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Crimthann mac Fidaig

Crimthann Mór, son of Fidach /ˈkrvən ˈmɔːr mæk ˈf/, also written Crimthand Mór, was a semi-mythological king of Munster and High King of Ireland of the 4th century. He gained territory in Britain and Gaul, but died poisoned by his sister Mongfind. It is possible that he was also recognized as king of Scotland. This Crimthann is to be distinguished from two previous High Kings of Ireland of the same name, two Kings of Leinster, and another King of Munster, among others. Importantly, he is included in the Baile Chuinn Chétchathaig (summary), and is thus the last High King of Ireland from Munster until Brian Bóruma, over six hundred years later.

In addition to having his reign described by Geoffrey Keating and mentioned in the Annals of the Four Masters, Crimthand Mór mac Fidaig also plays a major role in many stories belonging to the Cycles of the Kings.[1] In these, he is typically succeeded by Niall of the Nine Hostages as High King of Ireland and by Conall Corc as King of Munster, while his sister Mongfind, the first wife of Eochaid Mugmedón, becomes the ancestor of the Three Connachta. Thus this otherwise obscure kindred is central in the mythologies of most of the great medieval Irish dynasties.

According to Geoffrey Keating, Fidheang, daughter of an unnamed king of Connacht, was the wife of Crimthand Mór.[2] She is not mentioned in other sources.

Dind Traduí edit

 
A Cornish harbour of a sort the Irish kings may have used.

According to the Sanas Cormaic,[3] Crimthand Mór mac Fidaig built a great fortress in Cornwall known as Dind Traduí or Dinn Tradui (Dun Tredui/e, fortress of the three ramparts).[4] There appears to be little doubt that it existed,[5] and British archaeologists and linguists have attempted to identify it with a number of sites in Cornwall and in Wales as well, for example, Din Draithou,[6] which is phonetically similar. Din Draithou is widely thought to be the modern Dunster, or the nearby Iron Age hillfort Bat's Castle.[7] It may also be associated with Dind map Letháin, a colonial fortress constructed by the related Uí Liatháin, earlier form Létháin,[8] kingdom of Munster, who is known to have been active in Britain for centuries. They may have retreated to South Wales or Cornwall after being expelled from North Wales by Cunedda, as mentioned in the Historia Brittonum.[9]

In a 1926 paper, Eoin MacNeill discusses the movements of the Uí Liatháin at considerable length, arguing their leadership in the South Irish conquests and the founding of the later dynasty of Brycheiniog, the Welsh genealogies matching Uí Liatháin dynasts in the Irish genealogies. He argues any possible settlement of the Déisi in Wales would have been subordinate until the ousting of the Uí Liatháin by the sons of Cunedda. The founder of Brycheiniog, Brychan, is in all probability the early Uí Liatháin dynast Macc Brocc, while the name Braccan also occurs early in the pedigrees of the Uí Fidgenti and Uí Dedaid, close kindred of the Uí Liatháin. MacNeill further associates this with the sovereignty in Ireland and conquests in Britain of their cousin germane, the monarch Crimthann mac Fidaig.[10]

Crimthand Mór mac Fidaig and the early Uí Liatháin may have belonged to the historical Attacotti (circa 368). Note the correspondence of dates.

Ancestry edit

As grandchildren of Dáire Cerbba (Cearba, Cearb) in most sources (e.g., Rawlinson B 502), also an ancestor of the Uí Liatháin and Uí Fidgenti, the brother and sister are sometimes regarded as belonging to an early branch of the Eóganachta which later became peripheral or became extinct, although it is more likely that all descendants of Dáire Cerbba belong to a distinct people, possibly the Dáirine, which may be hinted at in an obscure Old Irish poem by Flann mac Lonáin,[11] although in the Banshenchas Mongfind is called "Mongfind of the Érnai" (Érainn),[12] a people in any case related to the Dáirine. A passage in Rawlinson B 502 declares that Dáire Cerbba was born in Mag Breg (Brega), Mide,[13] much of which probably remained Érainn or Dáirine territory at the time of his supposed floruit. Later political genealogies may remove this generation to make the monarch appear closer to the historical Eóganachta, his natural kindred having mostly fallen into obscurity. Byrne reproduces one of these (2001), and does not give his source, probably Laud 610, in which the father of Crimthand Mór is a certain Láre Fidach, son of Ailill Flann Bec. Possibly this is a mistake, or an attempt by the Eóganachta literati, well known for their political fables, to more closely associate the brother and sister with the new Munster dynasty. Mongfind is simply called the daughter of Dáire (Cerbba?), not of Fidach, in the Book of Lismore, and there Dáire's father is called Findchad, while Crimthand Mór is not mentioned at all.[14]

