  • Ua hEochadha

The first king to be recorded with this surname was Donn Slebhe Ua hEochadha who died on 1091 AD.

The grandson of Donn Slebhe Ua hEochadha took a new surname after him and became the Mac Duinnshléibhe (McDunleavy). His 5 sons mostly used the new name and became the last 5 kings of the Dál Fiatach. The last king of the Uladh was Ruaidhrí Mac Duinnshléibhe who died in 1201 AD. 

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Wednesday, July 20, 2022

The Royal Sites of the Táin Bó Cúailnge of Ancient Ireland

The Royal Sites of the Táin Bó Cúailnge of Ancient Ireland

Map of Iron Age Ireland

This verse was written in a text of Féineachas ('Brehon Law') in the 8th Century:

Batar trí prímcheinéla i nHére, .i. Féini 7 Ulaith 7 Gáilni .i. Laigin.
There were three primary kinships in Ireland, i.e., the Féini and Ulaidh and Gáilióin, i.e., the Laighin.

These three kinships which have been remembered for two millennia through poems and stories, have been associated in recent times with four ancient Iron Age sites located in the central area of Ireland.

Iron Age Royal Sites of Ireland
  • Rathcroghan - Cruachain of the Connachta, the Féini, located in Connacht and Ulser as the O'Neills
  • Navan Fort - Emhain Macha of the Ulaidh, the Men of Ulster
  • Knockaulin - Dún Ailinne of the Laighin, located around Tara
  • Tara - Teamhair na Rí, Sacred to all three kinships

Navan Fort - Emhain Macha of the Ulaidh, The Men of Ulster

Articles by C.J. (Chris) Lynn
Articles by J.P. Mallory
Articles by Ann Hamlin
Articles by Helen Steele
Articles by The Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA)
Video of the Figure of Eight Structure
'Time Team' (English television) video about the Navan Fort area (YouTube)

Knockaulin - Dún Ailinne of the Laighin

Articles by Gerald A. John Kelly
Articles by Bernard Wailes

Rathcroghan - Cruachain of the Connachta, the Féini in Connacht and the O'Neills in Ulser

Articles by John Waddell

Tara - Teamhair na Rí, sacred to all three kinships

Articles by Edel Bhreathnach

The Four Ancient Royal Sites of Ireland
  • The Four Royal Sites of Ancient ireland

Ptomemy's Map of Ireland

Ptolemy's Map of Ireland - about 150 AD

Claudius Ptolemy or in Latin, Claudius Ptolemaeus, lived about 100 AD to about 170 AD and was a Greek mathematician, astronomer, geographer, and astrologer. He lived in the city of Alexandria in Egypt. Ptolemy's Almagest is the only surviving comprehensive ancient treatise on astronomy. Because of its reputation, it was widely sought and was translated into Latin and later European languages.

Ptolemy's model, like all those of his time, was geocentric and was universally accepted until the appearance of simpler heliocentric models by Copernicus around 1500 AD.

Because Claudius Ptolemy chose to begin his description of the known world-the Oikumene in the extreme northwest, Ireland was given pride of place in the Geography.

Book 2, Chapter 2 comprises a list of forty geographical features, together with their latitudes and longitudes, and the names and approximate locations of known tribes.

  • These sixty items fall into the following categories:
  • 5 Promontories or headlands
  • 15 River mouths or estuaries
  • 11 Towns or settlements
  • 9 Offshore islands
  • 20 Tribes

Ptolemy's other main work is his Geography, a compilation of geographical coordinates of the part of the world known during his time. The coordinates that he used in his Geographia showed that he knew the earth was a sphere, but he misjudged the circumference of it by about 16% too small. No complete copy of his Geographia survives, but there are several fragments extant, the best of which is in the The Vatican Archives

ArchaeoIogy Ireland's 'Ireland in the Iron Age Map of Ireland by Claudius Ptolemaeus'