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Mongán mac Fíachnai

Mongán mac Fíachnai (died c. 625) was an Irish prince of the Cruthin, a son of Fíachnae mac Báetáin. Little is certainly known of Mongán's life as only his death is recorded in the Irish annals. He appears as a character in the Cycles of the Kings where he is said to have been the son of Manannán mac Lir and perhaps a reincarnation of the legendary hero Finn mac Cumaill of the Fenian Cycle.

His origin story is told in the Compert Mongáin found in the Yellow Book of Lecan and the Lebor na hUidre.

Compert Mongáin edit

The tale Compert Mongáin (the Conception of Mongán), which survives in three variants, has Mongán fathered on Fiachnae's wife Cáintigern by the sea-god Manannán mac Lir while Fíachnae campaigned alongside Áedán mac Gabráin of Dál Riata. The versions have different accounts of how this came about, all of which agree that some form of bargain was struck whereby Fiachnae's life was saved by Manannán in return for a night with Cáintigern. An early version of this tale is found in the Immram Brain where Manannán prophecies Mongán's birth and near divine nature to Bran. Although the surviving versions of the tale are from the 10th or 11th century, earlier versions are believed to have been included in the lost Cín Dromma Snechtai manuscript. The verses in which the claims of Mongán's divine parentage and tutoring are made are described by Charles-Edwards are "literary conceit" and by Carney as "poetic hyperbole", the presumed original intent being to vaunt Mongán's seamanship.[1]

Manannán takes Mongán away with him to Tír Tairngire—the land of promise, an otherworld similar to Tír na nÓg—where he learned shapeshifting and other esoteric knowledge. While Mongán is in the otherworld, his father is killed by Fiachnae mac Demmáin, an event which the Irish annals place after Mongán's death.[2] Mongán's ability to change his shape is alluded to in the 9th century tale De Chophur in dá Muccado (The quarrel of the two swineherds), found in the Book of Leinster, which is one of the stories setting the scene for the Táin Bó Cuailnge.[3]

The Ulstermen ask Manannán to send Mongán to rule over them, but he remains in the otherworld for a further ten years, returning to Ulster when he is sixteen. An agreement is made that Ulster will be divided between Fiachnae mac Demmáin and Mongán, and that Mongán will marry Fiachnae's daughter Dub Lacha. Mongán later kills his father-in-law in revenge for his father's death, again chronologically at odds with the surviving record which has Fiachnae mac Demmáin killed several years after Mongán.[4]

Finn reborn edit

One tale recounts a dispute between Mongán and the poet Forgoll, Forgoll being perhaps based on traditions about the historical poet Dallan Forgaill. Forgoll claims to know how Fothad Airgthech, a legendary High King of Ireland died, but Mongán says he is wrong. Forgoll threatens to curse and satirise Mongán for this insult to his knowledge and will settle for nothing less than Mongán's wife Breothigernd in reparation. A mysterious stranger appears who claims that Mongán was with him when he slew Fothad, and proves Forgall wrong. The story ends by revealing that the stranger was the legendary fianna hero Caílte mac Rónáin and that Mongán was the reincarnation of Finn mac Cumaill.[5]

Otherworld edit

Two short tales survive which associate Mongán with the otherworld, both dating from the late 10th or early 11th century.[6]

One is Scél Mongáin, a story concerning Mongán and the poet Forgoll. This has the two meet a poor student whom Mongán takes pity on and sends to the otherworld to bring back gold, silver and a precious stone, the silver which the student is to keep for himself. Little occurs in the tale which concentrates on the magnificence of the otherworld.[7]

The second, Tucait Baili Mongáin ("What caused Mongán's Frenzy"), is said to take place in the year in which Ciarán of Clonmacnoise died and Diarmait mac Cerbaill became King of Tara following the death of Túathal Máelgarb, events dated to the year AD 549. Mongán's wife Findtigernd asks him to recount his journey to the otherworld. When they are at the hill of Uisnech, a supernatural hailstorm comes on. When it ends Mongán, his wife, his poet, and seven companions, find a hall ringed by trees. They enter, are greeted by the inhabitants, and Mongán is given to drink, after which he recounts his journey. Although it seems as though they are in the house for only a short time, when they leave a year has passed, and they are now at Rath Mor, Mongán's home near modern Larne, 150 miles away.[8]