Death edit

King Crimthann was poisoned by his sister Mongfind in order for her son(s) to win the throne. She died from the act, having taken a sip to lull any suspicions her brother had. While on his travels throughout the kingdom of Munster, the poison took effect, and there he died. A cairn was hastily made for the king.

The cairn is in one of three possible locations: the first being in Glenagross, Sixmilebridge, Co. Clare. The supposed location is known as 'Knock Righ Crimthann' (The hill of the king's death), and the remains of a cairn are still there today. The second location is in Ballycannon, Meelick, Co. Clare (Baile Cónan). Cónan was the supposed first name of the king. This is the location of the cairn, according to the Bard of Thomond, Michael Hogan. There are no known remains of a cairn there today. The third possible location is also in Glenagross: there are three antiquities in a north-south alignment; a standing stone, a ring barrow, and what is described as an 'archaeological complex'.

Below is a possible and simplified pedigree for Crimthann mac Fidaig, based on Rawlinson B 502:

Mug Nuadat | | Ailill Aulomm | | Eógan Mór | | Fiachu Muillethan | | Ailill Flann Bec | |____________________________ ??? |   | |   | Lugaid Dáire Cerbba |   | |   |__________________________ |   |   | |   |   | |   Fidach Uí Fidgenti & Uí Liatháin |   | |   |__________________________ |   |   | |   |   | |  Crimthann mac Fidaig Mongfind = Eochaid Mugmedón = Cairenn |     |  | |     |  | Conall Corc Connachta Niall Noígiallach 

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ see Dillon 1946
  2. ^ Keating 1902–14:369
  3. ^ Cormaic 1868:111
  4. ^ Byrne 2001:183–4
  5. ^ see Ó Corráin 2001
  6. ^ Chadwick 1958:122–3
  7. ^ Bat's Castle
  8. ^ Byrne 2001:183–4
  9. ^ Morris 1980:20–1
  10. ^ MacNeill 1926, pp. 128–32
  11. ^ {MS folio 150b} Book of Leinster
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 16 November 2009.
  13. ^ Ó Corráin 1997
  14. ^ Stokes 1890:239–40

