- Uí
Bairrche (Modern Irish: Uí Bhairrche,
pronounced [iː ˈwaːɾˠəçə]) was an
Irish kin-based
group that
originally held
lands in the
south of the ancient...
- and
Iveagh Upper,
Upper Half to the
north and west.
Called at one time
Bairrche its
present name of
Mourne comes from the Múrna (Old Irish: Mughdorna)...
-
Laigin and
emerged in what is
today County Waterford. As
leaders of the Uí
Bairrche, they
competed with the Uí
Cheinnselaig in the 5th
century for the Kingship...
- the Uí Dúnlainge (ancestors of the O'Byrnes and the O'Tooles), the Uí
Bairrche (ancestors of the Mac Gormáin), the Uí Máil (ancestors of the Ó Conchobhair...
- Bécce
Bairrche (died 735) was the Dál
Fiatach ruler of the over-kingdom of
Ulaid in Ireland. He
reigned from 708 to 735. He was the son of Bécc
Bairrche mac...
- Bécc
Bairrche mac
Blathmaic (died 718) was king of
Ulaid from 692 to 707 from the Dál
Fiatach clan. He was the son of
Blathmac mac Máel
Cobha (died 670)...
- of Ui-
Bairrche, died."[citation needed]
According to
historian C.
Thomas Cairney, the O'Tracys were one of the
chiefly families of the Uí
Bairrche who were...
- they were
expelled across the
Wicklow Mountains. The Uí
Failge and Uí
Bairrche belonged to the
Laigin but may also be ****ociated with the Iverni. In medieval...
- the Book of Leinster,
probably intended to
support the
claims of the Uí
Bairrche to the
primacy in Leinster. Charles-Edwards, T. M. (2000).
Early Christian...
- O'Rahilly
proposed that the
Irish branch was the
origin of the
later Uí
Bairrche clan,
believing that they
belonged to the Érainn (Ptolemy's Iverni) who...