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Conn C�ad Cathach

Conn C�adcathach
Ir.: conn: head, leader, chief; c�ad: hundred; cathach battles.
"Chief/Head of a Hundred Battles"
ca. 110 - 157 CE

Irish Pseudohistorical King

Legendary high king of Ireland, he was the son of Fedhlimidh Rachtmar, the high king, and Ughna, daughter of the king of Lochlinn1. Between the kingship of he and his father, Conaire M�r ruled Ireland. Conn challenged Conaire to battle, defeating Conaire in Meath.

Supposedly, at Conn's birth, five roads to Temhair were discovered, which had never been noticed before: Slighe Asail, Alighe Miodhluchra, Sl�ghe Cualann, Slighe M�r, and Slighe D�la. Slighe M�r later became the dividing line between Leath Chuinn and Leath Mhogha.

For most of his reign, Conn was at war with one king or another. In particular, his war with Eoghan M�r2--also called Mogh Nuadat ("slave of Nuada")--led to the partition of Ireland into half. The origin of their feud is in the earliest Irish pseudohistory, with the feud between the brothers Eber and Eremon, the two sons of Mil Espaine--in other words, the original Milesians who came to Ireland.3 Conn was descended of Eremon, while Mogh Nuadat was descended of Eber. When Mogh Nuadat realized that Conn, as a descendant of Eremon, had gained dominion over him, he rebelled. Geoffrey Keating lists ten battles that Mogh Nuadath won over Conn:

the Battle of Brosnach and the Battle of Samhpait; the Battle of Sliabh Musach; the Battle of Gabhran; the Battle of Suama and the Battle of Grian and the Battle of Ath Luain; and the Battle of Magh Croich... the Battle of Asal and the Battle of Uisneach

At the battle of Magh Lena, the two kings divided Ireland into two sections: Leath Mhogha and Leath Chuinn, or, "Mogh's Half" and "Conn's Half." This division (supposedly) lasted up through the age of Brian B�r�mha (ca. 1000 CE). Keating also says that because of this division, Conn slew Mogh Nuadath in his bed.

The division of Ireland between Conn and Mogh Nuadat is likely indicative of an Irish social hierarchy: that is, "Conn", ruling the northern half, is the "head", while "Mogh", ruling the southern half, is the "slave". According to "The Settling of the Manor at Tara", the north and west (Ulster and Connacht, of whom Conn is ancestor) in Ireland were associated with war and knowledge, while the south and east (Munster and Leinster) were associated with slaves, musicians, and farming. This cosmology was likely created for the benefit of the U� Niell clan (of whom Conn is the ancestor).

In "Cath Mag Mucrama", it's stated that Conn's daughter Sadb is married to Ailill Aulom, son of Mogh Nuadat. His sons are Art, Connlae, and Asal, the last who murdered Eochu B�lbuide, which ultimately leads to Conn's death.

There are some legends that say Conn had a hand in the settling of Dalriada in Scotland.

Conn was killed at Temhair in 157 CE when Tiobraide Tireach the king of Ulster sent fifty warriors disguised as women to kill him. This enmity between Connacht and Ulster, of course, is reminiscent of the Ulster Cycle, and the enmity between Medb and Conchobhor mac Nessa.

Texts

  • "Airne F�ngein": Conn is born on Samhain, accompanied by forty-nine other wonders, including the bursting of the Boyne from the Well of Wisdom, and the discovery of the five roads.

  • "�ogan M�r 7 Conn C�tchathach": essentially a summary of the tensions between Mug Nuadat and Conn.

  • "Cath Maighe L�na": disputes in Munster ultimately lead to a war between Conn and Mug Nuadat with Conn's victory.

  • "Do bunad imthechta �oganachta": mentions that Conn won a hundred battles against the D�l nAraide, hence his name.

  • "Baile in Sca�l" and "Baile Cuind Ch�tchathaig": In this tale, Conn and his men suddenly find themselves in a fairy mist, are attacked, and are lead to the house of Lugh Lamhfada. Here, Conn is given the cup of sovereignty and is told how many of his decendants will rule Ireland. The story has long been recognized as simliar to the grail quest, with Conn as Perceval, Lugh as the Fisher King, and the cup of sovereignty as the Holy Grail. An earlier version, "Baile Cuinn", the narrative is missing, but

  • "Echtrae Airt": One of Conn's wives is said to have been Daire or Dairine Sirchrechtrach, while the mother of Art is Ethne Taebfada. After the death of Ethne, he marries Becuma Cneisgel, a member of the Tuatha De Danann who was exiled by that people for an unnamed crime. She first falls in love with Art, but when she marries Conn, she has the king banish Art from Tara, causing a famine.