References edit

  • Best, R.I., Osborn Bergin, M.A. O'Brien and Anne O'Sullivan (eds). The Book of Leinster, formerly Lebar na Núachongbála. 6 vols. Dublin: DIAS, 1954–83. {MS folio 150b} Fland mac Lonain cecinit.
  • Bhreathnach, Edel (ed.), The Kingship and Landscape of Tara. Four Courts Press for The Discovery Programme. 2005. Pages 249, 250 & Historical Early Éoganachta, Table 9, pages 356, 357.
  • Byrne, Francis John (2001). Irish Kings and High-Kings (2nd revised ed.). Four Courts Press.
  • Chadwick, Nora K. (1958). Studies in the Early British Church. Cambridge University Press. pp. 122–3.
  • Charles-Edwards, T.M., Early Christian Ireland. Cambridge. 2000.
  • Coogan, Tim Pat, Michael Collins: The Man Who Made Ireland. Palgrave Macmillan. 2002. (pgs. 5–6)
  • Cormac mac Cuilennáin (1868). Whitley Stokes (ed.). Sanas Cormaic [Cormac's Glossary]. Translated by John O'Donovan. Irish Archaeological and Celtic Society.
  • Cross, Tom Peete and Clark Harris Slover (eds.), "The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon", in Ancient Irish Tales. Henry Holt and Company. 1936. Pages 508–13.
  • Dillon, Myles (1946). The Cycles of the Kings. (Four Courts Press. Revised edition, 1995.)
  • Hull, Vernan, "Conall Corc and the Corcu Loígde", in Proceedings of the Modern Languages Association of America 62 (1947): 887–909.
  • Hull, Vernan, "The Exile of Conall Corc", in Proceedings of the Modern Languages Association of America 56 (1941): 937–50.
  • Keating, Geoffrey (1902–14). The History of Ireland by Geoffrey Keating. 4 Vols. Translated by David Comyn; Patrick S. Dinneen. London: David Nutt for the Irish Texts Society. pp. 369, 371.
  • MacKillop, James, A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford. 1998.
  • MacNeill, Eoin (1926). "The Native Place of St. Patrick". Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: 118–40.
  • Meyer, Kuno (ed. and tr.), "The Expulsion of the Dessi", in Y Cymmrodor 14. 1901. pgs. 101-35. (available here)
  • Meyer, Kuno (ed.), "The Laud Genealogies and Tribal Histories", in Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie 8. Halle/Saale, Max Niemeyer. 1912. Pages 291–338.
  • Mikhailova, Tatiana and Natalia Nikolaeva, "The denotations of death in Goidelic: to the question of Celtic eschatological conceptions", in Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie. Volume 53, Issue 1 (2003, online 2008): Pages 93–115.
  • Monaghan, Patricia, The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore. New York: Facts On File. 2004.
  • Morris, John, ed. (1980). Nennius: British History and The Welsh Annals. Arthurian Period Sources. Vol. 8. London: Phillimore.
  • Murphy, G. (ed & tr), "On the Dates of Two Sources used in Thurneysen's Heldensage: I. Baile Chuind and the date of Cín Dromma Snechtai", in Ériu (1952): 145–151.
  • Ó Corráin, Donnchadh, ed. (1997). Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502. Corpus of Electronic Texts. University College Cork.
  • Ó Corráin, Donnchadh (2001). "Prehistoric and Early Christian Ireland". In Foster, Roy (ed.). The Oxford Illustrated History of Ireland. Oxford University Press. pp. 1–52.
  • Ó Cróinín, Dáibhí (ed.), A New History of Ireland: Prehistoric and Early Ireland, Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. 2005.
  • O'Donovan, John (ed. and tr.), Annala Rioghachta Eireann. Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1616. 7 vols. Royal Irish Academy. Dublin. 1848–51. 2nd edition, 1856.
  • O'Grady, Standish H. (ed. and tr.), "Death of Crimthann son of Fidach, and of Eochaidh Muighmedóin's three sons: Brian, Ailill, Fiachra", in Silva Gadelica Williams and Norgate. 1892. Pages 373–8. (also available here)
  • O'Grady, Standish H. (ed. and tr.), "The Story of Eochaidh Muighmedóin's Sons", in Silva Gadelica Williams and Norgate. 1892. Pages 368–73.
  • O'Hart, John, Irish Pedigrees. 5th edition, 1892.
  • O'Keeffe, Eugene (ed. and tr.), Eoganacht Genealogies from the Book of Munster. Cork. 1703. (available here)
  • O'Rahilly, Thomas F., Early Irish History and Mythology. Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. 1946.
  • Sproule, David, "Origins of the Éoganachta", in Ériu 35 (1984): pp. 31–37.
  • Sproule, David, "Politics and pure narrative in the stories about Corc of Cashel", in Ériu 36 (1985): pp. 11–28.
  • Stokes, Whitley (ed. and tr.), "Aided Chrimthaind Maic Fhidaig: The Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig", in Revue Celtique 24. 1903. Pages 172–189.
  • Stokes, Whitley (ed. and tr.), "Echtra Mac nEchach Muigmedóin: The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Muigmedóin", in Revue Celtique 24. 1903. Pages 190–207.
  • Stokes, Whitley, ed. (1890). Lives of Saints from the Book of Lismore. pp. 239–40.
  • Thurneysen, R, (ed.), "Baile Chuind Chétchathaig nach der Handschrift von Druim Snechta", in Zu irischen Handschriften und Litteraturdenkmälern (Berlin 1912): 48–52.
  • Welch, Robert (ed.) with Bruce Stewart, The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Oxford University Press. 1996.

