Triallam timcheall na Fodla

Triallam timcheall na Fodla ("Let us wander around Ireland") is medieval Irish topographical text.

Overview

Composed by Seán Mór Ó Dubhagáin, Triallam consists of twenty verses divided into four (but sometimes five or even six) lines. The full poem is nine hundred and sixteen lines in length. It identifies various tribes, dynasties and territories of the Gaelic-Irish, as they were immediately before the arrival of the Anglo-Normans. Ó Dubhagáin devotes one hundred and fifty-two lines to Meath, three hundred and fifty-four to Ulster, three hundred and twenty-eight to Connacht, and fifty-six to Leinster. Possibly the work was unfinished at the time of Ó Dubhagáin's death in 1372.

Sometime after Ó Dubhagáin's death, Giolla na Naomh Ó hUidhrín (d. 1420) completed the poem.

gollark: If you spread around your location and/or pipe-bomb them it is your fault.
gollark: ++delete <@!358508089563021317> (alleged doxxing, and this is the INTERNET so we just IMMEDIATELY CANCEL ANYONE if they are accused of bad things)
gollark: This is why it is BEES to know the location of ANYONE AT ALL.
gollark: NO PIPE BOMBING
gollark: I think the idea is BF execution, not thing-to-BF compilation.

See also

References

  • Topographical Poems by Seaán Mór Ó Dubhagáin and Giolla-Na-Naomh Ó Huidhrín, ed. James Carney, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1943.
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