|
Daibhidh O Duibhghennain', fl. 1651, d.1696. // Events January 1 - Charles II crowned King of Scotland in Scone. ...
The year 1696 had the earliest equinoxes and solstices for 400 years in the Gregorian calendar, because this year is a leap year and the Gregorian calendar would have behaved like the Julian calendar since March 1500 had it have been in use that long. ...
Daibhidh mac Matthew Glas O Duibgeannain, or Daibhidh Bacach ("lame David") as he sometimes called himself, was an active scribe, compiler and poet between the years 1651 and 1696. In the earliest of his known works, Royal Irish Academy Ms. 24.P.9., he writes on page 238: "sguirim go ttrasada ar Loch Mesg dam a ttigh Thaidgh Oig Ui Fhlaibhertaigh 1 die Aprilis 1651, Dauid Duigenan qui scripsit/I stop now, and I on Loch Mask in the house of Tadhg Og O Flaherty, April 1st, 1651, David Duigenan who wrote this." A later entry specifies the place as Oilean Ruadh, or Red Island. There is a slight chance that he may have been the (or a) intermediary responsible for presenting Dubhaltach MacFhirbhisigh with "Volume C" of the original four volumes of the autograph of the Annals of the Four Masters, covering the period AM 2242 to AD 1171. Peregrine O'Duignan, one of the four main responsible for compiling the book, was a kinsman of Daibhidh's. However, an idea proposed by the writer of this article that Daibhaidh was MacFhirbhisigh's mysterious amanuensis cannot be sustained, as a comparison of their handwriting bears no resemblance to each other. Dubhaltach MacFhirbhisigh (fl. ...
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. ...
Peregrine ODuignan, Irish clergyman and historian, fl. ...
Over the course of his life he penned such works as "Suibhne Gelt/The Frenzy of Sweeney", "The Adventures of the Two Idiot Saints", "The Battle of Magh Rath", and "The Banquet of Dun na Gedh.". He is believed to have lived his final years in Shancough, Tirerrill, Co. Sligo, where he lived with his wife, a Mac Con Midhe. Daibhidh died in 1696.
See Also
Irish Historians, from earliest times to the present day, listed in chronological fashion. ...
The Clan O Duibhgeannain were a family of professional historians in medieval and early modern Ireland. ...
Sources - "The Learned Family of O Duigenan", Paul Walsh, "Irish Ecceslastical Record", 1921.
- "The Celebrated Antiquary: Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh - His Lineage, Life and Learning", Nollaig O Muraile, Maynooth, 1996.
|