External links edit

  • eDIL: electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
  • Irish Kings
  • Viducasses (French)
Preceded by High King of Ireland
AFM 365–376
FFE 351–368
Succeeded by

crimthann, fidaig, crimthann, mór, fidach, ɔːr, also, written, crimthand, mór, semi, mythological, king, munster, high, king, ireland, century, gained, territory, britain, gaul, died, poisoned, sister, mongfind, possible, that, also, recognized, king, scotland. Crimthann Mor son of Fidach ˈ k r iː v en ˈ m ɔːr m ae k ˈ f iː aɪ also written Crimthand Mor was a semi mythological king of Munster and High King of Ireland of the 4th century He gained territory in Britain and Gaul but died poisoned by his sister Mongfind It is possible that he was also recognized as king of Scotland This Crimthann is to be distinguished from two previous High Kings of Ireland of the same name two Kings of Leinster and another King of Munster among others Importantly he is included in the Baile Chuinn Chetchathaig summary and is thus the last High King of Ireland from Munster until Brian Boruma over six hundred years later In addition to having his reign described by Geoffrey Keating and mentioned in the Annals of the Four Masters Crimthand Mor mac Fidaig also plays a major role in many stories belonging to the Cycles of the Kings 1 In these he is typically succeeded by Niall of the Nine Hostages as High King of Ireland and by Conall Corc as King of Munster while his sister Mongfind the first wife of Eochaid Mugmedon becomes the ancestor of the Three Connachta Thus this otherwise obscure kindred is central in the mythologies of most of the great medieval Irish dynasties According to Geoffrey Keating Fidheang daughter of an unnamed king of Connacht was the wife of Crimthand Mor 2 She is not mentioned in other sources Contents 1 Dind Tradui 2 Ancestry 2 1 Death 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksDind Tradui edit nbsp A Cornish harbour of a sort the Irish kings may have used According to the Sanas Cormaic 3 Crimthand Mor mac Fidaig built a great fortress in Cornwall known as Dind Tradui or Dinn Tradui Dun Tredui e fortress of the three ramparts 4 There appears to be little doubt that it existed 5 and British archaeologists and linguists have attempted to identify it with a number of sites in Cornwall and in Wales as well for example Din Draithou 6 which is phonetically similar Din Draithou is widely thought to be the modern Dunster or the nearby Iron Age hillfort Bat s Castle 7 It may also be associated with Dind map Lethain a colonial fortress constructed by the related Ui Liathain earlier form Lethain 8 kingdom of Munster who is known to have been active in Britain for centuries They may have retreated to South Wales or Cornwall after being expelled from North Wales by Cunedda as mentioned in the Historia Brittonum 9 In a 1926 paper Eoin MacNeill discusses the movements of the Ui Liathain at considerable length arguing their leadership in the South Irish conquests and the founding of the later dynasty of Brycheiniog the Welsh genealogies matching Ui Liathain dynasts in the Irish genealogies He argues any possible settlement of the Deisi in Wales would have been subordinate until the ousting of the Ui Liathain by the sons of Cunedda The founder of Brycheiniog Brychan is in all probability the early Ui Liathain dynast Macc Brocc while the name Braccan also occurs early in the pedigrees of the Ui Fidgenti and Ui Dedaid close kindred of the Ui Liathain MacNeill further associates this with the sovereignty in Ireland and conquests in Britain of their cousin germane the monarch Crimthann mac Fidaig 10 Crimthand Mor mac Fidaig and the early Ui Liathain may have belonged to the historical Attacotti circa 368 Note the correspondence of dates Ancestry editThis section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions April 2011 As grandchildren of Daire Cerbba Cearba Cearb in most sources e g Rawlinson B 502 also an ancestor of the Ui Liathain and Ui Fidgenti the brother and sister are sometimes regarded as belonging to an early branch of the Eoganachta