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Ciannachta

The Ciannachta were a population group of early historic Ireland. They claimed descent from the legendary figure Tadc mac Céin. Modern research indicates Saint Cianán and his followers may have been the origin behind the tribal name as it is a late construction similar in form to Eóganachta and Connachta. They first appear in historical sources in the 6th century, and were found in several parts of the island, including in Brega and Airgialla. The Ciannachta groups were absorbed over time. Modern descendants (mostly surnamed O'Carroll) have formed a Clan Cian society (headquartered in the United States).[1]

Background edit

The Ciannachta claimed descend from Tadc mac Céin, a member of "the possibly legendary early Munster dynasty, who was said to be a grandson of Ailill Aulom. Tadc was also the putative ancestor of Luigni and Gailenga—peoples which were located in a number of centres in the midlands and the west of Ireland".[2] The acquisition, by Tadc, of the territory held by his descendants in Brega is related in the possibly late-9th-century saga, Cath Crinna.[3]

The fortunes of the historical Ciannachta can to an extent be traced via the Irish annals.[4] Ciannachta Breg occupied the coastal area between Annagassan and Dublin. They are first recorded sub anno 535 when they were defeated in battle at Luachair Mór (between the rivers Nanny and Boyne), near Duleek, by Túathal Máelgarb.

The Ciannachta kept their independence into the 9th century. A devastating seaborne attack by Ecgfrith of Northumbria in June 684,[5] which resulted in the seizing of a large number of slaves and the sacking of many churches and monasteries in Brega, was followed in 688 by the battle of Imblech Pich (Emlach, near Kells) an important defeat, inflicted upon them by King Niall mac Cernaigh, king of Brega. After this, they lost their independence south of the Boyne and north of the Nanny Water, and from this point on were referred to as Ard Ciannachta, reflecting their loss of territory in south-east Brega.

The area taken over became important to the Síl nÁedo Sláine and included both Duleek and the place called Cerne, Cernae or Cerna, noted as the principal burial site for the men of east Midhe and Brega (Cernoi nominatur, al. Cernai .i. coernia daiġ is ann atá primreilec Airthir Midi ocus Breaġ[6]), near to the townlands of Carnes.[7] This included both síd Cerna[8] and Cnoc Cerna, the hill of Cerna, noted in the Metrical Dindshenchus as holding the bodies of the sons and grandsons of Áed Slaine. These were located at the western end of Bellewstown ridge to the south of Duleek[9] close to the famous Lia Ailbhe, the standing stone described as 'the chief monument of Brega' (príomh-dindgnai Maighi Bregh) in 999, when it fell and was made into four millstones by Máelaschlainn the high king".[10]

In 742 the Síl nÁedo Sláine king of North Brega, Conaing mac Amalgado, began using the title king of Ciannachta, the first of seven North Brega kings to do so. In time, the Uí Chonaing conquered and assimilated it into Brega, while retaining use of the title for themselves.

Byrne remarks:[11]

Following the death of Cellach (786), the indigenous Ciannachta never again attained the kingship of their own territory and their political ambitions seem to have been entirely focused on the kingdom of Fir Arda Ciannachta ... The political eclipse of Ciannachta Breg from mid-8th century onwards may have resulted in members of that dynasty transferring their ambitions to the ecclesiastical sphere where one of their kindred, Conmael ua Loichene, took the abbacy of the same church [ Monasterboice ] in 733. Another member of the Ciannachta Breg, Ioseph ua Cernae, acceded to the abbacy of the same church in 790 ... Flann Mainistrech ... who died in 1056 is name in the Ciannachta Breg pedigree, as is his son, Echthigern ... who died in 1067.

Locations edit

Branches of the Ciannachta included:

Origin of the name edit

Admitting that there are significant questions surrounding the tribal name Ciannachta, David Sproule points out that the -acht suffix was used to form only three population-group names in early Ireland, namely the Connachta, Eoganachta and Ciannachta.[12] He states that,

originally there was one powerful people whose name had that suffix and ... the other two names were formed and adopted in imitation of the first by peoples who wished to emulate them. The original can only have been the Connachta, whose power, position and prestige in the earliest part of the historical period are unquestionable and who loom large in prehistory as the traditional enemies of the Ulaid.

It does not seem that the word "Connacht" can originally have meant 'the descendants of Conn'; it may have meant 'headship' or 'supremacy' from "cond" or "conn", head, and later have been interpreted as meaning "the descendants of Conn", Conn Cetchathach being derived from the word "Connacht" rather than vice versa. ... the name "Eoganacht" and "Ciannacht" were formed in imitation ...

