fbpx
Wikipedia

Niall of the Nine Hostages

Niall Noígíallach (pronounced [ˈniːəl noɪˈɣiːələx]; Old Irish "having nine hostages"),[1] or Niall of the Nine Hostages, was a legendary, semi-historical Irish king who was the ancestor of the Uí Néill dynasties that dominated Ireland from the 6th to the 10th centuries.[2] Irish annalistic and chronicle sources place his reign in the late 4th and early 5th centuries, although modern scholars, through critical study of the annals, date him about half a century later.

Historicity and dates

Niall is presumed, on the basis of the importance of his sons and grandsons, to have been a historical person,[3]: 70  but the early Irish annals say little about him. The Annals of Inisfallen date his death before 382, and the Chronicon Scotorum to 411.[4] The later Annals of the Four Masters dates his reign to 379–405,[5] and the chronology of Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn to 368–395.[6]

However, the early annals record the activities of his sons between 429 and 516, an implausibly long time-span for a single generation, leading scholars like Kathleen Hughes[4] and Francis J. Byrne[3]: 78–79  to conclude that the events of the later half of the 5th century have been extended backwards to accommodate as early a date as possible for the arrival of Saint Patrick, with the effect of pushing Niall back up to half a century. Hughes says "Niall himself must have died not before the middle of the fifth century".[4] Byrne, following James Carney, is a little more precise, dating his death to c. 452.[3]: 81 

Niall is placed in the traditional list of High Kings of Ireland. However, the traditional roll of kings and its chronology is now recognised as artificial. The High Kingship did not become a reality until the 9th century, and Niall's status has been inflated in line with the political importance of the dynasty he founded.[3]: 70 

T. F. O'Rahilly argues that Niall and his sons were responsible for the breakup of the ancient kingdom of Ulster and the creation of the kingdoms of Tír Chonaill and Tír Eoghain, and the satellite kingdom of the Airgíalla.[7]: 222–232  O'Rahilly and Byrne argue that the literary sources, though late and garbled, preserve genuine traditions that Niall led raids on Britain, and perhaps died on one.[3]: 76–78 [7]: 220 

Professor Dáithí Ó hÓgáin seems to indicate that Niall was likely a descendant of the Gaulish seafaring tribe of the Veneti, who originated in south-east Armorica (modern Brittany, France). Some of these sailors probably migrated to Cornwall, and later to south-eastern Ireland where they became known as the Venii and grew in power. They worshipped a ram god and sometimes called themselves Ghaisonli ('spear-men'), possibly to compete in propaganda with the Lagini ('lance-men').

The southern Venii came to be known as the Eoghanacht, while another group of them migrated north and formed a new kingdom west of the River Shannon where they became known as the Connachta after a revered leader named Conn. These Connachta later extended their power eastward into the plain of Meath, and under the leader Teutovalos Teachtmhar overthrew the kingship of the Lagini at Tara around AD 300. As the Celtic language in Ireland transformed into Irish between AD 400–500, Venii became Féni, and were also known to have called themselves Gaídhil (from Common Celtic *wēdelos, Brythonic gwddel, Goidelic *wēdus to Old Irish Goídel—meaning savage woodsman, wild, raider). The Primitive Irish Vendo is a cognate with Finn, and the Fianna were landless, aristocratic young men and women who had not yet come into their inheritance of land. Niall, the son of Ivocatus Magumedonus ('Eochaidh the Slave-ruler'), came to lead the Connachta in the fifth century AD.[8]

Legendary biography

A biography of Niall can be constructed from sources such as the "Roll of Kings" section of the 11th-century Lebor Gabála Érenn, the Annals of the Four Masters, compiled in the 17th-century, chronicles such as Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn (1634), and legendary tales like the 11th-century "The Adventure of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon" and "The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages". These sources date from long after Niall's time and they have little to no value as history.

Early life

A legendary account of Niall's birth and early life is given in the possibly-11th-century tale Echtra mac nEchach Muimedóin ("The adventure of the sons of Eochaid Mugmedón"). In it, Eochaid Mugmedón, the High King of Ireland, had five sons: Four, Brión, Ailill, Fiachrae and Fergus, by his first wife Mongfind, sister of the king of Munster, Crimthann mac Fidaig; and a fifth, Niall, by his second wife Cairenn Chasdub, daughter of Sachell Balb, king of the Saxons. While Cairenn is pregnant with Niall, the jealous Mongfind forces her to do heavy work, hoping to make her miscarry. She gives birth as she is drawing water, but out of fear of Mongfind, she leaves the child on the ground, exposed to the birds. The baby is rescued and brought up by a poet called Torna. When Niall grows up he returns to Tara and rescues his mother from her labour.[9][10]

Although it is anachronistic for Niall's mother to have been a Saxon, O'Rahilly argues that the name Cairenn is derived from the Latin name Carina, and that it is plausible that she might have been a Romano-Briton.[7]: 216–217  Keating describes her not as a Saxon but as the "daughter of the king of Britain".[6] Mongfind appears to have been a supernatural personage: the saga "The Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig" says the festival of Samhain was commonly called the "Festival of Mongfind", and prayers were offered to her on Samhain eve.[11]

Accession

Seeing Niall's popularity among the nobles, Mongfind demands that Eochaid name a successor, hoping it will be one of her sons. Eochaid gives the task to a druid, Sithchenn, who devises a contest between the brothers, shutting them in a burning forge, telling them to save what they can, and judging them based on which objects they choose to save. Niall, who emerges carrying an anvil, is deemed greater than Brión, with a sledgehammer, Fiachrae with bellows and a pail of beer, Ailill with a chest of weapons, and Fergus with a bundle of wood. Mongfind refuses to accept the decision.

