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Acallam na senórach ll. 1064–1092. The stories of Airnélach and Sálbuide

Short description
The stories of Airnélach and Sálbuide, ed. Whitley Stokes, ‘Acallamh na senórach’ in Irische Texte mit Wörterbuch... (1900): ll. 1064–1092, beg. ‘Maith, a anum, a Cháilte’, ar Pátraic, ‘cia in fert-sa ar an tulaig ar a tám?’; tr. Ann Dooley • Harry Roe, Tales of the elders of Ireland (1999): 34–35. Having identified the burial mounds of two royal sons of the Fían, Caílte tells the stories of their deaths: Airnélach, who died of shame from the threat of satire, and Sálbuide, who died in pursuit of a fairy deer. Patrick grants Heaven to both of them.
Incipit

Maith, a anum, a Cháilte’, ar Pátraic, ‘cia in fert-sa ar an tulaig ar a tám?’

Items




Verse beg. An fert fuil fan líg Lodain, attributed to: Caílte mac RónáinCaílte mac Rónáin
Caílte mac Crundchon meic Rónáin
(time-frame ass. with Finn Cycle)
or Caílte mac Crundchon meic Rónáin, kinsman of Finn mac Cumaill and a prominent member of his fían; accomplished warrior and hunter; one of the protagonists of Acallam na senórach
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(1 q.)
Quatrain concerning Airnélach mac Admalláin. ll. 1077-1079.




Verse beg. Atá isin chinn-sa thes, attributed to: Caílte mac RónáinCaílte mac Rónáin
Caílte mac Crundchon meic Rónáin
(time-frame ass. with Finn Cycle)
or Caílte mac Crundchon meic Rónáin, kinsman of Finn mac Cumaill and a prominent member of his fían; accomplished warrior and hunter; one of the protagonists of Acallam na senórach
See more
(1 q.)
ll. 1086-1089.

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Sources

Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
June 2014, last updated: May 2022
The stories of Airnélach and Sálbuide, ed.The stories of Airnélach and Sálbuide, ed. Whitley <span class="smallcaps" style="font-variant:small-caps;">Stokes</span>, ‘Acallamh na senórach’ in <i>Irische Texte mit Wörterbuch...</i> (1900): ll. 1064–1092, beg. <em>‘Maith, a anum, a Cháilte’, ar Pátraic, ‘cia in fert-sa ar an tulaig ar a tám?’</em>; tr. Ann <span class="smallcaps" style="font-variant:small-caps;">Dooley</span> • Harry <span class="smallcaps" style="font-variant:small-caps;">Roe</span>, <i>Tales of the elders of Ireland</i> (1999): 34–35.Having identified the burial mounds of two royal sons of the <em>Fían</em>, Caílte tells the stories of their deaths: Airnélach, who died of shame from the threat of satire, and Sálbuide, who died in pursuit of a fairy deer. Patrick grants Heaven to both of them.er. Patrick grants Heaven to both of them. +

Maith, a anum, a Cháilte’, ar Pátraic, ‘cia in fert-sa ar an tulaig ar a tám?’

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ll. 1064–1092. The stories of Airnélach and Sálbuide +
Has no sources in Template:Sources +