Úar in lathe do Lum Laine
verse
9 st.
beg. Úar in lathe do Lum Laine
Old Irish poem (9 qq) attributed to Ailbe. It is in the form of a dialogue between Tethna, daughter of king Cormac mac Airt, and her lover Lom Laine. Máirín O Daly, who edited the poem, has suggested that their names may be guises for Gráinne and Diarmait, as known from the early prose narrative of Finn and Gráinne.
Úasalepscop Éirenn Aéd
verse
beg. Úasalepscop Éirenn Aéd
Poem in praise of Áed (mac Cróngillai) Úa Forréid, bishop of Armagh (1032–1056).
Uga Corbmaic meic Cuilendáin
verse
29 st.
beg. In rogh so, a Rí na run
Cormac mac Cuilennáin
See more (ascr.)
Cormac mac Cuilennáin
(d. 908)
bishop and king of Munster
See more (ascr.)
Early Irish religious poem (29qq) attributed to Cormac mac Cuilennáin. What appears to be a full copy of text is attested in a single manuscript, while fragments of it also turn up as citations elsewhere.
Ulaid úaisle Inse Fáil
verse
beg. Ulaid úaisle Inse Fáil
Middle Irish poem (27qq) on the kings of Ulaid.
Independent, Tochmarc Emire
Verba Scáthaigeverse
beg. A mbé eirr óengaile
Poem in the form of a prophecy delivered by Scáthach to Cú Chulainn.
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