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Comrainter in airigid
verse
beg. Comrainter in airigid
Middle Irish poem on the honorific food portions that are due to different classes of society.
Conailla Medb míchuru
verse
beg. Conailla Medb míchuru
Luccreth moccu Chíara
Luccreth moccu Chíara
(fl. 7th century)
early Irish poet

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(ascr.)
Obscure 'accentual poem' by or at least attributed to Luccreth moccu Chíara. The first section deals with the Ulster hero Fergus mac Róich, his situation as an exile in the service of Medb and Ailill, and his participation in their wars over the cattle () of the Ulstermen. The account is thought to refer to an early version of the Táin bó Cúailnge.
Coneigius dúib geisi ulchai
verse
beg. Coneigius dúib geisi ulchai
Connachta cid dia tá in t-ainm
verse
15 st.
beg. Connachta cid dia tá int ainm
Poem which offers a mythological account for the origin of the name Connacht, formerly Cóiced Ol nÉcmacht. 15 stanzas.
Cormac cain buich neoit
verse
2 st.
beg. Cormac cain buich neóit
Colum Cille
Colum Cille
(fl. 6th century)
founder and abbot of Iona, Kells (Cenandas) and Derry (Daire).

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(ascr.)
Early Irish poem (2 qq) in praise of Cormac, presumably Cormac mac Airt. It is ascribed to Colum Cille and addressed to Áed, probaby Áed mac Ainmirech.
Cormac húa Líathán lí nglan
verse
24 st.
beg. Cormac húa Líathán lí nglan
Colum Cille
Colum Cille
(fl. 6th century)
founder and abbot of Iona, Kells (Cenandas) and Derry (Daire).

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(ascr.)
Duanaire Finn
Cotail becán becán bec
verse
15 st.
beg. Cotail becán becán bec
Cotlud cen chrinad colla
verse
2 st.
beg. Cotlud cen chrínad colla
Short Irish poem (2qq) on the saint Mo Chóe of Óendruim/Nóendruim (modern Nendrum, Co. Down).
Dinnshenchas Érenn A, Dinnshenchas Érenn C, Dinnshenchas Érenn B
Dinnshenchas of Crechmáel
prose
verse
beg. A drem-sa, nach duairc ic dáil
Dinnshenchas of Crechmáel
Crimthan clothrí cóicid hErend
verse
beg. Crimthan clothrí cóicid hErend
Dubthach maccu Lugair
Dubthach maccu Lugair
(supp. fl. 432)
Legendary Irish poet and legal expert, who plays an important role in the pseudo-historical prologue to the Senchas Már.

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Cris finnáin dumimdegail imum
verse
beg. Cris Finnáin dum imdegail imum
Cros an Choimdhedh cumachtaigh
verse
12 st.
beg. Cros an Choimdhedh cumachtaigh

Irish poem representing a dialogue between St Moling and Suibne.

Cros Chríst tarsin n-gnúisse
verse
beg. Cros Chríst tarsin n-gnúisse
Mugrón [abbot of Iona]
Mugrón ... abbot of Iona
(d. c.981)
Abbot of Iona and supposed author of a number of vernacular Irish poems. His obit in AFM remembers him as ‘scribe/writer and bishop, sage of the three divisions’ (scribhnidh ⁊ epscop, saoi na t-Tri Rand).

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Dinnshenchas Érenn C, Dinnshenchas Érenn B
Dinnshenchas of Crotta Clíach
verse
prose
beg. Sunda sefain fer síde
Tract on the dinnshenchas of Crotta Clíach.
Cú cen máthair
verse
36 st.
beg. Cú cen máthair, maith cland
Luccreth moccu Chíara
Luccreth moccu Chíara
(fl. 7th century)
early Irish poet

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Old Irish poem (36st) attributed to Luccreth moccu Chíara, which traces the ancestry of Cú cen Máthair (d. 665), king of Munster and grandfather of Cathal mac Finguine, all the way back to Adam. A large part of the pedigree, from Míl to Adam, closely resembles that found in another Old Irish poem of a similar metrical type, beg. Énna Labraid luad cáich and dealing with Leinster kings. Myles Dillon has argued that these pedigrees represent (respectively) Munster and Leinster recensions of the same core material.
Cughaire do-chúalammar
verse
3 st.
beg. Cúghaire dochúalammar
Colum Cille
Colum Cille
(fl. 6th century)
founder and abbot of Iona, Kells (Cenandas) and Derry (Daire).

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Minor Irish poem (3 qq) attributed to Colum Cille.
Cuibdeas comanmann na ríg
verse
51 st.
beg. Cuibdeas comanmann na ríg
Úa Caiside (Gilla Mo Dutu)
Úa Caiside (Gilla Mo Dutu)
(fl. c. 1147)
Irish poet, credited as the author of Éri óg inis na náem and Ádam óenathair na ndóene (the metrical Banshenchas).

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(ascr.)

Versified list of kings of Ireland attributed to Gilla Mo Dutu.

Cúiced Lagen na lecht ríg
verse
beg. Cúiced Lagen na lecht ríg
Gilla na Náem Úa DuinnGilla na Náem Úa Duinn
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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(ascr.)
Poem, including a list of the kings of Leinster.
Cúig coitchind tiaghaid in es
verse
60 st.
beg. Cúig coitchind tiaghaid in es
Middle Irish poem (60qq) on the gender and declension of Latin nouns
Cumtach na nIudaide n-ard
verse
beg. Cumtach na nIudaide n-ard

Short Middle Irish poem (4qq) on the defining characteristics of various peoples (the Jews, the Greeks, the Franks, the Welsh, the Picts, etc), which correspond closely to those listed in the tract De proprietatibus gentium.

Da cuincead neach a ndliged
verse
beg. Da cuincead neach a ndliged

Irish poem (9 qq) on the seven grades of poets (filid), which is typically found at the end of, or in association with, certain copies of Auraicept na n-éces. It is one of several prose and verse texts on the subject that ultimately derive from the Uraicecht becc.

Sex aetates mundi
Dá mac ar chaécait co mbroit
verse
6 st.
beg. Dá mac ar chaécait co mbroit
Mugrón Tuama dá Gualann
Mugrón Tuama dá Gualann
(d. 1032 (AFM))
Mugrón úa Níoc, abbot of Tuam; presumably the Mugrón ‘of Tuam’ (Tuaim dá Gualann) to whom a poem is attributed in the Book of Lecan version of Sex aetates mundi.

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(ascr.)

Middle Irish poem found in the Book of Lecan version of Sex aetates mundi.

Dá mac déc Cennéitig cháid
verse
8 st.
beg. Dá mac déc Cennéitig cháid
Mac Líacc [Muirchertach]
Mac Líacc ... Muirchertach
(d.. 1014 / 1016 (AU))
Middle Irish poet, who is described as 'chief poet of Ireland' (ard-ollamh Érenn) in the Annals of Ulster; becomes the subject of a body of later medieval Irish literature.

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Poem of eight quatrains on the twelve sons of Cennétig (Brian Bóruma's father), king of the Dál Cais.
Dá mac déc Iacóib
verse
6 st.
beg. Dá mac déc Iacóib
Óengus mac SuibneÓengus mac Suibne
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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Early Middle Irish(?) poem (6 qq) attributed to one Óengus mac Suibne on the twelve sons and one daughter of Jacob. The text is known from certain recensions of the Sex aetates mundi.

Cath Maige Tuired, Cath Maige Tuired § 142
In dáil n-asdadha
verse
rosc
beg. Gébaid foss findgrinde
Lóch LethglasLóch Lethglas
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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