Sithchenn takes the brothers to the smith, who makes them weapons, and sends them out hunting. Each brother in turn goes looking for water, and finds a well guarded by a hideous hag who demands a kiss in return for water. Fergus and Ailill refuse and return empty-handed. Fiachrae gives her a quick peck, but not enough to satisfy her. Only Niall kisses her properly, and she is revealed as a beautiful maiden, the Sovereignty of Ireland. She grants Niall not only water but the kingship for many generations—twenty-six of his descendants will be High Kings of Ireland. Fiachrae is granted a minor royal line—two of his descendants, Nath Í and Ailill Molt, will be High Kings.[9]

This "loathly lady" motif appears in myth and folklore throughout the world. Variations of this story are told of the earlier Irish high king Lugaid Loígde, in Arthurian legend—one of the most famous versions appears in both Geoffrey Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Tale and the related Gawain romance, The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle—and in John Gower's Middle English poem Confessio Amantis.[12]

In another story, the succession is not settled when Eochaid dies, and Mongfind's brother Crimthann takes the high kingship. But while he is away on a tour of his lands in Scotland, Mongfind's sons seize Ireland. Crimthann returns to Ireland intending to give battle. Mongfind, purporting to make peace between her brother and her sons, holds a feast, at which she serves Crimthann a poisoned drink. Crimthann refuses to drink it unless she does too; they both drink, and both die. Niall succeeds to the High Kingship, and Brión becomes his second in command.[11] Another version has Mongfind try to poison Niall, but she takes the poison herself by mistake.[13]

While Niall is high king, his brothers establish themselves as local kings. Brión rules the province of Connacht, but Fiachrae makes war against him. Brión defeats Fiachrae and hands him over as a prisoner to Niall, but Fiachrae's son Nath Í continues the war and eventually kills Brión. Niall releases Fiachrae, who becomes king of Connacht and Niall's right-hand man. Fiachrae and Ailill then make war against Crimthann's son Eochaid, king of Munster. They defeat him and win great spoil, but Fiachrae is wounded in the battle and dies of his wounds shortly afterwards. The Munstermen renew the battle, capture Ailill and cut him to pieces, and war continues between Munster and Connacht for many years.[11]

Death

The Lebor Gabála Érenn says there was war between Niall and Énnae Cennsalach, king of Leinster, over the bórama or cow-tribute first imposed on Leinster by Tuathal Techtmar.[14] Énna's son Eochaid is named as Niall's killer in all sources, although the circumstances vary. All sources agree he died outside Ireland. The earliest version of the Lebor Gabála says Eochaid killed him on the English Channel, later versions adding that Niall was invading Brittany when this happened. Keating, quoting a Latin Life of Saint Patrick, says that Niall led Irish raids on Roman Britain, and in one of those raids Patrick and his sisters were abducted. Keating associates these raids with those mentioned by Gildas and Bede, and deduces that, since some Irish sources say Patrick was abducted from Brittany, that Niall's raids must have extended to continental Europe as well.[6]

In the saga "The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages", Eochaid's enmity with Niall begins when he is refused hospitality by Niall's poet, Laidcenn mac Bairchid. He makes war and destroys the poet's stronghold, killing his son Leat[15] (Keating has it that Laidchenn was a druid, and that Eochaid killed his son after he used defamatory language towards him).[6] Laidchenn responds by satirising Leinster so that no corn, grass or leaves grow there for a year. Then Niall makes war against Leinster, and peace is concluded on the condition that Eochaid is handed over. Niall chains Eochaid to a standing stone, and sends nine warriors to execute him, but Eochaid breaks his chain and kills all nine of them with it. He then kills Laidchenn by throwing a stone which lodges in his forehead. Niall exiles him to Scotland. The story then becomes confused. Niall makes war in Europe as far as the Alps, and the Romans send an ambassador to parlay with him. Abruptly, the tale then has Niall appearing before an assembly of Pictish bards in Scotland, where he is killed by an arrow shot by Eochaid from the other side of the valley. Keating has Eochaid shoot Niall from the opposite bank of the river Loire during his European campaign. His men carry his body home, fighting seven battles on the way, and his foster-father Torna dies of grief. His body is said to have been buried at Ochann, now known as Faughan Hill at Jordanstown, a few miles west of Navan in County Meath.[13] He is succeeded by his nephew Nath Í.

Byrne suggests that Niall's death took place during a raid on Roman Britain. Irish tradition had forgotten that the Romans once ruled Britain, and relocated his remembered confrontations with the Empire to continental Europe, with Alba, the ancient name for Britain, being confused with Elpa, the Alps, or being understood with its later meaning of Scotland.[3] A poem by the 11th-century poet Cináed Ua hArtacáin in the Book of Leinster credits Niall with seven raids on Britain, on the last of which he was killed by Eochaid "above the surf of the Ictian Sea";[3][16] a poem attributed to the same poet in Lebor na hUidre credits him with going to the Alps seven times.[7]

Family and descendants

Keating credits Niall with two wives: Inne, daughter of Lugaid, who bore him one son, Fiachu; and Rignach, who bore him seven sons, Lóegaire, Éndae, Maine, Eógan, Conall Gulban, Conall Cremthainne and Coirpre.[6] These sons are the eponymous ancestors of the various Uí Néill dynasties: Eógan of the Cenél nEógain and Conall Gulban of the Cenél Conaill, making up the northern Uí Néill; Fiachu of the Cenél Fiachach dynasty, Lóegaire (the king who Saint Patrick is said to have converted) of the Cenél Lóegaire, Maine of the Uí Maine, Eógan of the Cenél nEógain, Conall Cremthainne of the Clann Cholmáin and the Síl nÁedo Sláine, and Coirpre of the Cenél Coirpri, making up the southern Uí Néill.[3] The O'Higgins family claims descent from the Southern branch of Uí Néill. Famous descendants include Niall's great-great-grandson Saint Columba, Saint Máel Ruba, the Kings of Ailech, the Kings of Tir Eogain, and the Kings of Tír Conaill.[17] The Scottish Clan Ewen of Otter, Gilchrist; Clan Lamont; the MacSorleys of Monydrain,[18] (of Clan MacDonald of Dunnyveg a branch of Clan Donald); Clan Maclachlan; Clan MacNeil, and the MacSweens all claim a descent from an Irish prince of the O'Neill dynasty, Ánrothán Ua Néill/Anrothan O'Neill, son of Áed, son of Flaithbertach Ua Néill, King of Ailech and Cenél nEógain, who left Ireland for Kintyre in the 11th century and died 1036.

