Act II — Fiachra and the Kings

Act II — Fiachra and the Kings

Act II · A History of the O'Dubhda

Fiachra and the Kings

c. 350 — 1000 CE
Two brothers, one island. One brother's line became the High Kings at Tara. The other brother's line became us.

From Eochaidh Mugmedon at Tara through Fiachra and Dathi to the emergence of the name itself — Aedh Ua Dubhda, the first to bear the surname, leading his people at the Battle of Clontarf. Six centuries in which a royal dynasty of Connacht slowly narrowed into a family.

Phase 1 of 4

Brothers at Tara

358 — 450
The O'Dubhda  ·  Tireragh The Wider World
358 CE

Eochaidh of the Slave-Lord

Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin, King of Connacht, is proclaimed monarch of Ireland and reigns eight years from Tara. He and his queen Mongfinn will have four sons — one of them ours.

O'Donovan, Genealogies of Hy-Fiachrach, p. 343
c. 366

Poison at Tara

Queen Mongfinn poisons her own brother, King Crimthann, hoping to place her eldest son Brian on the throne. She drinks the cup herself first to allay suspicion and dies of the same poison.

Annals of the Four Masters s.a. 366
c. 380

Fiachra, our ancestor

Fiachra Foltsnathach — Fiachra of the flowing hair — becomes King of Connacht and general to his half-brother Niall of the Nine Hostages. His descendants will be called the Uí Fiachrach. Every O'Dubhda alive today traces back to this man.

O'Donovan p. 345
410 CE World

Rome is sacked

Alaric's Visigoths take Rome; the Western Empire is collapsing. On the Atlantic fringe, Irish raiders like Niall of the Nine Hostages step into the vacuum, carrying off Romano-British captives — one of them a teenager named Patricius.

Gibbon; Patrick's Confessio
c. 405

Fiachra buried alive

Wounded in battle in Munster, Fiachra is being carried home in triumph when the Munster hostages seize him and bury him alive in revenge for his mother's poisoning. A grim end for the man whose name the clan will carry for sixteen centuries.

Book of Lecan via O'Donovan p. 345
c. 405–445

Dathi, last pagan High King

Fiachra's son Dathi (Nath Í) succeeds as King of Connacht and then, after Niall's death, as last pagan High King of Ireland. He is said to have led raiding expeditions as far as the Alps, where lightning strikes him dead.

O'Donovan p. 345
c. 445

The red pillar at Rathcroghan

Dathi's body is carried home and buried in the royal cemetery of Cruachan. A red pillar stone still marks the spot — the last pagan burial of the Connacht kings.

O'Donovan p. 346; Petrie
Phase 2 of 4

Kings of Connacht

450 — 770
The O'Dubhda  ·  Tireragh The Wider World
449

Twelve thousand baptised in a day

Dathi's brother Amhalgaidh, first Christian king of Connacht, and his seven sons are baptised by St Patrick at Forrach Mac n-Amhalgaidh near Killala — twelve thousand of his people with them, according to tradition. Tír Amhalgaidh — Tirawley — takes its name from him.

Jocelin, Life of St Patrick c.59
c. 450

Carn Amhalghaidh rises

Amhalgaidh's son raises the great cairn on the hill of Carn that will, for the next thousand years, be the inauguration mound of the northern Hy-Fiachrach. It will hold the last Gaelic O'Dubhda inauguration in 1595 — and the first modern one in 2025.

Visit the mound → O'Donovan p. 347
476 CE World

The fall of the Western Empire

The last Roman emperor in the west is deposed. Europe enters what will later be called the Dark Ages. Ireland — never Roman — now preserves Latin learning in its monasteries and will soon export it back across the sea.

Standard historical anchor
681

Battle of Corann

Donnchadh Muirsce, King of Connacht from our line, is killed in battle at Corann after a four-year reign. He is the last of our ancestors to sit the Connacht throne.

Annals of the Four Masters s.a. 681
768

The throne slips away

Donncatha mac Cathail dies after eighteen years as King of Connacht. After him the kingship passes to the southern Uí Fiachrach (Guaire's line at Aidhne) and then, permanently, to the Uí Briúin — ancestors of the O'Conors.

O'Donovan p. 348
Phase 3 of 4

The Vikings Come

770 — 950
The O'Dubhda  ·  Tireragh The Wider World
793 CE World

Lindisfarne — the Viking Age begins

Norse raiders sack the monastery of Lindisfarne on the Northumbrian coast. Within a generation their longships are in every Irish estuary, including the Moy.

Anglo-Saxon Chronicle s.a. 793
800 CE World

Charlemagne crowned in Rome

Christmas Day. The Holy Roman Empire is reborn. Western Europe has a centre again — and the Irish monasteries send teachers into it (Sedulius, Johannes Scottus Eriugena).

Standard
c. 820

The longships reach the Moy

Norse raiders enter Killala Bay. The monasteries at Killala, Kilcummin, and Kilglass are raided and rebuilt. Coastal defence becomes a permanent job for the Hy-Fiachrach — the foundation of the naval tradition that will reach its peak two centuries later.

Inferred from general Irish Viking Age sources
Phase 4 of 4

A Family Name Emerges

950 — 1014
The O'Dubhda  ·  Tireragh The Wider World
c. 876

A man named Dubhda

Somewhere between 768 and 983, a man called Dubhda — "the dark one" — is born into the line. His grandson will be the first to be called Ua Dubhda, "descendant of Dubhda." That is how our surname is made.

O'Donovan p. 349
983

Aedh Ua Dubhda — the first O'Dubhda

Aedh mac Ceallaigh, King of Lower Connacht, dies. He was the first entitled to bear the prefix Ó (grandson) before Dubhda. For the next six centuries, that name will carry the chieftainship of a country.

Annals of the Four Masters s.a. 983
1005

Death of Maolruanaidh — Clontarf's prelude

Three O'Dubhdas — Maolruanaidh son of Aedh, his son Maolseachlainn, and his brother Gebhennach — all die the same year. Nine years later Brian Boru will gather Ireland at Clontarf to break Viking power.

Annals of the Four Masters s.a. 1005
23 Apr 1014

Clontarf — the Hy-Fiachrach fight for Brian Boru

At the battle that ends Viking dominance in Ireland, the Uí Fiachrach fight on Brian's side. Brian himself is killed in his tent after the victory. Ireland, for one day, is united — and our name is on the winning side.

AFM s.a. 1014; O'Donovan p. 384
“ The throne of Connacht has slipped away. But a name has been made — and with it, the lordship of a country at the mouth of the Moy. ”

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