Paul Byrne accepts this hypothesis,[13] proposing the "conjecture that the source of the tribal name was the patron saint of the Ciannachta Breg, Cianan, the founder of Duleek. ... Cianan is, of course, a diminutive form of "Cian." Thus, the name Ciannachta may have been a combination of "Cian" and the suffix "-acht." One may surmise that an ambitious tribe (or grouping of tribes) of relatively insignificant origin based near the church of Duleek—possibly lay tenants of the monastery—decided to forge a new identity based on their adherence to the local founder. Thus they became the "Ciannachta"—'the people of St Cianan.' fortuitously, the ancestor figure of their neighbours Gailenga and Luigni—Cian mac Ailella Auluimm—would have provided a suitably named ancestor figure when they later sought to construct a new pedigree for themselves." The townland of Keenoge south of Duleek may indicate a place of origin.

Cianan was regarded as a very significant figure in very early Irish Christianity, his church at Duleek traditionally stated as the first stone church in Ireland. Cianan himself is reported in the Annals of Ulster as dying in 489, four years before Saint Patrick. No life is extant, but various anecdotes survive, particularly in the medieval commentary on the martyrology Félire Óengusso.[14]

The territorial extent of Ciannachta Breg prior to its conquest is uncertain, but believed to have been reasonably large.[15]

Kings of Ciannachta edit

  • Cronan mac Tigernaich – king of Ciannachta in 571, he killed the joint high-kings Baetan mac Muirchertaich and Eochaid mac Domnaill mac Muirchertaich of the Cenel nEoghain. The Annals of Ulster incorrectly refer to him as of Glinne Gaimen, whereas he was of the Ciannachta Breg.
  • Gerthide – probably son of the above, king in 594, defeated at the battle of Eudunn Mor in Ciannacht Breg
  • Cenn Faelad mac Gerthide – son of the above, referred to as the king of Ard Ciannacht in 662. Apparently killed at the battle of Oghamain in that year
  • Ultan mac Eraine – styled king of the Ciannachta, killed at Oghamain in 662
  • Mael Fuataich mac Eraine – brother of above, also styled king, died 662
  • Doir mac Mael Duib – styled king of the Ciannachta, fl. 674
  • Dub da Inber – styled king of Ardda Ciannachta in the Annals of Ulster in 688
  • Dub da Chrich – died in 722, apparently king of Ard Ciannachta
  • Ailill mac Cenn Faelad – died 702. Had sons Eodus and Oengus, both kings.
  • Oengus mac Ailillo – king of Ard Ciannachta in 737
  • Ailill mac Duib da Chrich – a descendant of Cenn Faelad, apparently king of Ard Ciannachta at his death in 749
  • Cellach mac Cormac mac Aiillo – king of Ard Ciannachta, died 786
  • Muiredach – king of Ard Ciannachta, died 855. His son, Tigernach mac Muiredach, is described as episcopus, princepas Droma Inasclainn on his death in 879.

Other kings edit

  • 974 – Tadhg Ua Ruadhrach, lord of Cianachta, was slain in Ulidia.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "What Is Clan Cian". ClanCian-OCarroll.com. Clan Cian Society. 2022.
  2. ^ Byrne, Ciannachta Breg, p. 121.
  3. ^ O'Grady (ed.), Silva Gadelica 1, pp. 319–326; O'Grady (trans.), Silva Gadelica 2, pp. 359–368; Byrne, Ciannachta Breg, p. 122
  4. ^ Byrne, Ciannachta Breg, pp. 124–126; Byrnes, Ard Ciannachta, pp. 128–131.
  5. ^ Koch, John T., Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1 (ABC-CLIO, 2006). ISBN 978-1-8510-9440-0
  6. ^ p. 229, Hogan, Edmund, Onamasticon Goedelicum, Williams & Norgate, 1910, reprinted, Four Courts, 2000, ISBN 1-85182-126-0 https://research.ucc.ie/doi/locus/C
  7. ^ Eugene O'Curry, Cath Mhuige Lena or 'The battle of Magh Leana', (Dublin, 1855), p. 66
  8. ^ Catherine Swift, 'St. Patrick, Skerries and the earliest evidence for local church organization in Ireland' in Ailbhe MacShamhráin (ed.), The Island of St. Patrick, (Dublin, 2004) p. 76 ISBN 1-85182-867-2
  9. ^ Catherine Swift, 'St. Patrick, Skerries and the earliest evidence for local church organization in Ireland' in Ailbhe MacShamhráin (ed.), The Island of St. Patrick, (Dublin, 2004) p. 69 ISBN 1-85182-867-2
  10. ^ Byrne, Excavations at Knowth PRIA 66C4 p. 396
  11. ^ Byrne, Ciannachta Breg, p. 126. For more information on the Ciannachta and Monasterboice, see Dobbs, Pedigree and Family.
  12. ^ Sproule, Origins of the Éoganchta, pp. 31–32
  13. ^ Byrne, Ciannachta Breg, pp. 122–123.
  14. ^ Stokes (ed. and trans.), Félire Óengusso, pp. 244–247.
  15. ^ Byrnes, Ard Ciannachta, pp. 130–131.