Wives and children and poets edit

In the tale of Forgoll and Fothad, Mongán is said to be married Breothigernd.[9] Tucait Baili Mongáin names his wife Findtigernd.[10] The Banshenchas or Lore of Women contained in the Book of Leinster, attributed to a Leinster poet named Gilla Mo-Dutu (died 1147), also names Dub Lacha as Mongán's wife.[11]

An alternative version of the Compert Mongáin, Compert Mongáin ocus Serc Duibe Lacha do Mongán (The conception of Mongán and Mongán's love for Dub Lacha), contains a lengthy romance concerning Mongán and another wife, Dub Lacha, daughter of Fiachnae mac Demmáin, in which Brandub mac Echach is a major character. This story makes frequent use of Mongán's otherworldly shapeshifting and magical powers.[12] Austin Clarke's play The plot succeeds; a poetic pantomime (1950) is a comedy based on the tale of Mongán and Dub Lacha.

A third tale concerning Mongán and a poet, this time Eochaid Rígéiges, again perhaps based on the historical poet Dallan Forgaill, purports to explain why he had no children. The tale recounts a journey by Mongán and Eochaid where they are asked to explain the meaning of various place names—a branch of poetical learning called dindshenchas—and on each occasion Eochaid is shown up by Mongán. As a result, Eochaid curses Mongán so that he will have no noble-born children and that his descendants will be peasants.[13]

Yeats took Mongán as a subject in his writings, including the poems "Mongan laments the Change that has come upon him and his Beloved" and "Mongan thinks of his past Greatness" (The Wind Among the Reeds, 1899).

Death edit

The record of Mongán's death in the Annals of Tigernach has him killed by a stone thrown by one Artúr son of Bicior, described as a Briton or perhaps, following Kuno Meyer's reading, a Pict. It is accompanied by a poem attributed to Bécc Bairrche mac Blathmaic, king of Ulaid. Whitley Stokes translated it as follows:

The wind blows cold over Islay;
there are youths approaching in Kintyre:
they will do a cruel deed thereby,
they will slay Mongán, son of Fíachnae.[14]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Carney, pp. 504–504; Charles-Edwards, p. 202; MacKillop, pp. 218–219, "Fiachnae mac Báetáin" & pp. 333–334, "Mongán"; Wiley, Compert Mongáin.
  2. ^ The internal chronology of Compert Mongáin ocus Serc Duibe Lacha do Mongán, in Meyer, Appendix V, places Fiachnae's death when Mongán is around six years old.
  3. ^ Carney, p. 470; Kinsella, pp. 46–50 & 260–261.
  4. ^ MacKillop, pp. 333–334, "Mongán"; Meyer, Appendix V. The chronology of the annals is uncertain, but the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach are both in agreement as to the sequence of events, which is that Fíachnae mac Báetáin is killed in battle against Fiachnae mac Demmáin the year following Mongán's death, and that Fiachnae mac Demmáin was defeated and killed by Connad Cerr two years after Mongán's death.
  5. ^ Byrne, p. 112; Meyer, Appendix II; Wiley, Scél asa mberar co mbad hé Find mac Cumaill Mongán ocus aní día fil aided Fothaid Airgdig; MacKillop, pp. 333–334, "Mongán".
  6. ^ Wiley, Scél Mongáin; Wiley, Scél Mongáin.
  7. ^ Meyer, Appendix III; Wiley, Scél Mongáin.
  8. ^ Meyer, Appendix IV; Wiley, Tucait Baili Mongáin.
  9. ^ Meyer, Appendix II; Wiley, Scél asa mberar co mbad hé Find mac Cumaill Mongán ocus aní día fil aided Fothaid Airgdig.
  10. ^ MacKillop, pp. 333–334, "Mongán".
  11. ^ Meyer, Appendix IX.
  12. ^ MacKillop, p. 52, "Brandub", pp. 154–155, "Dub Lacha", & pp. 333–334, "Mongán"; Meyer, Appendix V.
  13. ^ Wiley, Cid dia tall Eochaid Rígéiges degiartaige ó Mongán?; MacKillop, p. 185, "Eochaid Éigeas".
  14. ^ Anderson, pp. 147–148; Annals of Tigernach, AT 626.6. Another different verse is included in the notice of Mongán's death in the Annals of Ulster, AU 625.2.