As next-generation sequencing has become available, various chief lines have been tested. Although these studies are not coordinated with each other and are ongoing, it is already apparent that not all of these lineages are related to each other within Niall's timeframe. For instance, the chiefs of Clan Donald are now known to belong to a branch of Haplogroup R1a, which split from Niall's hypothetical lineage over 20,000 years ago.[19]

Y Chromosome Analysis

Following a 2006 hypothesis by Moore et al.[20] suggesting that his Y chromosomal signature had been discovered, popular science journalists and genetic testing companies began promoting the theory that millions alive today have an unbroken descent from Niall.[21]

Geneticists at Trinity College Dublin found that 21 percent of men from north-western Ireland, 8 percent from all of Ireland, a substantial percentage of men from western and central Scotland, and about 2 percent of men from New York bore the same Y-chromosome haplotype. The geneticists estimated that about 2–3 million men bear this haplotype. Moore et al. concluded that these men descend from "a single early-medieval progenitor" and implied this was associated with Niall's dynasty. While Moore et al. did not specifically state that Niall was the progenitor of M222, journalists quickly jumped to that conclusion.[22][23] According to the PBS documentary series Finding Your Roots, Bill O'Reilly, Stephen Colbert, Colin Quinn, Bill Maher, and the show's host, Henry Louis Gates Jr. all display STR markers consistent with the Irish Modal Haplotype.[24] The series suggested that Niall may have been the most fecund male in Irish history.

This suggestion is no longer plausible. Niall does not have verifiable remains that can be tested. Furthermore, the paper examined only 17 STR loci, which are not a reliable means of verifying descent, as SNPs, which define haplogroups and subclades, would be.[25] Indeed, more recent estimates indicate that the R1b-M222 subclade marked by the Moore et al. haplotype likely originated in the 2nd millennium BC, long before Niall is claimed to have lived, so his descendants would only represent a minority of men in this group even if Niall had been a historical figure.[26]

Perhaps even more problematic is the dearth of M222 lineages in Midlands samples. We would expect to find a large concentration of Niall's descendants there, as the Southern Uí Néill were dominant in that region, but we do not. Because of that, the identification of M222 with Niall's descendants is "difficult to justify".[27]

Origin of his epithet

There are various versions of how Niall gained his epithet Noígíallach. The saga "The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages" says that he received five hostages from the five provinces of Ireland (Ulster, Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Meath), and one each from Scotland, the Saxons, the Britons and the Franks.[15] Keating says that he received five from the five provinces of Ireland, and four from Scotland.[6] O'Rahilly suggests that the nine hostages were from the kingdom of the Airgialla (literally "hostage-givers"), a satellite state founded by the Ui Néill's conquests in Ulster, noting that the early Irish legal text Lebor na gCeart ("The Book of Rights") says that the only duty of the Airgialla to the King of Ireland was to give him nine hostages.[7]

Family tree

Bold indicates a High King of Ireland.

