Dáire Doimthech (Dáire "poor house"),[1] alias Dáire Sírchréchtach ("the ever-wounded"),[2] son of
Sithbolg,[3] was a legendary
King of Tara and
High King of Ireland, and one of the eponymous ancestors of the proto-historical
Dáirine and historical
Corcu Loígde of
Munster. A son of his was
Lugaid Loígde (a quo Corcu Loígde), an ancestor of
Lugaid Mac Con. In the Scéla Mosauluim,[4][5] Dáire Doimthech is referred to as one of the five kings of Tara from Munster, or alternatively one of five Dáires to rule at Tara.[6]
He may at one time have been partly identical with
Dáire mac Degad,[7] father of
Cú Roí, although traditions concerning him or them appear to have diverged at an early period, following regional paths. Scholars in medieval times were aware that both were believed to be ancestors of the Dáirine.[8][9] In fact in one manuscript, as Dairi Sirchrechtaig, he is listed as the father of Cú Roí,[10] and through him an ancestor of
Fiatach Finn, a quo the
Dál Fiatach of
Ulster, son of Fuirme mac Con Roí.
T. F. O'Rahilly saw even less distinction between these figures, stating that "Cú Roí and
Dáire are ultimately one and the same".[11]
Eochaid Étgudach, a High King of Ireland, was another son of Dáire Doimthech, apparently misplaced chronologically by medieval scholars.
Despite his prominence as an ancestral figure, little is recalled in Irish legend of Dáire's reign. However, it appears to have been remembered as strong, and in this way is typical for the Dáirine in legend, and as they were portrayed by later historians and storytellers. A passage of poetry in the
Old IrishScéla Mosauluim[13] is translated by
Kuno Meyer:[6]
Dáre Doimthech dealt a draught of blood upon every stream, so that he left his stories of kingship without concealment. Dáre Doimthech was king over Brug; 'tis he ... from Srub Cermna to Srub Brain, from the western ocean to the sea in the east.
Dáre Doimthech poured out a draught of blood on every [battle-]rank so that he left conspicuous [after him] the chronicles(?) of his reign. Dáre was king over the settled land of Éber's island - ploughing after feats of valour- from Dún (?) Cermna to Srúb Brain, from the western ocean to the eastern sea.
The Five Lugaids
This section is empty. You can help by
adding to it. (December 2009)
^also Doimtech, Doimthig, Doimtig, Doimthich, Doimtich; doim-t(h)ech meaning "poor house", there being great shortage of food during his reign. Arbuthnot (ed.) 2005,
Cóir Anmann
Margaret E. Dobbs, The History of the Descendants of Ir, in Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie 13 (1921): 308–59; continued in Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie 14 (1923): 44–144.
Eoin MacNeill, Celtic Ireland. Academy Press. 1981 (reissue with new intro. and notes by
Donnchadh Ó Corráin of original Martin Lester Ltd edition, 1921).
Kuno Meyer (ed. & tr.), Fianaigecht: being a collection of hitherto inedited Irish poems and tales relating to Finn and his Fiana, with an English translation. Todd Lecture Series,
Royal Irish Academy, Volume 16. Dublin: Hodges Figgis. 1910.
Michael A. O'Brien (ed.) with intr. by John V. Kelleher, Corpus genealogiarum Hiberniae.
DIAS. 1976. / partial digital edition:
Donnchadh Ó Corráin (ed.), Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502. University College, Cork: Corpus of Electronic Texts. 1997.
John O'Donovan (ed.), "The Genealogy of Corca Laidhe", in Miscellany of the Celtic Society. Dublin. 1849.
alternative scan
Whitley Stokes (ed. & tr.), "Cóir Anmann (Fitness of Names)", in Whitley Stokes and
Ernst Windisch, Irische Texte mit Wörterbuch. Volume 3, Parts 1–2. Leipzig: Verlag von S. Hirzel. 1891 (1); 1897 (2). pp. 285–444. alternative scan I
alternative scan II