The
Benntraige, a people dwelling in southern Ireland in pre-Christian times, might be a remnant of the tribe.[3]Eoin MacNeill identified another later Irish group, the Coraind, in the
Boyne valley, as possibly the same people.[4]
Other possibly related names include the Corcu Cuirnd,[4] Cuirennrige and Dál Cuirind in early medieval Ireland, and in Britain, the Corionototae, known from an inscription in
Hexham,
Northumberland, and Corinion, the Brittonic name for
Cirencester,
Gloucestershire.[1]
References
^
abT. F. O'Rahilly, Early Irish History and Mythology, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1946, pp. 33-34
^J. Lacroix, Les noms d'origine gauloise, la Gaule des combats, Errance, Paris, 2003
^
abEoin MacNeill, "Early Irish population groups: their nomenclature, classification and chronology", Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy (C) 29, 1911, pp. 59–114