Preceded by King of The Connachta
?–c. 450
Succeeded by
Preceded by High King of Ireland
FFE 368–395
AFM 378–405
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ noí, nine; gíall, a human pledge or hostage; the possessive suffix -ach (Dictionary of the Irish Language, Compact Edition, 1990, pp. 360, 479–480; Rudolf Thurneysen, A Grammar of Old Irish, 1946, p. 220). Also spelled Noí nGiallach, Naígiallach, Naoighiallach etc
  2. ^ "Was Niall of the Nine Hostages a real person? – SidmartinBio". www.sidmartinbio.org. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Francis J. Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, Second Edition, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2001, ISBN 978-1851821969
  4. ^ a b c Kathleen Hughes, "The church in Irish society, 400–800, in Dáibhí Ó Cróinín (ed.), A New History of Ireland Vol I: Prehistoric and Early Ireland, Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 306–308
  5. ^ Annals of the Four Masters M378-405
  6. ^ a b c d e f Geoffrey Keating, Foras Feasa ar Éirinn 1.48, 1.49, 1.50, 51, 52
  7. ^ a b c d e T. F. O'Rahilly, Early Irish History and Mythology, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1946
  8. ^ Dáithí Ó hÓgáin, "The Celts: A History", 2002, pp. 211.
  9. ^ a b Tom Peete Cross & Clark Harris Slover (eds.), "The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon", Ancient Irish Tales, 1936, pp. 508–513
  10. ^ Echtra Mac nEchach, trans. by John Carey, in The Celtic Heroic Age: Literary Sources for Ancient Celtic Europe & Early Ireland & Wales, ed. by John T. Koch and John Carey, Celtic Studies Publications, 1, 4th edn (Aberystwyth: Celtic Studies Publications, 2003), pp. 203–208.
  11. ^ a b c "The Death of Crimthann son of Fidach" (translator unknown)
  12. ^ Myles Dillon, The Cycles of the Kings, 1946, pp. 38–41
  13. ^ a b James MacKillop, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology, 1998, pp. 305–306
  14. ^ R.A. Stewart MacAlister (ed. & trans.), Lebor Gabála Érenn Part V, Irish Texts Society, 1956, p. 349
  15. ^ a b Tom Peete Cross & Clark Harris Slover (eds.), "The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages", Ancient Irish Tales, 1936, pp. 514–517
  16. ^ Edward Gwynn (ed. & trans), "Ochan", The Metrical Dindshenchas Vol 2, 1906, pp. 37–41
  17. ^ Byrne 2001[page needed]
  18. ^ Black (2012); Sellar (1971).
  19. ^ "Show Somerled People | Clan Donald USA, Inc". Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  20. ^ Moore, LT; McEvoy, B; Cape, E; Simms, K; Bradley, DG (2006), "A Y-Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic Ireland", American Journal of Human Genetics, 78 (2): 334–338, doi:10.1086/500055, PMC 1380239, PMID 16358217
  21. ^ e.g. “The genetic imprint of Niall of the Nine Hostages”, The Irish Times, Aoife McLysaght, 24 Apr 2014
  22. ^ Wade, Nicholas (18 January 2006), "If Irish Claim Nobility, Science May Approve", The New York Times
  23. ^ Moore, LT; McEvoy, B; Cape, E; Simms, K; Bradley1, DG (2006), "A Y-Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic Ireland", American Journal of Human Genetics, 78 (2): 334–338, doi:10.1086/500055, PMC 1380239, PMID 16358217 Accessed via National Center for Biotechnology Information.
  24. ^ Finding your Roots PBS January 12, 2016
  25. ^ "Dubious commercial claims". www.ucl.ac.uk. 13 February 2019. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  26. ^ Howard, W.E. and McLaughlin, J.D., 2011. “A dated phylogenetic tree of M222 SNP haplotypes: exploring the DNA of Irish and Scottish surnames and possible ties to Niall and the Uí Néill kindred”, Familia: Ulster Genealogical Review, 27, 34.
  27. ^ Swift, Catherine (2013). "Interlaced scholarship: genealogies and genetics in twenty-first century Ireland" in: Duffy, Seán (ed.), Princes, prelates and poets in medieval Ireland: essays in honour of Katharine Simms. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 18–31.

Bibliography

  • Bhreathnach, Edel (2005), The Kingship and Landscape of Tara, Dublin: Four Courts Press, ISBN 1-85182-954-7
  • Burke, Bernard (1976), Burke's Irish family records, London: Burke's Peerage, ISBN 0-85011-018-1
  • Byrne, Francis John (2001), Irish Kings and High-Kings, Dublin: Four Courts Press, ISBN 1-85182-196-1
  • Thomas Charles-Edwards, Charles-Edwards, Thomas (2007), Early Christian Ireland, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-052136395-2
  • 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. pp. 508–513.
  • Ambassador Walter Curley, Vanishing Kingdoms: The Irish Chiefs and their Families. Dublin: Lilliput Press. 2004.
  • Myles Dillon, The Cycles of the Kings. Oxford. 1946. (Four Courts Press edition, 1995.)
  • Duffy, Seán (ed.), Medieval Ireland: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. 2005.
  • FitzPatrick, Elizabeth (2004), Royal Inauguration in Gaelic Ireland c. 1100–1600: A Cultural Landscape Study, Boydell Press, ISBN 978-184383090-0
  • Patrick Weston Joyce, A Social History of Ancient Ireland, Vol. I and A Social History of Ancient Ireland, Vol. II. Longmans, Green, and Co. 1903.
  • Geoffrey Keating, with David Comyn and Patrick S. Dinneen (trans.), The History of Ireland by Geoffrey Keating. 4 Vols. London: David Nutt for the Irish Texts Society. 1902–14.
  • Foster, Roy (ed.), The Oxford Illustrated History of Ireland. Oxford University Press. 2001.
  • Joynt, Maud (ed. & tr.), "Echtra Mac Echdach Mugmedóin", in Ériu 4 (1910): 91–111.
  • Koch, John T. (ed.), Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. 5 volumes or single ebook. ABC-CLIO. 2006.
  • MacKillop, James, A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford. 1998.
  • Edward MacLysaght, Irish Families: Their Names, Arms and Origins. Irish Academic Press. 4th edition, 1998.
  • Mac Niocaill, Gearóid, Ireland before the Vikings. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. 1972.
  • Kuno Meyer (ed.), "The Laud Genealogies and Tribal Histories", in Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie 8. Halle/Saale, Max Niemeyer. 1912. pp. 291–338.
  • Moore, Laoise T., Brian McEvoy, Eleanor Cape, Katharine Simms and Daniel G. Bradley, "A Y-Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic Ireland." The American Journal of Human Genetics 78 (February 2006): 334–338.
  • Ó Canann, Tomás G., , Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland
  • Donnchadh Ó Corráin (ed.), Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502. University College, Cork: Corpus of Electronic Texts. 1997.
  • Ó Corráin, Donnchadh, Ireland before the Normans. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. 1972.
  • Dáibhí Ó Cróinín (ed.), A New History of Ireland: Prehistoric and Early Ireland, Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. 2005.
  • John O'Donovan (scholar) (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.
  • Standish Hayes O'Grady (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. pp. 373–378. (also available here [1])
  • O'Grady, Standish H. (ed. and tr.), "The Story of Eochaidh Muighmedóin's Sons", in Silva Gadelica Williams and Norgate. 1892. pp. 368–373.
  • John O'Hart, Irish Pedigrees. Dublin. 5th edition, 1892.
  • T.F. O'Rahilly, Early Irish History and Mythology. Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. 1946.
  • Richter, Michael, Medieval Ireland: The Enduring Tradition. Palgrave Macmillan. 1996.
  • Whitley Stokes (ed. and tr.), "Aided Chrimthaind Maic Fhidaig: The Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig", in Revue Celtique 24. 1903. pp. 172–189.
  • Stokes, Whitley (ed. and tr.), "Echtra Mac nEchach Muigmedóin: The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Muigmedóin", in Revue Celtique 24. 1903. pp. 190–207.
  • Welch, Robert (ed.) with Bruce Stewart, The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Oxford University Press. 1996.

