Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Diarmaid (Irish: [ˈdʲiəɾˠmˠədʲ]) is a masculine given name in the Irish language, which has historically been anglicized as Jeremiah or Jeremy, names with ...
Diarmuid is magically compelled to leave the party, Gráinne in tow, knowing full well that Fionn will hunt the two of them down. [ 26 ] [ 27 ] [ 28 ] Diarmuid and Gráinne cross the Sionnan and hide in the Doire-da-Bhoth, the Wood of the Two Huts.
Diarmait was born around 1090 [3] or 1110, [4] [5] a son of Donnchadh mac Murchada, King of Leinster and Dublin.His father's paternal grandmother, Derbforgaill, was a daughter of Donnchad, King of Munster and thus a granddaughter of Brian Boru.
Of the death of Diarmaid was said:" [7] Two, seven times ten above one thousand, From the birth of Christ is reckoned, To this year, in which Diarmaid, First man in Leinster, fell. Diarmaid, of the ruddy-coloured aspect, A king who maintained the standard of war, Whose death brought scarcity of peace, The loss of the heroes of Ladhrann, with ...
In 1115, Donnchad mac Murchada and Conchobar Ua Conchobair Failge, co-kings of Leinster, [1] seized upon the faltering power of the Uí Briain controlled Kingdom of Munster, and launched an attack upon the Kingdom of Dublin.
Diarmait Ua Briain (c. 1060 –1118) was an 11th-century Irish king who ruled Munster from 1114 to 1118.. One of three sons of Toirdelbach Ua Briain, he was banished from Munster by his brother Muirchertach Ua Briain shortly after the death of their father in 1086.
Diarmaid lived in a stormy age, as the Scandinavian rovers under Turgesius seized Armagh in 841 and leveled the churches. By 848 Diarmaid was in sole control. In 851 he attended the meeting between Máel Sechnaill mac Máele Ruanaid and Matudán mac Muiredaig where Máel Sechnaill was acknowledged as High King by the men of Ulster.
Diarmaid was the son of Madudan Reamhar Ua Madadhan (died 1096). In addition to ruling Síol Anmchadha , he was the last of his dynasty to gain overlordship of Uí Maine , ca. 1134. Ua Fuirg and Ua Ceannéidigh