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The Conmaicne (; ) were a people of early Ireland, perhaps related to the , who dispersed to various parts of . They settled in and , giving their name to several Conmaicne territories. T. F. O'Rahilly's assertion the Conmaicne were non-Goidelic is not widely accepted.


Etymology
Their name originates from a mythical ancestor known as Conmac(c) (), meaning "hound-son" (con, prefix form of cú hound; mac, son). Conmac(c) descended from Fergus mac Róich and Queen of . However, Walsh stated "Conmac son of Fergus is a genealogical fiction". The word Conmaicne means "progeny of Conmac" ( -ne, a progeny). The name in spelling contains m (without a following h) and c (or more etymologically, cc), thus Conmac(c) and Conmaic(c)ne, but in Modern spelling contains mh (with unetymological h as a sign of ) and single c, thus Conmhac and Conmhaicne).


Branches
Branches of the Conmaicne dispersed to various places.

  • (Conmaicne of the sea) settled in the west of , in the territory of Conmhaicne Mara, anglicised today as .
  • Conmhaicne Dúna Móir, or Conmaicne Cenel Dubáin, at Dunmore, County Galway.
  • Conmhaicne Mhean or Conmaicne Máenmaige, , County Galway.

  • Conmhaícne Cúile, of Kilmaine, .
  • Conmhaícne Ceara, of Carra, County Mayo.
  • Conmaicne Meic Oirbsen Máir near Lough Corrib, .

The Diocese of Ardagh was established in 1111 as the for east . Fourteen years later, at the Synod of Kells-Mellifont, its area was reduced to the territory of the Conmaicne Rein and Conmaicne Angalie, south county Leitrim and all county Longford.P Galloway, The Cathedrals of Ireland, Belfast, 1992 The diocese was commonly called "the Diocese of the Conmaicne".


Septs
Known Septs in south County Leitrim were:
  • Conmhaicne Maigh Rein today called Fenagh, County Leitrim.
  • Cluain Conmhaícne, Cloone parish, in Carrigallen and Mohill barony.
  • Cenel Luacháin, both Oughteragh and parishes at Carrigallen, .


People
John O'Donovan wrote:

The chief families of the Conmacians were the O'Fearralls, princes and lords of Annaly, or Longford; the Mac Rannalls, a name anglicised to Reynolds, who were Lords of Conmaincee of Moy-Rein and Muintir-Eolais, in Leitrim; the Mac Keoghes, who were chiefs in Galway, and also in Lenister; the MacShanleys; O'Rodaghans; MacDorchys; O'Mulveys; O'Morans, and O'Mannings, chiefs and clans in various parts of Longford, Leitrim, and Roscommon.

Notables descended from the Conmhaicne include Cruimthear Mac Carthaigh, St. Jarlath of and some abbots of .


See also
  • Cíarraige
  • Pre-Norman invasion Irish Celtic kinship groups, from whom many of the modern Irish surnames came from

  • Some Connacht Population-Groups, Nollaig Ó Muraíle, in Seanchas:Studies in Early and Medieval Archaeology, History and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne, pp. 176–76, Four Courts Press, , 2000
  • Medieval Ireland: Territorial, Political and Economic Divisions, Paul Mac Cotter, Four Courts Press, 2008, pp. 134–135.


Secondary sources

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