which later became peripheral or became extinct although it is more likely that all descendants of Daire Cerbba belong to a distinct people possibly the Dairine which may be hinted at in an obscure Old Irish poem by Flann mac Lonain 11 although in the Banshenchas Mongfind is called Mongfind of the Ernai Erainn 12 a people in any case related to the Dairine A passage in Rawlinson B 502 declares that Daire Cerbba was born in Mag Breg Brega Mide 13 much of which probably remained Erainn or Dairine territory at the time of his supposed floruit Later political genealogies may remove this generation to make the monarch appear closer to the historical Eoganachta his natural kindred having mostly fallen into obscurity Byrne reproduces one of these 2001 and does not give his source probably Laud 610 in which the father of Crimthand Mor is a certain Lare Fidach son of Ailill Flann Bec Possibly this is a mistake or an attempt by the Eoganachta literati well known for their political fables to more closely associate the brother and sister with the new Munster dynasty Mongfind is simply called the daughter of Daire Cerbba not of Fidach in the Book of Lismore and there Daire s father is called Findchad while Crimthand Mor is not mentioned at all 14 Death edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message King Crimthann was poisoned by his sister Mongfind in order for her son s to win the throne She died from the act having taken a sip to lull any suspicions her brother had While on his travels throughout the kingdom of Munster the poison took effect and there he died A cairn was hastily made for the king The cairn is in one of three possible locations the first being in Glenagross Sixmilebridge Co Clare The supposed location is known as Knock Righ Crimthann The hill of the king s death and the remains of a cairn are still there today The second location is in Ballycannon Meelick Co Clare Baile Conan Conan was the supposed first name of the king This is the location of the cairn according to the Bard of Thomond Michael Hogan There are no known remains of a cairn there today The third possible location is also in Glenagross there are three antiquities in a north south alignment a standing stone a ring barrow and what is described as an archaeological complex Below is a possible and simplified pedigree for Crimthann mac Fidaig based on Rawlinson B 502 Mug Nuadat Ailill Aulomm Eogan Mor Fiachu Muillethan Ailill Flann Bec Lugaid Daire Cerbba Fidach Ui Fidgenti amp Ui Liathain Crimthann mac Fidaig Mongfind Eochaid Mugmedon Cairenn Conall Corc Connachta Niall NoigiallachSee also editIrish nobility Kingdoms of Ireland List of Celtic tribes Iverni Attacotti Scoti Petty kingdom Tuathal TechtmarNotes edit see Dillon 1946 Keating 1902 14 369 Cormaic 1868 111 Byrne 2001 183 4 see o Corrain 2001 Chadwick 1958 122 3 Bat s Castle Byrne 2001 183 4 Morris 1980 20 1 MacNeill 1926 pp 128 32 MS folio 150b Book of Leinster Banshenchus The Lore of Women Archived from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 16 November 2009 o Corrain 1997 Stokes 1890 239 40References editBest R I Osborn Bergin M A O Brien and Anne O Sullivan eds The Book of Leinster formerly Lebar na Nuachongbala 6 vols Dublin DIAS 1954 83 MS folio 150b Fland mac Lonain cecinit Bhreathnach Edel ed The Kingship and Landscape of Tara Four Courts Press for The Discovery Programme 2005 Pages 249 250 amp Historical Early Eoganachta Table 9 pages 356 357 Byrne Francis John 2001 Irish Kings and High Kings 2nd revised ed Four Courts Press Chadwick Nora K 1958 Studies in the Early British Church Cambridge University Press pp 122 3 Charles Edwards T M Early Christian Ireland Cambridge 2000 Coogan Tim Pat Michael Collins The Man Who Made Ireland Palgrave Macmillan 2002 pgs 5 6 Cormac mac Cuilennain 1868 Whitley Stokes ed Sanas Cormaic Cormac s Glossary Translated by John O Donovan Irish Archaeological and Celtic Society Cross Tom Peete and Clark Harris Slover eds The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon in Ancient Irish Tales Henry Holt and Company 1936 Pages 508 13 Dillon Myles 1946 