External links

  • eDIL: electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
  • Irish Kings
  • High Kings of Ireland
  • Echtra mac nEchach bibliography

niall, nine, hostages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, june, 2018, learn, when, remove, this, template, messag. 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 June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Niall Noigiallach pronounced ˈniːel noɪˈɣiːelex Old Irish having nine hostages 1 or Niall of the Nine Hostages was a legendary semi historical Irish king who was the ancestor of the Ui Neill dynasties that dominated Ireland from the 6th to the 10th centuries 2 Irish annalistic and chronicle sources place his reign in the late 4th and early 5th centuries although modern scholars through critical study of the annals date him about half a century later The Ui Neill s Lamh Dhearg Uladh Contents 1 Historicity and dates 2 Legendary biography 2 1 Early life 2 2 Accession 2 3 Death 2 4 Family and descendants 2 4 1 Y Chromosome Analysis 2 5 Origin of his epithet 3 Family tree 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksHistoricity and dates EditNiall is presumed on the basis of the importance of his sons and grandsons to have been a historical person 3 70 but the early Irish annals say little about him The Annals of Inisfallen date his death before 382 and the Chronicon Scotorum to 411 4 The later Annals of the Four Masters dates his reign to 379 405 5 and the chronology of Geoffrey Keating s Foras Feasa ar Eirinn to 368 395 6 However the early annals record the activities of his sons between 429 and 516 an implausibly long time span for a single generation leading scholars like Kathleen Hughes 4 and Francis J Byrne 3 78 79 to conclude that the events of the later half of the 5th century have been extended backwards to accommodate as early a date as possible for the arrival of Saint Patrick with the effect of pushing Niall back up to half a century Hughes says Niall himself must have died not before the middle of the fifth century 4 Byrne following James Carney is a little more precise dating his death to c 452 3 81 Niall is placed in the traditional list of High Kings of Ireland However the traditional roll of kings and its chronology is now recognised as artificial The High Kingship did not become a reality until the 9th century and Niall s status has been inflated in line with the political importance of the dynasty he founded 3 70 T F O Rahilly argues that Niall and his sons were responsible for the breakup of the ancient kingdom of Ulster and the creation of the kingdoms of Tir Chonaill and Tir Eoghain and the satellite kingdom of the Airgialla 7 222 232 O Rahilly and Byrne argue that the literary sources though late and garbled preserve genuine traditions that Niall led raids on Britain and perhaps died on one 3 76 78 7 220 Professor Daithi o hogain seems to indicate that Niall was likely a descendant of the Gaulish seafaring tribe of the Veneti who originated in south east Armorica modern Brittany France Some of these sailors probably migrated to Cornwall and later to south eastern Ireland where they became known as the Venii and grew in power They worshipped a ram god and sometimes called themselves Ghaisonli spear men possibly to compete in propaganda with the Lagini lance men The southern Venii came to be known as the Eoghanacht while another group of them migrated north and formed a new kingdom west of the River Shannon where they became known as the Connachta after a revered leader named Conn These Connachta later extended their power eastward into the plain of Meath and under the leader Teutovalos Teachtmhar overthrew the kingship of the Lagini at Tara around AD 300 As the Celtic language in Ireland transformed into Irish between AD 400 500 Venii became Feni and were also known to have called themselves Gaidhil from Common Celtic wedelos Brythonic gwddel Goidelic wedus to Old Irish Goidel meaning savage woodsman wild raider The Primitive Irish Vendo is a cognate with Finn and the Fianna were landless aristocratic young men and women who had not yet come into their inheritance of land Niall the son of Ivocatus Magumedonus Eochaidh the Slave ruler came to lead the Connachta in the fifth century AD 8 Legendary biography EditA biography of Niall can be constructed from sources such as the Roll of Kings section of the 11th century Lebor Gabala Erenn the Annals of the Four Masters compiled in the 17th century chronicles such as Geoffrey Keating s Foras Feasa ar Eirinn 1634 and legendary tales like the 11th century The Adventure of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon and The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages These sources date from long after Niall s time and they have little to no value as history Early life Edit A legendary account of Niall s birth and early life is given in the possibly 11th century tale Echtra mac nEchach Muimedoin The adventure of the sons of Eochaid Mugmedon In it Eochaid Mugmedon the High King of Ireland had five sons Four Brion Ailill Fiachrae and Fergus by his first wife Mongfind sister of the king of Munster Crimthann mac Fidaig and a fifth Niall by his second wife Cairenn Chasdub daughter of Sachell Balb king of the Saxons While Cairenn is pregnant with Niall the jealous Mongfind forces her to do heavy work hoping to make her miscarry She gives birth as she is drawing water but out of fear of Mongfind she leaves the child on the ground exposed to the birds The baby is rescued and brought up by a poet called Torna When Niall grows up he returns to Tara and rescues his mother from her labour 9 10 Although it is anachronistic for Niall s mother to have been a Saxon O Rahilly argues that the name Cairenn is derived from the Latin name Carina and that it is plausible that she might have been a Romano Briton 7 216 217 Keating describes her not as a Saxon but as the daughter of the king of Britain 6 Mongfind appears to have been a supernatural personage the saga The Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig says the festival of Samhain was