-
Howth (/ˈhoʊθ/ HOHTH; Irish: Binn Éadair,
meaning 'Éadar's peak'; Old Norse: Hǫfuð) is an
affluent peninsular village and
outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland...
-
Immacaldam in dá
thuarad "The
Colloquy of the Two Sages"
Talland Étair "The
Siege of Howth" Cath
Étair "The
Battle of Howth" Tromdámh
Guaire (or
Imthecht na Tromdáime)...
-
Aithed Gráinne
ingine Corbmaic la Díarmait húa
mDuibni (lost) Úath
Beinne Étair Úath
Dercce Ferna or
Echtra Fhind i
nDerc Ferna (lost) "The
Death of Finn"...
- of Clane,
along with his wife Buan. This
story is
recounted in
Tallaind Etair ("The
Siege of Howth") in the 12th-century Book of Leinster. The
mound was...
- one "Ironbones, son of the king of Thessaly. The race is to be from Benn
Étair to Munster. Caílte mac Rónáin, the best
runner of the Fianna, is away at...
- pp. 483–485
Stokes (1887), pp. 52–53.
Buttimer (1982), p. 64.
Talland Étair ("The
Siege of Howth").
Stokes (1887) ed. tr., pp. 46–64
Scowcroft (1995)...
- men of Erin
together with Dáire's sons,
pursued it till they
reached Benn
Étair. A
magical mist is 'set
between them (Dáire's sons) and the (rest of the)...
-
forces of
Diarmuit and
Leinster met with the
forces of
Muirchertach at
Raith Etair,
possibly the
promontory fort on
Howth Head in
northern County Dublin. The...
- time of its inception, the
Welsh Saint Samson made a
pilgrimage to Dun
Etair (Irish: Binn Éadair) (Contemporary Howth) and is said to have
founded the...
- al-Ṭawāʾif, les
monarques naṣrides favorisèrent les poetes. Muḥammad II
etair bon versificateur, aux
dires d'Ibn al-Ḫatīb. Lisān al-dīn a
reproduit intégralement...