Máthair Díarmata ón dáil
verse
2 st.
beg. Máthair Díarmata ón dáil
Two quatrains alluding to a story about the birth of Oisín.
Dinnshenchas Érenn C
Dinnshenchas of Medraige
prose
verse
beg. Medraige mac Dorcain Maill

Prose and verse dinnshenchas of Medraige, which gives an account of the battle of Mag Mucrama.

Táin bó Cúailnge I, Táin bó Cúailnge II
Meillgleó nIliach
form undefined
Episode in the Táin bó Cúailnge (Recensions I and II).
Metrical Banshenchas
verse
beg. Adam oen-athair na ndoene
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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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.)
Metrical version of the Banshenchas, composed by Gilla Mo Dutu Úa Caiside (1147).
Dinnshenchas Érenn A, Dinnshenchas Érenn C, Dinnshenchas Érenn B
Dinnshenchas of Mide
prose
verse
13 st.
beg. Mide magen na marc mer
Áed úa CarthaigÁed úa Carthaig
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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(ascr.)
Dinnshenchas of Mide.
Míorbuile Senáin
prose
Text on the miracles of St Senán of Inis Cathaig (Scattery Island)
Mo Chutu and the Devil in Rathan
form undefined
Short anecdotal story about Mo Chutu of Rathan, telling how the Devil gained access to Rathan.
Mo Chutu, Comgall and the Devil
form undefined
Short anecdotal story about St Mo Chutu of Rathan, telling how the Devil caused him to go on pilgrimage.
Mo Ling and Findat
prose
verse
Early Irish anecdote about Mo Ling and an old woman (caillech) named Findat who gave her son to him; also on the appearance of Christ as a leper (clam).
Mo Ling and Grác
prose
Anecdote about Mo Ling and a neighbouring couple, Grác and his wife Crón
Mo Ling and Máel Doborchon
prose
Anecdote about Mo Ling
Mo Ling and the brigands
prose
verse
prosimetrum
Anecdote about Mo Ling
Mo Ling and the Devil
prose
verse
Anecdote about Mo Ling
Mo Ling and the leper
prose
Irish anecdote about St Mo Ling and a leper. 
Mo Ling and the trenching of his millstream
prose
Middle Irish anecdote about Mo Ling, here presented as a fosterson of St Máedóc of Ferns, and the trenching of a watercourse or millstream (taídiu) at Tech Mo Ling.
Duanaire Finn
Mo mhaílacht ar chloinn Bhaoísgne
verse
9 st.
beg. Mo mhaílacht ar chloinn Bhaoísgne
Dinnshenchas Érenn C, Dinnshenchas Érenn B
Dinnshenchas of Móenmag
prose
verse
beg. Móenmag, cá Móen ótá in mag
Dinnshenchas of Móenmag
Dinnshenchas Érenn A, Dinnshenchas Érenn C
Dinnshenchas of Móin Gai Glais
verse
prose
beg. Culdub mac Déin dia Samna
Dinnshenchas of Móin Gai Glais, in prose and verse. When Cúldub mac Déin slays one Fidrad at Samain, Gae Glas, grandson of Lug, comes to avenge Fidrad's death and kills Cúldub with a spear. The prose version, which is generally fuller, adds that the spear entered the ground and was not found until Máel Odrán dug it up and used it to kill Aithechdae, king of Uí Máil. The prose also identifies the spear as the Carr of Belach Duirgen.
Dinnshenchas Érenn C, Dinnshenchas Érenn B
Dinnshenchas of Móin Tíre Náir
prose
verse
3 st.
beg. Mebul lemm inní dia fail
Text on the dinnshenchas of Móin Tíre Náir
Mór ar bfearg riot a rí Saxan
verse
60 st.
beg. Mór ar bfearg riot a rí Saxan, a sé a dhamra
Ó Dálaigh (Gofraidh Fionn)
Ó Dálaigh (Gofraidh Fionn)
(d. 1387)
also Gofraidh Ó Dálaigh Fionn; Irish bardic poet of the Ó Dálaigh family

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Ó Dálaigh (Gofraidh Fionn)
Ó Dálaigh (Gofraidh Fionn)
(d. 1387)
also Gofraidh Ó Dálaigh Fionn; Irish bardic poet of the Ó Dálaigh family

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(ascr.)
Classical Irish poem by Gofraidh Fionn Ó Dálaigh in commemoration of Maurice fitz Maurice (Muiris Óg), second earl of Desmond. It includes an episode about Lug's arrival at Tara, after which Maurice is likened to the Irish deity.
Independent, Scéla mucce Meic Da Thó, Dinnshenchas of Mag Léna
Muc mic Dá Thó, tlacht-múad torc
verse
6 st.
beg. Muc mic Dá Thó, tlacht-múad torc
Poem on Mac Da Thó's pig.
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