References and further reading edit

  • Annals of Ulster AD 431–1201, CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts, 2003, retrieved 23 March 2008
  • Annals of Tigernach, CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts, 1996, retrieved 23 March 2008
  • Anderson, Alan Orr (1922), Early Sources of Scottish History A.D. 500 to 1286, vol. I (1990 revised & corrected ed.), Stamford: Paul Watkins, ISBN 1-871615-03-8
  • Byrne, Francis John (1973), Irish Kings and High-Kings, London: Batsford, ISBN 0-7134-5882-8
  • Carney, James (2005), "Language and literature to 1169", in Ó Cróinín, Daibhí (ed.), Prehistoric and early Ireland, A New History of Ireland, vol. I, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 451–510, ISBN 978-0-19-922665-8
  • Charles-Edwards, T. M., Early Christian Ireland, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-36395-0
  • Kinsella, Thomas (1970), The Tain. Translated from the Irish epic Táin Bó Cuailnge, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-281090-1
  • Mac Cana, Proinsias (2007), "Ireland and Wales in the Middle Ages: an overview", in Jankulak, Karen; Wooding, Jonathan M. (eds.), Ireland and Wales in the Middle Ages, Dublin: Four Courts Press, pp. 17–45, ISBN 978-1-85182-748-0
  • MacKillop, James (1998), Oxford Dictionary of Celtic Mythology, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-860967-1
  • Meyer, Kuno (1895), The Voyage of Bran son of Febal to the Land of the Living, London: D. Nutt
  • White, Nora (2006), Compert Mongáin and three other early Mongán tales, Maynooth Medieval Irish Texts, vol. 5, Maynooth: Department of Old and Middle Irish, National University of Ireland, ISSN 1393-970X
  • Wiley, Dan (2004), , archived from the original on 27 December 2008