References edit

  • Bhreathnach, Edel, ed. (2005), The Kingship and Landscape of Tara, Dublin: Four Courts Press, ISBN 1-85182-954-7
  • Byrne, Francis John (2001), Irish Kings and High Kings (3rd ed.), Dublin: Four Courts Press, ISBN 1-85182-196-1
  • Byrne, Paul (2000), "Ciannachta Breg before Sil nAeda Slaine", in Smyth, Alfred P. (ed.), Seanchas: Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology, History, and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne, Dublin: Four Courts Press, pp. 121–126, ISBN 1-85182-489-8
  • Byrnes, Michael (2000), "The Ard Ciannachta in Adomnan's "Vita Columbae": a reflection of Iona's attitude to the Sil nAeda Slaine in the late seventh century", in Smyth, Alfred P. (ed.), Seanchas: Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology, History, and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne, Dublin: Four Courts Press, pp. 127–136, ISBN 1-85182-489-8
  • Dobbs, Margaret E. (1956), "The Pedigree and Family of Flann Manistrech", Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society, vol. 5:3, JSTOR 27728169
  • O'Brien, M. A. (1962), Corpus Genealogiarum Hiberniae, Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies
  • O'Grady, S. H. (1892), Silva Gadelica: A Collection of Tales in Irish. Irish Text, vol. 1, London: Williams and Norgate
  • O'Grady, S. H. (1892), Silva Gadelica: A Collection of Tales in Irish. Translation and Notes, vol. 2, London: Williams and Norgate
  • O'Rahilly, T. F. (1946), Early Irish History and Mythology, Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies
  • Sproule, David (1984), "Origins of the Éoganchta", Ériu 35, pp. 31–37, JSTOR 30007776
  • Stokes, Whitley (1905), Félire Óengusso Céli Dé: The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee, London: The Henry Bradshaw Society

