Medieval Ireland. An Encyclopedia
Radner, J. N., ed. Fragmentary Annals of Ireland. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1978, pp.150–167. O’Donovan, Jo ...
COURTS that Patrick de Courcy, later lord of Kinsale, was his (illegitimate) son. Though archaeological evidence such as mottes ...
lordship with the chief governor, but then (like its English counterpart, the court of King’s Bench) came to be stationary in a ...
CRAFTWORK Gaelic areas levied “noctials,” something very like coyne and livery: essentially the compulsory hospital- ity demande ...
CRAFTWORK as opposed to traditional, domestic craftworking. Towns are increasingly prominent in this research. Areas and buildin ...
CRAFTWORK to the twelfth century Irish stone buildings (mainly churches) display little in the way of complex carving, but high ...
beaters and weaver’s swords) is surprisingly com- mon. It, too, may have been a relatively common domestic craft until the later ...
CRANNÓGA/CRANNOGS at Moynagh Lough (Co. Meath) and Sroove (Co. Sligo), have also revealed evidence for houses, pathways, fences, ...
occupied at times of danger (i.e., as might be suggested by their occasional remoteness and difficulty of access). There is cert ...
self-description by these groups or whether it was an externally generated label. The word is an Irish cognate of Welsh Prydain ...
In religious terms, the most important Cruthnian saint was Comgall, founder of Bangor and friend of Colum Cille. His foundation ...
a trusted royal official and earned the powerful patron- age of King Henry II. He served the king in the judi- ciary, the chambe ...
seeking redress from first Richard and then John. His cause was championed by Pope Innocent III, who eventually brokered a settl ...
D DÁL CAIS Dál Cais was the name of the Munster people based in eastern County Clare that rose to prominence in the latter half ...
DÉISI As a proper noun, the word Déisi (sg. Déis) means “subject peoples” and was the name borne in the his- torical period by t ...
Doan, J. “Sovereignty Aspects in the Roles of Women in Medi- eval Irish and Welsh Society.” Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Co ...
DEVOTIONAL AND LITURGICAL LITERATURE and (3) sought to regulate its teaching through the use of written records which, in time, ...
study of the religious culture of the period, one can only properly examine a cult artifact—be it a text or an object—by locatin ...
DIARMAIT MAC CERBAILL times—messages that frequently dealt with the ten- sions between church and state. Possibly the earliest w ...
Mac Airt, Seán, and Gearóid Mac Niocaill, eds. The Annals of Ulster (to A.D. 1131). Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studie ...
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