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Mongan redirects here For the surname see Mongan surname Mongan mac Fiachnai died c 625 was an Irish prince of the Cruthin a son of Fiachnae mac Baetain Little is certainly known of Mongan s life as only his death is recorded in the Irish annals He appears as a character in the Cycles of the Kings where he is said to have been the son of Manannan mac Lir and perhaps a reincarnation of the legendary hero Finn mac Cumaill of the Fenian Cycle His origin story is told in the Compert Mongain found in the Yellow Book of Lecan and the Lebor na hUidre Contents 1 Compert Mongain 2 Finn reborn 3 Otherworld 4 Wives and children and poets 5 Death 6 Notes 7 References and further readingCompert Mongain editThe tale Compert Mongain the Conception of Mongan which survives in three variants has Mongan fathered on Fiachnae s wife Caintigern by the sea god Manannan mac Lir while Fiachnae campaigned alongside Aedan mac Gabrain of Dal Riata The versions have different accounts of how this came about all of which agree that some form of bargain was struck whereby Fiachnae s life was saved by Manannan in return for a night with Caintigern An early version of this tale is found in the Immram Brain where Manannan prophecies Mongan s birth and near divine nature to Bran Although the surviving versions of the tale are from the 10th or 11th century earlier versions are believed to have been included in the lost Cin Dromma Snechtai manuscript The verses in which the claims of Mongan s divine parentage and tutoring are made are described by Charles Edwards are literary conceit and by Carney as poetic hyperbole the presumed original intent being to vaunt Mongan s seamanship 1 Manannan takes Mongan away with him to Tir Tairngire the land of promise an otherworld similar to Tir na nog where he learned shapeshifting and other esoteric knowledge While Mongan is in the otherworld his father is killed by Fiachnae mac Demmain an event which the Irish annals place after Mongan s death 2 Mongan s ability to change his shape is alluded to in the 9th century tale De Chophur in da Muccado The quarrel of the two swineherds found in the Book of Leinster which is one of the stories setting the scene for the Tain Bo Cuailnge 3 The Ulstermen ask Manannan to send Mongan to rule over them but he remains in the otherworld for a further ten years returning to Ulster when he is sixteen An agreement is made that Ulster will be divided between Fiachnae mac Demmain and Mongan and that Mongan will marry Fiachnae s daughter Dub Lacha Mongan later kills his father in law in revenge for his father s death again chronologically at odds with the surviving record which has Fiachnae mac Demmain killed several years after Mongan 4 Finn reborn editOne tale recounts a dispute between Mongan and the poet Forgoll Forgoll being perhaps based on traditions about the historical poet Dallan Forgaill Forgoll claims to know how Fothad Airgthech a legendary High King of Ireland died but Mongan says he is wrong Forgoll threatens to curse and satirise Mongan for this insult to his knowledge and will settle for nothing less than Mongan s wife Breothigernd in reparation A mysterious stranger appears who claims that Mongan was with him when he slew Fothad and proves Forgall wrong The story ends by revealing that the stranger was the legendary fianna hero Cailte mac Ronain and that Mongan was the reincarnation of Finn mac Cumaill 5 Otherworld editTwo short tales survive which associate Mongan with the otherworld both dating from the late 10th or early 11th century 6 One is Scel Mongain a story concerning Mongan and the poet Forgoll This has the two meet a poor student whom Mongan takes pity on and sends to the otherworld to bring back gold silver and a precious stone the silver which the student is to keep for himself Little occurs in the tale which concentrates on the magnificence of the otherworld 7 The second Tucait Baili Mongain What caused Mongan s Frenzy is said to take place in the year in which Ciaran of Clonmacnoise died and Diarmait mac Cerbaill became King of Tara following the death of Tuathal Maelgarb events dated to the year AD 549 Mongan s wife Findtigernd asks him to recount his journey to the otherworld When they are at the hill of Uisnech a supernatural hailstorm comes on When it ends Mongan his wife his poet and seven companions find a hall ringed by trees They enter are greeted by the inhabitants and Mongan is given to drink after which he recounts his journey Although it seems as though they are in the house for only a short time when they leave a year has passed and they are now at Rath Mor Mongan s home near modern Larne 150 miles away 8 Wives and children and poets editIn the tale of Forgoll and Fothad Mongan is said to be married Breothigernd 9 Tucait Baili Mongain names his wife Findtigernd 10 The Banshenchas or Lore of Women contained in the Book of Leinster attributed to a Leinster poet named Gilla Mo Dutu died 1147 also names Dub Lacha as