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The Soghain were a people of ancient Ireland. The 17th-century scholar Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh identified them as part of a larger group called the . Mac Fhirbhisigh stated that the Cruithin included "the Dál Araidhi Dál, the seven Lóigisi Loígis of Leinster, the seven Soghain of Ireland, and every Conaille that is in Ireland."


Locations
The locations of four of the seven Soghain are as follows:
  • A branch in the territory of Fernmag (barony of Farney, ).
  • In () where a Soghain tribe lived with a branch of the in an area called Trícha cét na Delbna Móire agus na Sogan.
  • The Corcu Shogain, who were subject to the Benntraige under the . An inscription discovered near in the barony of , some twelve miles west of the city of Cork, displays the words MUCOI SOGINI, which probably means "of the Corcu Sogain".
  • The Soghain of Connacht were located in central east , in a kingdom called Soghan.


Soghan
The Soghain of Connacht were located in the ancient kingdom of Soghan, an area in central east bounded by the on the east, the on the west, the Grange and Shiven rivers to the north, and the Raford and Ballinure rivers to the south. A poem recorded in The Book of Uí Maine, Cruas Connacht clanna Sogain, lists the kingdom's boundaries, which can be found to tie in with the above locations:

From Áth an Ibar west To Glais Uair Arnaigh Was the extent of Soghan That sword-guarded land.

From Béal na Róbe in Máenmagh To the clear, soft-reeded Simin Was the breath of the plain Which bore no ignominy.

The previous, pre- people of the area were called the . Very little information survives on them.

The Soghain of were described by Seán Mór Ó Dubhagáin in his poem Triallam timcheall na Fodla as follows: "The six Sogain let us not shun / Their kings are without oblivion / Good the host of plundering excursions / To whom the spear-armed Sogain is hereditary."

The Book of Lecan lists their six branches as Cenél Rechta, Cenél Trena, Cenél Luchta, Cenél Fergna, Cenél Domaingen and Cenél Déigill.

The genealogy of of Clonkeenkerrill is given as Caireall mac Curnáin mac Treana mac Fionnchada mac Náir mac Earca mac Tiobraide mac Soghain Salbhuidhe mac Fiacha Araidhe. His grandfather, Treana mac Fionnchada, was the eponym of the Cinel Trena, who were apparently located close to , as evinced by the placename Tír Mhic Trena (the land of the sons of Trena). This area was the western limit of the kingdom of the Connacht Soghain.

Early evangelists among the Soghain included , and . Their successors include Naomhéid, Cuana of Kilcoonagh, Dubhán, , Íbar, Íomar of the Sogain, Laisren of Clonkeenkerrill, , Modiúit, , Molua of Kilmoluagh.

Parishes known to be included in Soghan were:

Soghan became subject to the Uí Maine sometime during the first millennium.


Descendants
Descendants of the Soghain are still found in great numbers in County Galway, bearing names such as Ó Mainnín, , Manning, Ward / Mac an Bhaird, Gill / Gillane, Scarry, Dugan / Duggan, Megan / McGann, Martin, and Cassain.


Annalistic references
  • 811. Irghalach, son of Maelumha, lord of Corca Soghain


See also
  • Uí Fiachrach Aidhne
  • Conmhaícne Mara
  • Delbhna Tir Dha Locha
  • Maolán
  • Trícha Máenmaige
  • Uí Díarmata
  • Cóiced Ol nEchmacht
  • Síol Anmchadha
  • Cenél Áeda na hEchtge
  • Pre-Norman invasion Irish Celtic kinship groups, from whom many of the modern Irish surnames came from

  • The Book of Uí Maine, otherwise called 'The book of the O'Kellys', R.A.S. Mac Alister (ed.), , 1942.
  • Punann arsa part i, , Galway, 1951.
  • The parish of Ballinasloe, Rev. Patrick K. Egan, Dublin and London, 1960. Facsimile reproduction, Galway, 1994.
  • Ballymacward: The story of an east Galway parish, John S. Flynn, 1991.
  • The Life, Legends and Legacy of Saint Kerrill: A Fifth-Century East Galway Evangelist, , 2004. 0 954798 1 3
  • The true identity of Saint Kerrill of Clonkeenkerrill, Joseph Mannion, in Making shapes with slates and marla:A Gurteen anthology, John and Margaret Corbett (compilers), Galway, 2004.
  • The and the Sogain: Differentiating between the pre-Celtic and early Celtic Tribes of Central East Galway, Joseph Mannion, Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, Volume 58, pp. 165–170, 2006.

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