Dinnshenchas of Ard Ruide, a royal seat in Munster.
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Early Irish poem attributed to Cú Brettan mac Congusso, three quatrains of which are quoted in Irish annalistic sources for the year 722, including the Annals of Tigernach, Chronicon Scotorum and the Cath Almaine section in the Fragmentary annals of Ireland.
Middle Irish poem on Cú Roí mac Dáire and his exploits, which are brought far afield, even extending into Greece, Asia, Africa and in general terms, ‘the south of the world’ (descert domain). He is depicted as a warrior fighting against dog-heads (Conchinn) and commanding a fleet and army, with Fomoiri and Amazons (Cígloiscthi) in his service, as well as a lord of opulent wealth. The poem concludes with the assertion that Gregory the Great is of Cú Roí’s lineage.
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Dinnshenchas of Áth nGabla (Áth nGrencha) and some other places. It is first attested as a poem (6qq) in the LL Táin and elaborated, using additional quatrains and prose, in one of the recensions of Dinnshenchas Érenn.
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Tract on the dinnshenchas of Áth Líac Find, a ford of the Shannon.
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Poem (22 stanzas) in the Sex aetates mundi.
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Poem of four stanzas, attributed to Caílte. It uses a special, learned vocabulary known as bérla na filed.
Early Irish poem which occurs in the prose preface to the Amra Choluim Chille and related textual contexts. It is a dialogue poem between Colum Cille and Scandlán Mór, apparently in continuation of the previous dialogue poem (beg. Slécht sís, a Scandláin, dom réir), in which Scandlán has promised to deliver tribute at Durrow. In the present poem, Colum Cille offers him his crozier (bachall) as a means of protection against trouble on the road to Durrow, specifically any trouble he might encounter from Domnall mac Áeda.
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