commonly called the Festival of Mongfind and prayers were offered to her on Samhain eve 11 Accession Edit Seeing Niall s popularity among the nobles Mongfind demands that Eochaid name a successor hoping it will be one of her sons Eochaid gives the task to a druid Sithchenn who devises a contest between the brothers shutting them in a burning forge telling them to save what they can and judging them based on which objects they choose to save Niall who emerges carrying an anvil is deemed greater than Brion with a sledgehammer Fiachrae with bellows and a pail of beer Ailill with a chest of weapons and Fergus with a bundle of wood Mongfind refuses to accept the decision Sithchenn takes the brothers to the smith who makes them weapons and sends them out hunting Each brother in turn goes looking for water and finds a well guarded by a hideous hag who demands a kiss in return for water Fergus and Ailill refuse and return empty handed Fiachrae gives her a quick peck but not enough to satisfy her Only Niall kisses her properly and she is revealed as a beautiful maiden the Sovereignty of Ireland She grants Niall not only water but the kingship for many generations twenty six of his descendants will be High Kings of Ireland Fiachrae is granted a minor royal line two of his descendants Nath I and Ailill Molt will be High Kings 9 This loathly lady motif appears in myth and folklore throughout the world Variations of this story are told of the earlier Irish high king Lugaid Loigde in Arthurian legend one of the most famous versions appears in both Geoffrey Chaucer s The Wife of Bath s Tale and the related Gawain romance The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle and in John Gower s Middle English poem Confessio Amantis 12 In another story the succession is not settled when Eochaid dies and Mongfind s brother Crimthann takes the high kingship But while he is away on a tour of his lands in Scotland Mongfind s sons seize Ireland Crimthann returns to Ireland intending to give battle Mongfind purporting to make peace between her brother and her sons holds a feast at which she serves Crimthann a poisoned drink Crimthann refuses to drink it unless she does too they both drink and both die Niall succeeds to the High Kingship and Brion becomes his second in command 11 Another version has Mongfind try to poison Niall but she takes the poison herself by mistake 13 While Niall is high king his brothers establish themselves as local kings Brion rules the province of Connacht but Fiachrae makes war against him Brion defeats Fiachrae and hands him over as a prisoner to Niall but Fiachrae s son Nath I continues the war and eventually kills Brion Niall releases Fiachrae who becomes king of Connacht and Niall s right hand man Fiachrae and Ailill then make war against Crimthann s son Eochaid king of Munster They defeat him and win great spoil but Fiachrae is wounded in the battle and dies of his wounds shortly afterwards The Munstermen renew the battle capture Ailill and cut him to pieces and war continues between Munster and Connacht for many years 11 Death Edit The Lebor Gabala Erenn says there was war between Niall and Ennae Cennsalach king of Leinster over the borama or cow tribute first imposed on Leinster by Tuathal Techtmar 14 Enna s son Eochaid is named as Niall s killer in all sources although the circumstances vary All sources agree he died outside Ireland The earliest version of the Lebor Gabala says Eochaid killed him on the English Channel later versions adding that Niall was invading Brittany when this happened Keating quoting a Latin Life of Saint Patrick says that Niall led Irish raids on Roman Britain and in one of those raids Patrick and his sisters were abducted Keating associates these raids with those mentioned by Gildas and Bede and deduces that since some Irish sources say Patrick was abducted from Brittany that Niall s raids must have extended to continental Europe as well 6 In the saga The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages Eochaid s enmity with Niall begins when he is refused hospitality by Niall s poet Laidcenn mac Bairchid He makes war and destroys the poet s stronghold killing his son Leat 15 Keating has it that Laidchenn was a druid and that Eochaid killed his son after he used defamatory language towards him 6 Laidchenn responds by satirising Leinster so that no corn grass or leaves grow there for a year Then Niall makes war against Leinster and peace is concluded on the condition that Eochaid is handed over Niall chains Eochaid to a standing stone and sends nine warriors to execute him but Eochaid breaks his chain and kills all nine of them with it He then kills Laidchenn by throwing a stone which lodges in his forehead Niall exiles him to Scotland The story then becomes confused Niall makes war in Europe as far as the Alps and the Romans send an ambassador to parlay with him Abruptly the tale then has Niall appearing before an assembly of Pictish bards in Scotland where he is killed by an arrow shot by Eochaid from the other side of the valley Keating has Eochaid shoot Niall from the opposite bank of the river Loire during his European campaign His men carry his body home fighting seven battles on the way and his foster father Torna dies of grief His body is said to have been buried at Ochann now known as Faughan Hill at Jordanstown a few miles west of Navan in County Meath 13 He is succeeded by his nephew Nath I Byrne suggests that Niall s death took place during a raid on Roman Britain Irish tradition had forgotten that the Romans once ruled Britain and relocated his remembered confrontations with the Empire to continental Europe with Alba the ancient name for Britain being confused with Elpa the Alps or being understood with its later meaning of Scotland 3 A poem by the 11th century poet Cinaed Ua hArtacain in the Book of Leinster credits Niall with seven raids on Britain on the last of which he was killed by Eochaid above the surf of the Ictian Sea 3 16 a poem attributed to the same poet in Lebor na hUidre credits him with going to the Alps seven times 7 Family and descendants Edit Keating