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Encyclopedia > Ailill Finn

Ailill or Oilioll Finn, son of Art mac Lugdach, was a legendary High King of Ireland. He was killed by Airgeatmhar and Duach Ladhgrach, but managed to pass the kingship on to his son Eochaid. The office of High King of Ireland (Irish: Ard Rí Érenn) was in origin a pseudohistorial construct of the eighth century that placed a king of all Ireland atop the fragmented pyramid of kingship that actually existed at that time. ...



Preceded by:
Fiacha Tolgrach
High King of Ireland
AFM 795-786 BC
FFE 586-577 BC
Succeeded by:
Eochaid mac Ailella


The High Kingship of Ireland was a pseudohistorical construct of the eighth century AD, a projection into the distant past of a political entity that did not become reality until the ninth century. ... Signature page from the Annals of the Four Masters Entry for A.D. 432 The Annals of the Four Masters or the Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters are a chronicle of medieval Irish history. ... Seathrún Céitinn, known in English as Geoffrey Keating, was a 17th century Irish clergyman, poet and historian. ...

For other personages called Ailill, see Ailill.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Finn - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography (205 words)
Finn (Frisian) is a Frisian lord who appears in Beowulf and The Fight at Finnsburg.
Finn is the name of the giant who, according to folk mythology, built the cathedral in Lund.
Finn may be a variant of fin, a colloquial term for the U.S. five dollar bill bearing a portrait of Abraham Lincoln.
Minor Celtic Characters (4746 words)
Bile, Amairgin, Eremon, Eber Finn, Eber Donn, Íth, Breogan, Goídel Glas.
Ailill Aulomm was the son of Eógan Mór and brother of Lugaid Lága.
Ailill Aulomm was best known for his involvement with the goddess Aíne, daughter of Eógabal, who was the foster son of Manannán Mac Lir.
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