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{{Text | {{Text | ||
|Initial words 2=Mad bé ríg rofessir recht flatha | |Initial words 2=Mad bé ríg rofessir recht flatha | ||
|Belongsto2={{Belongs | |Belongsto2={{Belongs | ||
|text=Críth gablach | |text=Críth gablach | ||
}} | }} | ||
|Initial words in translation=If you are a king you should know the prerogative of a ruler | |||
|Classification=Subject:early Irish legal texts;Subject:early Irish verse | |||
|Categories=Early Irish law texts; Early Irish poetry; Early Irish poetry | |Categories=Early Irish law texts; Early Irish poetry; Early Irish poetry | ||
|ShortDescription=Legal poem cited at the end of | |ShortDescription=<p>Legal poem cited at the end of <em>Críth gablach</em>. It numbers 104 lines in Binchy’s edition. </p> | ||
|LanguageAuto=Old Irish | |LanguageAuto=Old Irish | ||
|Language=Old Irish. Although “most of the archaic forms and orthography have been ironed out [in the manuscript, ...] the poem passes most of the tests used to distinguish archaic from ‘classical’ Old Irish” (Binchy).{{Note|{{C/s|Binchy (D. A.) 1971a|at=152-153}}.}} | |Language=Old Irish. Although “most of the archaic forms and orthography have been ironed out [in the manuscript, ...] the poem passes most of the tests used to distinguish archaic from ‘classical’ Old Irish” (Binchy).{{Note|{{C/s|Binchy (D. A.) 1971a|at=152-153}}.}} | ||
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|FormPrimary=verse | |FormPrimary=verse | ||
|NumberLines=104 | |NumberLines=104 | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 19:28, 18 April 2020
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Ma be rí rofesser recht flatho
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texts