credits Niall with two wives Inne daughter of Lugaid who bore him one son Fiachu and Rignach who bore him seven sons Loegaire Endae Maine Eogan Conall Gulban Conall Cremthainne and Coirpre 6 These sons are the eponymous ancestors of the various Ui Neill dynasties Eogan of the Cenel nEogain and Conall Gulban of the Cenel Conaill making up the northern Ui Neill Fiachu of the Cenel Fiachach dynasty Loegaire the king who Saint Patrick is said to have converted of the Cenel Loegaire Maine of the Ui Maine Eogan of the Cenel nEogain Conall Cremthainne of the Clann Cholmain and the Sil nAedo Slaine and Coirpre of the Cenel Coirpri making up the southern Ui Neill 3 The O Higgins family claims descent from the Southern branch of Ui Neill Famous descendants include Niall s great great grandson Saint Columba Saint Mael Ruba the Kings of Ailech the Kings of Tir Eogain and the Kings of Tir Conaill 17 The Scottish Clan Ewen of Otter Gilchrist Clan Lamont the MacSorleys of Monydrain 18 of Clan MacDonald of Dunnyveg a branch of Clan Donald Clan Maclachlan Clan MacNeil and the MacSweens all claim a descent from an Irish prince of the O Neill dynasty Anrothan Ua Neill Anrothan O Neill son of Aed son of Flaithbertach Ua Neill King of Ailech and Cenel nEogain who left Ireland for Kintyre in the 11th century and died 1036 As next generation sequencing has become available various chief lines have been tested Although these studies are not coordinated with each other and are ongoing it is already apparent that not all of these lineages are related to each other within Niall s timeframe For instance the chiefs of Clan Donald are now known to belong to a branch of Haplogroup R1a which split from Niall s hypothetical lineage over 20 000 years ago 19 Y Chromosome Analysis Edit Following a 2006 hypothesis by Moore et al 20 suggesting that his Y chromosomal signature had been discovered popular science journalists and genetic testing companies began promoting the theory that millions alive today have an unbroken descent from Niall 21 Geneticists at Trinity College Dublin found that 21 percent of men from north western Ireland 8 percent from all of Ireland a substantial percentage of men from western and central Scotland and about 2 percent of men from New York bore the same Y chromosome haplotype The geneticists estimated that about 2 3 million men bear this haplotype Moore et al concluded that these men descend from a single early medieval progenitor and implied this was associated with Niall s dynasty While Moore et al did not specifically state that Niall was the progenitor of M222 journalists quickly jumped to that conclusion 22 23 According to the PBS documentary series Finding Your Roots Bill O Reilly Stephen Colbert Colin Quinn Bill Maher and the show s host Henry Louis Gates Jr all display STR markers consistent with the Irish Modal Haplotype 24 The series suggested that Niall may have been the most fecund male in Irish history This suggestion is no longer plausible Niall does not have verifiable remains that can be tested Furthermore the paper examined only 17 STR loci which are not a reliable means of verifying descent as SNPs which define haplogroups and subclades would be 25 Indeed more recent estimates indicate that the R1b M222 subclade marked by the Moore et al haplotype likely originated in the 2nd millennium BC long before Niall is claimed to have lived so his descendants would only represent a minority of men in this group even if Niall had been a historical figure 26 Perhaps even more problematic is the dearth of M222 lineages in Midlands samples We would expect to find a large concentration of Niall s descendants there as the Southern Ui Neill were dominant in that region but we do not Because of that the identification of M222 with Niall s descendants is difficult to justify 27 Origin of his epithet Edit There are various versions of how Niall gained his epithet Noigiallach The saga The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages says that he received five hostages from the five provinces of Ireland Ulster Connacht Leinster Munster and Meath and one each from Scotland the Saxons the Britons and the Franks 15 Keating says that he received five from the five provinces of Ireland and four from Scotland 6 O Rahilly suggests that the nine hostages were from the kingdom of the Airgialla literally hostage givers a satellite state founded by the Ui Neill s conquests in Ulster noting that the early Irish legal text Lebor na gCeart The Book of Rights says that the only duty of the Airgialla to the King of Ireland was to give him nine hostages 7 Family tree EditBold indicates a High King of Ireland Tuathal TeachtmharFedlimid RechtmarConn CetchathachArt mac CuinnSonSonSonSonCormac mac AirtCairbre LifechairFiacha SroiptineMuiredach TirechMongfindEochaid MugmedonCairennBrionFiachraeAilillNiall NoigiallachFergusConall GulbanEndae of Cenel Enda EoganCoirpreLoegaireMaineConall CremthainneFiachuMuirdeachCormac CaechLughaid mac LoeguireFergus CerrbelArdgalMuirchertach mac ErcaeTuathal MaelgarbDiarmait mac CerbaillPreceded byEochaid Mugmedon King of The Connachta c 450 Succeeded byAmalgaid mac FiachraePreceded byCrimthann mac Fidaig High King of IrelandFFE 368 395AFM 378 405 Succeeded byNath IReferences Edit noi nine giall a human pledge or hostage the possessive suffix ach Dictionary of the Irish Language Compact Edition 1990 pp 360 479 480 Rudolf Thurneysen A Grammar of Old Irish 1946 p 220 Also spelled Noi nGiallach Naigiallach Naoighiallach etc Was Niall of the Nine Hostages a real person SidmartinBio www sidmartinbio org Retrieved 1 January 2022 a b c d e f g h Francis J Byrne Irish Kings and High Kings Second Edition Dublin Four Courts Press 2001 ISBN 978 1851821969 a b c Kathleen Hughes The church in Irish society 400 800 in Daibhi o Croinin ed A New History of Ireland Vol I Prehistoric and Early Ireland Oxford University Press 2005 pp 306 308 Annals of the Four Masters M378 405 a b c d e f Geoffrey Keating Foras Feasa ar Eirinn 1 48 1 49 1 50 51 52 a b c d e T F O Rahilly Early Irish History and Mythology Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1946 