Cathal mac Finguine
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Cathal mac Finguine (died 742) was an Irish King of Munster. He belonged to Glendamnach sept of the dominant Eóganachta kin-group whose members ruled Munster from the 6th century to the 10th. His father, uncle, grandfather, and great-grandfather had also been kings of Munster, so too were his son and grandson.
In histories written after Brian Bóruma of the Dál gCais of Munster had become High King of Ireland, Cathal too was presented as High King, one of only three historical Munster kings—the third was Feidlimid mac Crimthainn—for whom this claim is made in southern sources. The historical record discredits these claims.
Cathal's conflict with the Uí Néill kings, Fergal mac Máele Dúin, Flaithbertach mac Loingsig, and Áed Allán, son of Fergal mac Máele Dúin, is reported at some length in the Irish annals, and again northern and southern versions provide differing accounts. Cathal also appears as a character, not always portrayed sympathetically, in a number of prose and verse tales in the Middle Irish language.
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[edit] Background
The Eóganachta kingship, which had its chief seat at Cashel and chief church at Emly, was the most powerful in the southern half of Ireland—Leth Moga—while the various branches of the Uí Néill dominated the northern half—Leth Cuinn. The chief place of the Uí Néill kingship was at the Hill of Tara which gave the High Kingship of Ireland its alternative name, King of Tara. The succession generally alternated between the northern and southern branches of the Uí Néill.[2]
For the century and a quarter until Cathal's death, the kingship at Cashel was dominated by the Glendamnach and Cashel septs.[3] The lands of the Glendamnach lay to the south-west of Cashel, in the middle valley of the Blackwater.[4] Cathal's father, Finguine mac Cathail Con-cen-máthair(d.696), uncle, Ailill mac Cathail (d. 701), grandfather, Cathal Cú-cen-máthair (d. 665/666), and great-grandfather, Cathal mac Áedo (d. 628), had been kings of Munster.[3]
Cathal's immediate predecessor was probably Cormac mac Ailello of the Cashel sept, who was killed in battle against the Deisi in 713. Eterscél mac Máele Umai, who had been king and did not die until 721, had probably abdicated much earlier, so that Cathal was king at Cashel from around 713 onwards.[5]
While the Uí Néill and Eóganachta were the most important kingships in Ireland, the kings of Leinster and the kings of Connacht were significant forces. Leinster, once a much larger region, the northern parts of which had been conquered by the Uí Néill, was the target of expansionist Uí Néill kings, and also of the Eóganachta. The contest for control of Leinster would play a major part in Cathal's reign, and indeed in relations between the Eóganachta and Uí Néill in the centuries which followed. The kings of Connacht claimed a common kinship with the Uí Néill, and were largely favourable towards them. The remaining provincial kingship, that of the kings of Ulster (Ulaid), controlled a much smaller area than the later province of Ulster, largely confined to the lands north and east of Lough Neagh, and was generally hostile to the Uí Néill.[6]
[edit] Early reign
The earliest record concerning Cathal, although it does not explicitly name him, is in 715 when Murchad mac Brain Mut of the Uí Dúnlainge, the king of Leinster, led his inaugural raid against Cashel.[7] The first event to mention Cathal is in 721 when he and Murchad mac Brain attacked the lands of the southern Uí Néill. The Annals of Ulster report:"[t]he wasting of Mag Breg by Cathal son of Finnguine, and by Murchad son of Bran."[8] Later that year, Fergal mac Máele Dúin retaliated, not against Cathal and Munster, but against Murchad and Leinster. The Annals of Ulster report: "An invasion of the Laigin by Fergal, and the cattletribute was imposed and the hostages of the Laigin secured for Fergal son of Mael Dúin."[8] That Fergal attacked Leinster in retaliation for the raid on Brega may mean that Cathal was, as Irwin notes, "the junior partner".[9]
The Annals of Inisfallen, as partisan a southern record as the Annals of Ulster are biased towards the Uí Néill, give a different and less reliable report of the events in 721:
The harrying of Brega by Cathal son of Finnguine, king of Mumu, and after that he and Ferga son of Mael Dúin, king of Temuir [Tara], made peace; and Ferga submitted to Cathal. For these were the five kings of the Munstermen who ruled Ireland after the [introduction of the] Faith, viz. Aengus son of Nad Fraích, and his son, i.e. Eochaid who ruled Ireland for seventeen years, and Cathal, son of Finnguine, and Feidlimid, son of Crimthann, and Brian, son of Cennétig.[10]
Fergal led an Uí Néill army south into Leinster again in 722, but this time he was defeated and killed by the Leinstermen. This defeat was record in the Cath Almaine, a poem about the battle of Allen, fought on 11 December 722, the feast of Saint Finnian of Clonard. Much of the work is devoted to the story of the faithful bard Donn Bó, but the introduction provides a late view of the war:
For a long time there was great warfare between Cathal son of Findguine, king of Leth Mogha, and Fergal son of Máel Duin, king of Leth Cuinn. Fergal son of Mael Duin raided Leinster in order to injure Cathal son of Findguine; so Cathal son of Findguine wasted the whole of Magh Bregh [the plain of Brega], until they made peace and truce.[11]
This truce, the poet tells, was broken by the Leinstermen:
The Leinstermen had delivered this battle of Allen in the absence of Cathal mac Finguini, and Cathal was grieved that the battle was fought while he himself was away. They heard of Cathal's grudge against them, so this was the counsel they framed, to carry to Cathal Fergal's head as a trophy of the action.[12]
[edit] Cathal and Flaithbertach mac Loingsig
On the death of Fergal, the Uí Néill kingship of Tara passed to Fogartach mac Néill of the Síl nÁedo Sláine of South Brega, whose nominal High Kingship was ended in 724 when he was killed fighting against his Síl nÁedo Sláine kinsman Cináed mac Írgalaid of North Brega, who became the new overking of the Uí Néill.[13] Cináed retained the overlordship of the Uí Néill for less than four years, being killed in battle at Druim Corcain against the Cenél Conaill king Flaithbertach mac Loingsig, who took the overlordship of the Uí Néill.[14] Flaithbertach himself reigned for only a few years before Áed Allán of the Cenél nEógain, son of Fergal mac Máele Dúin, fought him for the leadership of the Uí Néill, beginning in 732 and continuing through several battles until Flaithbertach abdicated and entered a monastery in 734.[15]
With the Uí Néill kings no great threat during the reigns of Fogartach, Cináed and Flaithbertach, Cathal sought to extend his authority over Leinster. The Cath Almaine claims that the dispute arose because Fergal mac Máele Dúin had been killed in defiance of the truce he had made with Cathal.
Cathal was defeated by Áed mac Colggen of the Uí Cheinnselaig, then King of Leinster, in 731,[16] and a second battle in 735 was an even greater defeat:
A battle between Mumu and Laigin, in which many of the Laigin and well nigh countless Munstermen perished; Cellach son of Faelchar, king of Osraige, fell therein, but Cathal son of Finnguine, king of Mumu, escaped.[17]
In 733 Cathal raided the lands of the Southern Uí Néill, but was defeated and driven off from Tailtiu by Domnall Midi of Clann Cholmáin. Cathal had more success against the neighbouring Clann Cholmáin Bicc, ruled by Fallomon mac Con Congalt, whom he defeated at the Hill of Ward. In 734 Cathal inflicted a defeat on the Leinstermen at Bealach Ele.[18]
[edit] Cathal and Áed Allán
In 737, Áed Allán met with Cathal at Terryglass, probably neutral ground outwith the control of either king. Byrne says that it is unlikely that Cathal acknowledged Áed Allán's authority—the Uí Néill had little enough influence in the south—but if Cathal had expected some benefit from the meeting, where he perhaps acknowledged the ecclesiastical supremacy of Armagh, he was to be disappointed. However, the clerics of Armagh may have been well satisfied as the Annals of Ulster, in the entry following that which reports the meeting of Cathal and Áed Allán, say that the law of Patrick was in force in Ireland. The presumably means that they agreed to the special treatment of the church, its lands and its tenants, as prescribed by the law of Patrick.
