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Qiu, Fangzhe, “Wandering cows and obscure words: a rimeless poem from legal manuscripts and beyond”, Studia Celtica Fennica 10 (2013): 91–111.

  • journal article
Citation details
Contributors
Article
“Wandering cows and obscure words: a rimeless poem from legal manuscripts and beyond”
Periodical
Studia Celtica Fennica 10 (2013)
Studia Celtica Fennica 10 (2013).
– PDFs: <link>
Volume
10
Pages
91–111
Description
Abstract (cited)
An Old Irish rimeless poem recording a verdict by the legendary judge Fachtna is found in manuscripts that represent various textual traditions. It is cited in a gloss to early Irish laws and commentary to Amra Coluim Chille, and in two lemmata in Sanas Cormaic. This paper provides a critical edition of the poem, and considers it together with the accompanying narrative prose and verses in the textual environments, in order to illustrate the complex relationship between these textual traditions. The discussion may further our understanding of the intellectual background of the medieval literati and the growth of medieval Irish law tracts.
Subjects and topics
Headings
early Irish law
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
Fachtna mac SenchaFachtna mac Sencha
No short description available
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IuchnaIuchna
Mythical cattle-owner or briugu; associated in dinnshenchas narratives with Almu (Hill of Allen, Co. Kildare) and Adarca (eponymously, Adarca Bó Iuchna) in Co. Offaly; name probably connected to Benna Iuchna in Slán seiss, a Brigit co mbúaid; in the story cycle around Cú Roí, he came to be equated or merged with Echde [or Eochu] Echbél, legendary owner of three special cows.
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
March 2017, last updated: April 2018