Daithi o hogain The Celts A History 2002 pp 211 a b Tom Peete Cross amp Clark Harris Slover eds The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon Ancient Irish Tales 1936 pp 508 513 Echtra Mac nEchach trans by John Carey in The Celtic Heroic Age Literary Sources for Ancient Celtic Europe amp Early Ireland amp Wales ed by John T Koch and John Carey Celtic Studies Publications 1 4th edn Aberystwyth Celtic Studies Publications 2003 pp 203 208 a b c The Death of Crimthann son of Fidach translator unknown Myles Dillon The Cycles of the Kings 1946 pp 38 41 a b James MacKillop Dictionary of Celtic Mythology 1998 pp 305 306 R A Stewart MacAlister ed amp trans Lebor Gabala Erenn Part V Irish Texts Society 1956 p 349 a b Tom Peete Cross amp Clark Harris Slover eds The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages Ancient Irish Tales 1936 pp 514 517 Edward Gwynn ed amp trans Ochan The Metrical Dindshenchas Vol 2 1906 pp 37 41 Byrne 2001 page needed Black 2012 Sellar 1971 Show Somerled People Clan Donald USA Inc Retrieved 16 July 2021 Moore LT McEvoy B Cape E Simms K Bradley DG 2006 A Y Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic Ireland American Journal of Human Genetics 78 2 334 338 doi 10 1086 500055 PMC 1380239 PMID 16358217 e g The genetic imprint of Niall of the Nine Hostages The Irish Times Aoife McLysaght 24 Apr 2014 Wade Nicholas 18 January 2006 If Irish Claim Nobility Science May Approve The New York Times Moore LT McEvoy B Cape E Simms K Bradley1 DG 2006 A Y Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic Ireland American Journal of Human Genetics 78 2 334 338 doi 10 1086 500055 PMC 1380239 PMID 16358217 Accessed via National Center for Biotechnology Information Finding your Roots PBS January 12 2016 Dubious commercial claims www ucl ac uk 13 February 2019 Retrieved 12 November 2019 Howard W E and McLaughlin J D 2011 A dated phylogenetic tree of M222 SNP haplotypes exploring the DNA of Irish and Scottish surnames and possible ties to Niall and the Ui Neill kindred Familia Ulster Genealogical Review 27 34 Swift Catherine 2013 Interlaced scholarship genealogies and genetics in twenty first century Ireland in Duffy Sean ed Princes prelates and poets in medieval Ireland essays in honour of Katharine Simms Dublin Four Courts Press pp 18 31 Bibliography EditBhreathnach Edel 2005 The Kingship and Landscape of Tara Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 954 7 Burke Bernard 1976 Burke s Irish family records London Burke s Peerage ISBN 0 85011 018 1 Byrne Francis John 2001 Irish Kings and High Kings Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 196 1 Thomas Charles Edwards Charles Edwards Thomas 2007 Early Christian Ireland Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 052136395 2 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 pp 508 513 Ambassador Walter Curley Vanishing Kingdoms The Irish Chiefs and their Families Dublin Lilliput Press 2004 Myles Dillon The Cycles of the Kings Oxford 1946 Four Courts Press edition 1995 Duffy Sean ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Routledge 2005 FitzPatrick Elizabeth 2004 Royal Inauguration in Gaelic Ireland c 1100 1600 A Cultural Landscape Study Boydell Press ISBN 978 184383090 0 Patrick Weston Joyce A Social History of Ancient Ireland Vol I and A Social History of Ancient Ireland Vol II Longmans Green and Co 1903 Geoffrey Keating with David Comyn and Patrick S Dinneen trans The History of Ireland by Geoffrey Keating 4 Vols London David Nutt for the Irish Texts Society 1902 14 Foster Roy ed The Oxford Illustrated History of Ireland Oxford University Press 2001 Joynt Maud ed amp tr Echtra Mac Echdach Mugmedoin in Eriu 4 1910 91 111 Koch John T ed Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia 5 volumes or single ebook ABC CLIO 2006 MacKillop James A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford 1998 Edward MacLysaght Irish Families Their Names Arms and Origins Irish Academic Press 4th edition 1998 Mac Niocaill Gearoid Ireland before the Vikings Dublin Gill and Macmillan 1972 Kuno Meyer ed The Laud Genealogies and Tribal Histories in Zeitschrift fur Celtische Philologie 8 Halle Saale Max Niemeyer 1912 pp 291 338 Moore Laoise T Brian McEvoy Eleanor Cape Katharine Simms and Daniel G Bradley A Y Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic Ireland The American Journal of Human Genetics 78 February 2006 334 338 o Canann Tomas G Book Review Brian Lacey Cenel Conaill and the Donegal Kingdoms AD 500 800 Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland Donnchadh o Corrain ed Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502 University College Cork Corpus of Electronic Texts 1997 o Corrain Donnchadh Ireland before the Normans Dublin Gill and Macmillan 1972 Daibhi o Croinin ed A New History of Ireland Prehistoric and Early Ireland Vol 1 Oxford University Press 2005 John O Donovan scholar 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 Standish Hayes O Grady 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 pp 373 378 also available here 1 O Grady Standish H ed and tr The Story of Eochaidh Muighmedoin s Sons in Silva Gadelica Williams and Norgate 1892 pp 368 373 John O Hart Irish Pedigrees Dublin 5th edition 1892 T F O Rahilly Early Irish History and Mythology Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1946 Richter Michael Medieval Ireland The Enduring Tradition Palgrave Macmillan 1996 Whitley Stokes ed and tr Aided Chrimthaind Maic Fhidaig The Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig in Revue Celtique 24 1903 pp 172 189 Stokes Whitley ed and tr Echtra Mac nEchach Muigmedoin The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Muigmedoin in Revue Celtique 24 1903 pp 190 207 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 Aided Neill Noigiallaig Orcuin Neill Noigiallaig Baile Chuinn Cetchathaigh Irish Kings High Kings of Ireland Echtra mac nEchach bibliography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Niall of the Nine Hostages amp oldid 1129157144, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.