[edit] Mór Muman
Of Mór Muman a legend survives which compares her to the goddess of sovereignty. Mór was placed under an enchantment and lost her senses. She wandered Ireland for two years before she came to Cashel and the court of Fingen. Fingen eventually slept with her, and her memory returned. In the morning, Fingen gave her the Queen's robe and brooch, and put aside his current Queen, daughter of the king of the Deisi, and put Mór in her place as she was of better blood. The Metrical Dindshenchas say of Fingen mac Áedo and Mór:
Best of the women of Inis Fail
is Mór daughter of Áed Bennan.
Better is Fingen than any hero
that drives about Femen.[19]
When Fingen died, the story says, Mór Muman married Cathal mac Finguine. Unfortunately, the collector of this tale mistook this Cathal for his grandfather, Cathal mac Áedo Flaind. He may have married Mór Muman, but Cathal mac Finguine certainly did not.[20]
[edit] Notes
- ^ After Duffy, p. 17, and Byrne, pp. 172–173.
- ^ The presumed expansion of the Eóganachta and Uí Néill is shown in Duffy, pp. 18–19. For the Uí Néill king lists and genealogies, see Byrne, pp. 275–277 & 280–284; Charles-Edwards, chapter 12 & pp. 600–608.
- ^ a b For king lists and genealogies, see Byrne, pp. 277–279 & 291–296; Charles-Edwards, pp. 612–617.
- ^ Byrne, pp. 172–173.
- ^ Irwin. For the death of Cormac at the battle of Cam Feradaig, Annals of Innisfallen, s.a. 713, and Annals of Ulster, s.a. 713; for the death of Eterscél, Annals of Innisfallen, s.a. 721.
- ^ Byrne, pp. 126–129.
- ^ Irwin; the Annals of Ulster, s.a. 715, record a "hosting by Murchad son of Bran to Cashel". The inaugural raid by a new king was a long standing tradition in Gaelic society; Ó Cróinín, p. 99.
- ^ a b Annals of Ulster, s.a. 721.
- ^ Irwin.
- ^ Annals of Innisfallen, s.a. 721; Irwin notes that this is an 11th century entry and "an artificial promotion of a favoured character".
- ^ Stokes trans. from the Yellow Book of Lecan.
- ^ Stokes trans. from the Yellow Book of Lecan.
- ^ Annals of Ulster, s.a. 724.
- ^ Annals of Ulster, 728.
- ^ Annals of Ulster, s.a. 732, 733, 734; Byrne, p. 114.
- ^ Annals of Ulster, s.a. 731.
- ^ Thus the Annals of Ulster, s.a. 735, but the Annals of Innisfallen, s.a. 735, make Cathal the victor. Irwin prefers the account in the Annals of Ulster.
- ^ Annals of the Four Masters, s.a. 730 (for 734).
- ^ Metrical Dindshenchas, volume 3, p. 203.
- ^ Byrne, pp.204–207.
[edit] References
- Byrne, Francis John, Irish Kings and High-Kings. London: Batsford, 1973. ISBN 0-7134-5882-8
- Charles-Edwards, T.M., Early Christian Ireland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-521-39395-0
- Duffy, Seán (ed.), Atlas of Irish History. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan, 2nd edition, 2000. ISBN 0-7171-3093-2
- Irwin, Philip (September 2004). Cathal mac Finguine (d. 742). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved on 2007-10-22.
[edit] External links
- CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork The Corpus of Electronic Texts includes the Annals of Ulster and the Four Masters, the Chronicon Scotorum and the Book of Leinster as well as Genealogies, the Metrical Dindshenchas and various Saints' Lives. Most are translated into English, or translations are in progress.
- The Battle of Allen trans. Whitley Stokes (Irish texts at CELT)
- The Vision of Mac Con Glinne trans. Kuno Meyer (Irish text at CELT)
Cathal mac Finguine
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Preceded by Cormac mac Ailello |
King of Munster c. 713 – 742 |
Succeeded by Cathussach mac Eterscélai |
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