Mongan s wife 11 An alternative version of the Compert Mongain Compert Mongain ocus Serc Duibe Lacha do Mongan The conception of Mongan and Mongan s love for Dub Lacha contains a lengthy romance concerning Mongan and another wife Dub Lacha daughter of Fiachnae mac Demmain in which Brandub mac Echach is a major character This story makes frequent use of Mongan s otherworldly shapeshifting and magical powers 12 Austin Clarke s play The plot succeeds a poetic pantomime 1950 is a comedy based on the tale of Mongan and Dub Lacha A third tale concerning Mongan and a poet this time Eochaid Rigeiges again perhaps based on the historical poet Dallan Forgaill purports to explain why he had no children The tale recounts a journey by Mongan and Eochaid where they are asked to explain the meaning of various place names a branch of poetical learning called dindshenchas and on each occasion Eochaid is shown up by Mongan As a result Eochaid curses Mongan so that he will have no noble born children and that his descendants will be peasants 13 Yeats took Mongan as a subject in his writings including the poems Mongan laments the Change that has come upon him and his Beloved and Mongan thinks of his past Greatness The Wind Among the Reeds 1899 Death editMionannala from Egerton 1782 615 643 Suibne Menn Fiachna mac Baetain Mongan http www ucc ie celt published G100027 text002 htmlThe record of Mongan s death in the Annals of Tigernach has him killed by a stone thrown by one Artur son of Bicior described as a Briton or perhaps following Kuno Meyer s reading a Pict It is accompanied by a poem attributed to Becc Bairrche mac Blathmaic king of Ulaid Whitley Stokes translated it as follows The wind blows cold over Islay there are youths approaching in Kintyre they will do a cruel deed thereby they will slay Mongan son of Fiachnae 14 Notes edit Carney pp 504 504 Charles Edwards p 202 MacKillop pp 218 219 Fiachnae mac Baetain amp pp 333 334 Mongan Wiley Compert Mongain The internal chronology of Compert Mongain ocus Serc Duibe Lacha do Mongan in Meyer Appendix V places Fiachnae s death when Mongan is around six years old Carney p 470 Kinsella pp 46 50 amp 260 261 MacKillop pp 333 334 Mongan Meyer Appendix V The chronology of the annals is uncertain but the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach are both in agreement as to the sequence of events which is that Fiachnae mac Baetain is killed in battle against Fiachnae mac Demmain the year following Mongan s death and that Fiachnae mac Demmain was defeated and killed by Connad Cerr two years after Mongan s death Byrne p 112 Meyer Appendix II Wiley Scel asa mberar co mbad he Find mac Cumaill Mongan ocus ani dia fil aided Fothaid Airgdig MacKillop pp 333 334 Mongan Wiley Scel Mongain Wiley Scel Mongain Meyer Appendix III Wiley Scel Mongain Meyer Appendix IV Wiley Tucait Baili Mongain Meyer Appendix II Wiley Scel asa mberar co mbad he Find mac Cumaill Mongan ocus ani dia fil aided Fothaid Airgdig MacKillop pp 333 334 Mongan Meyer Appendix IX MacKillop p 52 Brandub pp 154 155 Dub Lacha amp pp 333 334 Mongan Meyer Appendix V Wiley Cid dia tall Eochaid Rigeiges degiartaige o Mongan MacKillop p 185 Eochaid Eigeas Anderson pp 147 148 Annals of Tigernach AT 626 6 Another different verse is included in the notice of Mongan s death in the Annals of Ulster AU 625 2 References and further reading editAnnals of Ulster AD 431 1201 CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2003 retrieved 23 March 2008 Annals of Tigernach CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 1996 retrieved 23 March 2008 Anderson Alan Orr 1922 Early Sources of Scottish History A D 500 to 1286 vol I 1990 revised amp corrected ed Stamford Paul Watkins ISBN 1 871615 03 8 Byrne Francis John 1973 Irish Kings and High Kings London Batsford ISBN 0 7134 5882 8 Carney James 2005 Language and literature to 1169 in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 451 510 ISBN 978 0 19 922665 8 Charles Edwards T M Early Christian Ireland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 36395 0 Kinsella Thomas 1970 The Tain Translated from the Irish epic Tain Bo Cuailnge Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 281090 1 Mac Cana Proinsias 2007 Ireland and Wales in the Middle Ages an overview in Jankulak Karen Wooding Jonathan M eds Ireland and Wales in the Middle Ages Dublin Four Courts Press pp 17 45 ISBN 978 1 85182 748 0 MacKillop James 1998 Oxford Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860967 1 Meyer Kuno 1895 The Voyage of Bran son of Febal to the Land of the Living London D Nutt White Nora 2006 Compert Mongain and three other early Mongan tales Maynooth Medieval Irish Texts vol 5 Maynooth Department of Old and Middle Irish National University of Ireland ISSN 1393 970X Wiley Dan 2004 The Cycles of the Kings archived from the original on 27 December 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongan mac Fiachnai amp oldid 1209049077, wikipedia, wiki, 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