External links edit

  • Clan Cian

ciannachta, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, were, populati. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Ciannachta were a population group of early historic Ireland They claimed descent from the legendary figure Tadc mac Cein Modern research indicates Saint Cianan and his followers may have been the origin behind the tribal name as it is a late construction similar in form to Eoganachta and Connachta They first appear in historical sources in the 6th century and were found in several parts of the island including in Brega and Airgialla The Ciannachta groups were absorbed over time Modern descendants mostly surnamed O Carroll have formed a Clan Cian society headquartered in the United States 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Locations 3 Origin of the name 4 Kings of Ciannachta 5 Other kings 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editThe Ciannachta claimed descend from Tadc mac Cein a member of the possibly legendary early Munster dynasty who was said to be a grandson of Ailill Aulom Tadc was also the putative ancestor of Luigni and Gailenga peoples which were located in a number of centres in the midlands and the west of Ireland 2 The acquisition by Tadc of the territory held by his descendants in Brega is related in the possibly late 9th century saga Cath Crinna 3 The fortunes of the historical Ciannachta can to an extent be traced via the Irish annals 4 Ciannachta Breg occupied the coastal area between Annagassan and Dublin They are first recorded sub anno 535 when they were defeated in battle at Luachair Mor between the rivers Nanny and Boyne near Duleek by Tuathal Maelgarb The Ciannachta kept their independence into the 9th century A devastating seaborne attack by Ecgfrith of Northumbria in June 684 5 which resulted in the seizing of a large number of slaves and the sacking of many churches and monasteries in Brega was followed in 688 by the battle of Imblech Pich Emlach near Kells an important defeat inflicted upon them by King Niall mac Cernaigh king of Brega After this they lost their independence south of the Boyne and north of the Nanny Water and from this point on were referred to as Ard Ciannachta reflecting their loss of territory in south east Brega The area taken over became important to the Sil nAedo Slaine and included both Duleek and the place called Cerne Cernae or Cerna noted as the principal burial site for the men of east Midhe and Brega Cernoi nominatur al Cernai i coernia daiġ is ann ata primreilec Airthir Midi ocus Breaġ 6 near to the townlands of Carnes 7 This included both sid Cerna 8 and Cnoc Cerna the hill of Cerna noted in the Metrical Dindshenchus as holding the bodies of the sons and grandsons of Aed Slaine These were located at the western end of Bellewstown ridge to the south of Duleek 9 close to the famous Lia Ailbhe the standing stone described as the chief monument of Brega priomh dindgnai Maighi Bregh in 999 when it fell and was made into four millstones by Maelaschlainn the high king 10 In 742 the Sil nAedo Slaine king of North Brega Conaing mac Amalgado began using the title king of Ciannachta the first of seven North Brega kings to do so In time the Ui Chonaing conquered and assimilated it into Brega while retaining use of the title for themselves Byrne remarks 11 Following the death of Cellach 786 the indigenous Ciannachta never again attained the kingship of their own territory and their political ambitions seem to have been entirely focused on the kingdom of Fir Arda Ciannachta The political eclipse of Ciannachta Breg from mid 8th century onwards may have resulted in members of that dynasty transferring their ambitions to the ecclesiastical sphere where one of their kindred Conmael ua Loichene took the abbacy of the same church Monasterboice in 733 Another member of the Ciannachta Breg Ioseph ua Cernae acceded to the abbacy of the same church in 790 Flann Mainistrech who died in 1056 is name in the Ciannachta Breg pedigree as is his son Echthigern who died in 1067 Locations editBranches of the Ciannachta included Ciannachta Breg found in Brega between the Liffey and the Boyne later conquered by the Sil nAedo Slaine Cianachta Glenn Geimin now the barony of Keenaght in County Londonderry Ard Ciannachta barony of Ferrard County Louth see Conaille Muirtheimne Origin of the name editAdmitting that there are significant questions surrounding the tribal name Ciannachta David Sproule points out that the acht suffix was used to form only three population group names in early Ireland namely the Connachta Eoganachta and Ciannachta 12 He states that originally there was one powerful people whose name had that suffix and the other two names were formed and adopted in imitation of the first by peoples who wished to emulate them The original can only have been the Connachta whose power position and prestige in the earliest part of the historical period are unquestionable and who loom large in prehistory as the traditional enemies of the Ulaid It does not seem that the word Connacht can originally have meant the descendants of Conn it may have meant headship or supremacy from cond or conn head and later have been interpreted as meaning the descendants of Conn Conn Cetchathach being derived from the word Connacht rather than vice versa the name Eoganacht and Ciannacht were formed in imitation Paul Byrne accepts this hypothesis 13 proposing the conjecture that the source of the tribal name was the patron saint of the Ciannachta Breg Cianan the founder of Duleek Cianan is of course a diminutive form of Cian Thus the name Ciannachta may have been a combination of Cian and the