The Cycles of the Kings Four Courts Press Revised edition 1995 Hull Vernan Conall Corc and the Corcu Loigde in Proceedings of the Modern Languages Association of America 62 1947 887 909 Hull Vernan The Exile of Conall Corc in Proceedings of the Modern Languages Association of America 56 1941 937 50 Keating Geoffrey 1902 14 The History of Ireland by Geoffrey Keating 4 Vols Translated by David Comyn Patrick S Dinneen London David Nutt for the Irish Texts Society pp 369 371 MacKillop James A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford 1998 MacNeill Eoin 1926 The Native Place of St Patrick Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 118 40 Meyer Kuno ed and tr The Expulsion of the Dessi in Y Cymmrodor 14 1901 pgs 101 35 available here Meyer Kuno ed The Laud Genealogies and Tribal Histories in Zeitschrift fur Celtische Philologie 8 Halle Saale Max Niemeyer 1912 Pages 291 338 Mikhailova Tatiana and Natalia Nikolaeva The denotations of death in Goidelic to the question of Celtic eschatological conceptions in Zeitschrift fur celtische Philologie Volume 53 Issue 1 2003 online 2008 Pages 93 115 Monaghan Patricia The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore New York Facts On File 2004 Morris John ed 1980 Nennius British History and The Welsh Annals Arthurian Period Sources Vol 8 London Phillimore Murphy G ed amp tr On the Dates of Two Sources used in Thurneysen s Heldensage I Baile Chuind and the date of Cin Dromma Snechtai in Eriu 1952 145 151 o Corrain Donnchadh ed 1997 Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502 Corpus of Electronic Texts University College Cork o Corrain Donnchadh 2001 Prehistoric and Early Christian Ireland In Foster Roy ed The Oxford Illustrated History of Ireland Oxford University Press pp 1 52 o Croinin Daibhi ed A New History of Ireland Prehistoric and Early Ireland Vol 1 Oxford University Press 2005 O Donovan John ed and tr Annala Rioghachta Eireann Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters from the Earliest Period to the Year 1616 7 vols Royal Irish Academy Dublin 1848 51 2nd edition 1856 O Grady Standish H ed and tr Death of Crimthann son of Fidach and of Eochaidh Muighmedoin s three sons Brian Ailill Fiachra in Silva Gadelica Williams and Norgate 1892 Pages 373 8 also available here O Grady Standish H ed and tr The Story of Eochaidh Muighmedoin s Sons in Silva Gadelica Williams and Norgate 1892 Pages 368 73 O Hart John Irish Pedigrees 5th edition 1892 O Keeffe Eugene ed and tr Eoganacht Genealogies from the Book of Munster Cork 1703 available here O Rahilly Thomas F Early Irish History and Mythology Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1946 Sproule David Origins of the Eoganachta in Eriu 35 1984 pp 31 37 Sproule David Politics and pure narrative in the stories about Corc of Cashel in Eriu 36 1985 pp 11 28 Stokes Whitley ed and tr Aided Chrimthaind Maic Fhidaig The Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig in Revue Celtique 24 1903 Pages 172 189 Stokes Whitley ed and tr Echtra Mac nEchach Muigmedoin The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Muigmedoin in Revue Celtique 24 1903 Pages 190 207 Stokes Whitley ed 1890 Lives of Saints from the Book of Lismore pp 239 40 Thurneysen R ed Baile Chuind Chetchathaig nach der Handschrift von Druim Snechta in Zu irischen Handschriften und Litteraturdenkmalern Berlin 1912 48 52 Welch Robert ed with Bruce Stewart The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature Oxford University Press 1996 External links editeDIL electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language Aided Chrimthainn meic Fhidaig 7 Tri Mac Echach Muigmedoin Echtra Mac nEchach Muigmedoin Conall Corc 7 Rige Caisil Genemain Chuirc meic Luigdech Baile Chuinn Cetchathaigh Irish Kings Viducasses French Preceded byEochaid Mugmedon High King of IrelandAFM 365 376FFE 351 368 Succeeded byNiall Noigiallach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crimthann mac Fidaig amp oldid 1206292149, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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