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  2. Senchas Fagbála Caisil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senchas_Fagbála_Caisil

    Senchas Fagbála Caisil "The Story of the Finding of Cashel" is an early medieval Irish text which relates, in two variants, the origin legend of the kingship of Cashel. Myles Dillon has dated the first variant (§§ 1-3) to the 8th century, and the second (§§ 4-8) tentatively to the 10th century.

  3. Crusader: No Remorse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crusader:_No_Remorse

    The Silencer is shooting a non-combatant with two guards and a robot present. Crusader is divided into missions, each with their own locations and objectives. Settings vary from factories to military bases to offices to space stations, and contain a variety of enemy soldiers and servomechs, traps, puzzles and non-combatants (who can be killed with no penalty and their bodies can be looted for ...

  4. Caithréim Chellacháin Chaisil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caithréim_Chellacháin...

    Caithréim Chellacháin Chaisil ("The Victorious Career of Cellachán of Cashel") [note 1] is an Irish tract from the first part of the 12th century. It is most likely written some time between 1127 and 1134, [note 2] commissioned by Cormac Mac Carthaigh, king of Munster and claimant to the title High King of Ireland.

  5. Cellachán Caisil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellachán_Caisil

    His predecessor as king at Cashel was said to be Lorcan mac Coinlígáin, a distant cousin, the date of whose death is uncertain. The earliest record of Cellachán is an attack on Clonmacnoise in 936. In 939, he was allied with Norse Gaels from Waterford in an attack on the kingdom of Mide. The leader of the Waterford contingent is called mac ...

  6. Eóganachta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eóganachta

    The Eóganachta (Modern Irish: Eoghanachta, pronounced [ˈoːnˠəxt̪ˠə]) were an Irish dynasty centred on Cashel which dominated southern Ireland (namely the Kingdom of Munster) from the 6/7th to the 10th centuries, [1] and following that, in a restricted form, the Kingdom of Desmond, and its offshoot Carbery, to the late 16th century.

  7. Psalter of Cashel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psalter_of_Cashel

    The Psalter of Cashel (Irish: Saltair Caisil) is a now-lost Irish manuscript, which seems to have been highly influential in Irish historiographical tradition. Not an actual Psalter , it seems to have contained Munster -orientated genealogies, king-lists, synchronisms, and hagiographical material, among other items. [ 1 ]

  8. Rock of Cashel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_of_Cashel

    According to the Tripartite Life of Saint Patrick Cashel is reputed to be the site of the conversion of the King of Munster by Saint Patrick in the 5th century. [2] The Rock of Cashel was the traditional seat of the kings of Munster as early as the 4th century and prior to the Norman invasion. [3]

  9. Miler Magrath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miler_Magrath

    In 1570, Magrath was appointed by the Crown as the Protestant Bishop of Clogher, [5] including the temporalities, and visited England, where he fell ill of a fever.In February 1571, he was then appointed Archbishop of Cashel and Bishop of Emly (no new appointment was made to Clogher until 1605).