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grain in corn" says the story—and Mac Con is deposed and Cormac is made king in his place. Mac Con travels to Ailill's court, where his foster mother warns him that he is in peril. When Ailill embraces Mac Con he bites him with his poison tooth, wounding Mac Con, who flees but is killed by one of Ailill's warriors.
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Mac Con takes Cormac mac Airt as his foster son, and rules for seven years. He then pronounces a false judgement, showing that he is unfit to rule, while Cormac gives a right judgment, showing that he is the stuff of kings. Disasters ensue—"no grass came through the earth, nor leaf on tree, nor
94:
Mac Con, exiled from
Ireland, returns with the aid of the king of Britain, along with an army of Britons and Saxons, and conquers Ireland as far as Connacht where Éogan, with the help of Art mac Cuinn, plans to fight. The night before the battle Éogan and Art sleep with their hosts' daughters,
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were no longer a force after the 7th century. As such it forms part of the common origin legends of the Uí Néill and the Eóganachta. Mac Con belonged to the ancient
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The purpose of the tale is presumed by some to have been political, to explain, and to justify, how it came about that the descendants of Art, that is the
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413:
395:
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in Art's. Both Éogan and Art, as is foreseen, die in the battle at Mag
Mucrama, and Mac Con becomes king of Tara.
121:, dated to the middle 12th century. The most recent translator dates the tale in that form to the 9th century.
471:
429:
258:. As late as the 11th century, it was still used as a locative term, as demonstrated by this obit in the
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220:
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132:, occupied the leading political positions in Ireland—the Connachta and their offshoot the
87:, has it that the plain was named for the magical pigs which infested it until banished by Queen
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148:—when their ancestral figures had been defeated by Mac Con, whose own descendants the
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The cast includes several major figures from Irish pseudo-history,
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The earliest surviving manuscript containing the tale is in the
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65:. Mag Mucrama, the plain of the counting of the pigs, was in
231:(1975). A modernization into modern Irish was published by
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334:, pp. 481, 489–490 & 580–583; MacKillop,
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330:, pp. 66, 202 & 236–237; Charles-Edwards,
304:, "Cath Maige Mucrama"; Wiley, "Cath Maige Mucrama".
296:
294:
160:. The ancestors of the Eóganachta are known as the
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267:AI1044.6 Repose of Maenach Muccruma in Achad Deó.
207:The Battle of Mag Mucrama has been translated by
463:
385:
338:, "Conmac", "Conmaicne" & "Lugaid mac Con".
317:, for dating see Wiley, "Cath Maige Mucrama".
229:Cath Maige Mucrama: The Battle of Mag Mucrama
422:Wiley, Dan M. (2004), "Cath Maige Mucrama",
95:conceiving the sons who will succeed them,
313:A list of all manuscripts is available at
406:The Oxford Dictionary of Celtic Mythology
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390:, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
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227:, 2 volumes, 1892) and by M. O'Daly in
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250:queried its supposed location in the
168:Editions, translations, and adaptions
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408:, Oxford: Oxford University Press,
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386:Charles-Edwards, T. M. (2000),
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211:("The Battle of Mag Mucrime",
1:
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54:and his step- and foster-son
34:tale which forms part of the
288:Wiley, "Cath Maige Mucrama".
7:
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493:
370:Irish Kings and High-Kings
156:, who were cousins of the
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456:The Battle of Mag Mucrama
404:MacKillop, James (1998),
272:
425:The Cycles of the Kings
388:Early Christian Ireland
348:Lughaidh Mac Con (1917)
332:Early Christian Ireland
252:Ordnance Survey Books
243:Annalistic references
144:, the Eóganachta the
32:Middle Irish language
28:Battle of Mag Mucrama
372:, London: Batsford,
260:Annals of Inisfallen
138:High King of Ireland
128:, and of Éogan, the
99:in Éogan's case and
472:Cycles of the Kings
458:at ancienttexts.org
432:on 2 September 2006
366:Byrne, Francis John
233:Peadar Ua Laoghaire
69:, in the region of
36:Cycles of the Kings
187:. You can help by
19:Cath Maige Mucrama
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97:Fiachu Muillethan
77:. A tradition or
58:, along with the
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237:Lughaidh Mac Con
221:Standish O'Grady
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142:King of Connacht
118:Book of Leinster
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185:needs expansion
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146:King of Munster
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101:Cormac mac Airt
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477:Texts in Irish
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63:Art mac Cuinn
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434:, retrieved
430:the original
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219:, 1892), by
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150:Corcu Loígde
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84:dindshenchas
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60:King of Tara
48:Ailill Aulom
45:
27:
18:
17:
15:
328:Irish Kings
300:MacKillop,
235:in 1917 as
81:, in Irish
466:Categories
358:References
336:Dictionary
302:Dictionary
130:Eóganachta
50:, his son
162:Deirgtine
126:Connachta
52:Éogan Mór
368:(1973),
140:and the
134:Uí Néill
111:Contexts
67:Connacht
326:Byrne,
154:Dáirine
71:Athenry
56:Mac Con
42:Content
24:English
436:24 May
412:
394:
376:
315:Scéla
273:Notes
158:Ulaid
438:2007
410:ISBN
392:ISBN
374:ISBN
254:for
89:Medb
26:the
22:(in
16:The
454:of
191:.
468::
293:^
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217:13
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73:,
38:.
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194:(
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