  • "Echtrae Connlae": The most famous of Conn's sons are Connla and Art mac Cuinn. Of Connla, it is said that a fairy woman fell in love with him, and the two left for Tir na n�g. Connla was never seen again, and so his brother Art was called Art �enfher--"The Lone One."4 Other stories, though, say that Connla was killed by his uncles in a power-grab. As for Art, he seized the throne of Ireland, becoming high king. His son was Cormac mac Airt, who, unlike his reputed ancestors Art and Conn, may have actually existed.

  • "Aided Cuind Ch�tchathaig": Conn is murdered while preparing for the Feast of Temhair in revenge for his men killing Eochaid B�lbuide, who was seeking sanctuary in Ulster.

  • "Sc�la Cuinn 7 Airt 7 Cormaic": briefly summarizes the death and burial of Conn.

Relationship with Pwyll
In Ireland and the Grail, John Carey argues that Pwyll has his origin in the mythical Irish king Conn C�adcathach. While other figures in the Mabinogi have names which signify divinity or have cognates in Irish literature or Gaulish deities, "Sense" and his son "Care" have names which are more like the invented names found in "Culhwch ac Olwen" than anythink like the rest of the Mabinogi. However, pwyll has an Irish cognate ciall, "sense", which in turn is often paired with the word cenn or conn, both of which mean "head". Ergo, ciall cenn (or ciall conn) becomes, in Welsh, pwyll pen--Pwyll Pen Annwfn.

But beyond this, Carey notes the similarities of the first branch of the Mabinogi with the stories surrounding Conn and his progeny. In Baile in Scail, Conn blunders into the Otherworld, is initially attacked, then finds himself and his companions at the house of Lugh, who offers friendship and his descendents the kingship of Ireland. Conn is also offered a mead cup by Sovereignty. In Echtrae Connlai, Conn's son Connlae climbs on the Hill of Uisnech, and is lured to the Otherworld by a fairy woman and disappears. Carey compares these stories with the first and third branches of the Mabinogi, and finds a close comparison between them: Pwyll, like Conn, blunders into the Otherworld, is initially attacked, then becomes a friend of Arawn, like Conn with Lugh. Pryderi, like Connlae, disappears, causing chaos for his father. Also, the story of Connlae seeing the fairy woman from the Hill of Uisnech parallels Pwyll seeing Rhiannon from the hill Gorsedd Arberth.

SOURCES:

Keating, Geoffrey. The History of Ireland. ca. 1350? Found at CELT: The Corpus of Electronic Texts: http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T100054/index.html.

The Annals of the Four Masters. A six-volume work of the 16th century (IIRC). It can now be found at CELT: The Corpus of Electronic Texts: http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/G100005A/index.html

"Baile in Sca�l." The Encyclopedia of Celtic Wisdom. ed. Caitlin and John Matthews.

Ancient Irish Tales. ed. T. Cross & H. Slover. Barnes and Noble, 1995 (reprint).


NOTES:

1. Lochlinn: presumably Scandanavia, though some scholars narrow this down to Denmark. Probably due to the Viking raids, the Scandanavians--under the guise of the people of Lochlinn--often figure in the pseudohistorical Irish and Welsh tales, as they were written in the Viking and post-Viking age of conquests. It is unknown if they would have been as prominent in the original, oral tales; if anything, Lochlinn often stands in as the typical "far away place" that, say, Sarras would play in the medieval romances. It's possible that Lochlinn may even have originally designated the Otherworld, as many wives seem to come from there, comparable to the later "fairy wife" in folklore.

2. Eoghan M�r: eponymous founder of the Eoghannacht clan.

3. Eber and Eremon: the theme of warring brothers who found a nation or are the origin of civilization is common in western culture; compare to Romulus and Remus, or Cain and Able.

4. This type of story is reflected in "The Colloquy of the Old Men" in which we are told of how Ois�n went off with a fairy woman; and in the story of "The Voyage of Bran" in which Bran sails to T�r inna m-Ban, the Land of Women.

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