suffix acht One may surmise that an ambitious tribe or grouping of tribes of relatively insignificant origin based near the church of Duleek possibly lay tenants of the monastery decided to forge a new identity based on their adherence to the local founder Thus they became the Ciannachta the people of St Cianan fortuitously the ancestor figure of their neighbours Gailenga and Luigni Cian mac Ailella Auluimm would have provided a suitably named ancestor figure when they later sought to construct a new pedigree for themselves The townland of Keenoge south of Duleek may indicate a place of origin Cianan was regarded as a very significant figure in very early Irish Christianity his church at Duleek traditionally stated as the first stone church in Ireland Cianan himself is reported in the Annals of Ulster as dying in 489 four years before Saint Patrick No life is extant but various anecdotes survive particularly in the medieval commentary on the martyrology Felire oengusso 14 The territorial extent of Ciannachta Breg prior to its conquest is uncertain but believed to have been reasonably large 15 Kings of Ciannachta editCronan mac Tigernaich king of Ciannachta in 571 he killed the joint high kings Baetan mac Muirchertaich and Eochaid mac Domnaill mac Muirchertaich of the Cenel nEoghain The Annals of Ulster incorrectly refer to him as of Glinne Gaimen whereas he was of the Ciannachta Breg Gerthide probably son of the above king in 594 defeated at the battle of Eudunn Mor in Ciannacht Breg Cenn Faelad mac Gerthide son of the above referred to as the king of Ard Ciannacht in 662 Apparently killed at the battle of Oghamain in that year Ultan mac Eraine styled king of the Ciannachta killed at Oghamain in 662 Mael Fuataich mac Eraine brother of above also styled king died 662 Doir mac Mael Duib styled king of the Ciannachta fl 674 Dub da Inber styled king of Ardda Ciannachta in the Annals of Ulster in 688 Dub da Chrich died in 722 apparently king of Ard Ciannachta Ailill mac Cenn Faelad died 702 Had sons Eodus and Oengus both kings Oengus mac Ailillo king of Ard Ciannachta in 737 Ailill mac Duib da Chrich a descendant of Cenn Faelad apparently king of Ard Ciannachta at his death in 749 Cellach mac Cormac mac Aiillo king of Ard Ciannachta died 786 Muiredach king of Ard Ciannachta died 855 His son Tigernach mac Muiredach is described as episcopus princepas Droma Inasclainn on his death in 879 Other kings edit974 Tadhg Ua Ruadhrach lord of Cianachta was slain in Ulidia Notes edit What Is Clan Cian ClanCian OCarroll com Clan Cian Society 2022 Byrne Ciannachta Breg p 121 O Grady ed Silva Gadelica 1 pp 319 326 O Grady trans Silva Gadelica 2 pp 359 368 Byrne Ciannachta Breg p 122 Byrne Ciannachta Breg pp 124 126 Byrnes Ard Ciannachta pp 128 131 Koch John T Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO 2006 ISBN 978 1 8510 9440 0 p 229 Hogan Edmund Onamasticon Goedelicum Williams amp Norgate 1910 reprinted Four Courts 2000 ISBN 1 85182 126 0 https research ucc ie doi locus C Eugene O Curry Cath Mhuige Lena or The battle of Magh Leana Dublin 1855 p 66 Catherine Swift St Patrick Skerries and the earliest evidence for local church organization in Ireland in Ailbhe MacShamhrain ed The Island of St Patrick Dublin 2004 p 76 ISBN 1 85182 867 2 Catherine Swift St Patrick Skerries and the earliest evidence for local church organization in Ireland in Ailbhe MacShamhrain ed The Island of St Patrick Dublin 2004 p 69 ISBN 1 85182 867 2 Byrne Excavations at Knowth PRIA 66C4 p 396 Byrne Ciannachta Breg p 126 For more information on the Ciannachta and Monasterboice see Dobbs Pedigree and Family Sproule Origins of the Eoganchta pp 31 32 Byrne Ciannachta Breg pp 122 123 Stokes ed and trans Felire oengusso pp 244 247 Byrnes Ard Ciannachta pp 130 131 References editBhreathnach Edel ed 2005 The Kingship and Landscape of Tara Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 954 7 Byrne Francis John 2001 Irish Kings and High Kings 3rd ed Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 196 1 Byrne Paul 2000 Ciannachta Breg before Sil nAeda Slaine in Smyth Alfred P ed Seanchas Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology History and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne Dublin Four Courts Press pp 121 126 ISBN 1 85182 489 8 Byrnes Michael 2000 The Ard Ciannachta in Adomnan s Vita Columbae a reflection of Iona s attitude to the Sil nAeda Slaine in the late seventh century in Smyth Alfred P ed Seanchas Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology History and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne Dublin Four Courts Press pp 127 136 ISBN 1 85182 489 8 Dobbs Margaret E 1956 The Pedigree and Family of Flann Manistrech Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society vol 5 3 JSTOR 27728169 O Brien M A 1962 Corpus Genealogiarum Hiberniae Dublin Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies O Grady S H 1892 Silva Gadelica A Collection of Tales in Irish Irish Text vol 1 London Williams and Norgate O Grady S H 1892 Silva Gadelica A Collection of Tales in Irish Translation and Notes vol 2 London Williams and Norgate O Rahilly T F 1946 Early Irish History and Mythology Dublin Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies Sproule David 1984 Origins of the Eoganchta Eriu 35 pp 31 37 JSTOR 30007776 Stokes Whitley 1905 Felire oengusso Celi De The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee London The Henry Bradshaw SocietyExternal links editClan Cian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ciannachta amp oldid 1204272729, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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