- Art
mac Cuinn ("son of Conn"), also
known as Art Óenfer (literally "one man", used in the
sense of "lone", "solitary", or "only son"), was, according...
- Clarenbridge,
County Galway. The
night before the
Battle of Mag Mucrama, Art
mac Cuinn he was a
guest of Olc Acha, who
asked him how many
children he had. To...
-
Cormac mac Airt, also
known as
Cormac ua
Cuinn (grandson of Conn) or
Cormac Ulfada (long beard), was,
according to
medieval Irish legend and historical...
-
lover of nine
successive kings,
including Fedlimid Rechtmar, Art
mac Cuinn and
Cormac mac Airt. She is ****ociated with Rath Meave,
south of the Hill of Tara...
-
rivals of Dál
Cuinn after Conn's
floruit (and
others for a few
centuries before) were the Dáirine (usually the
Corcu Loígde
during Dál
Cuinn's era), two or...
-
Shane O'Neill (Irish: Séan
mac Cuinn Ó Néill; c. 1530 – 2 June 1567) was an
Irish chieftain of the O'Neill
dynasty of
Ulster in the mid-16th century....
- Niall's
birth and
early life is
given in the
possibly 11th-century tale
Echtra mac nEchach Muimedóin ("The
adventure of the sons of
Eochaid Mugmedón"). In it...
- Cóem in the
battle of Gruitine.
During the
reign of the High King Art
mac Cuinn, Conaire's sons
defeated and
killed Nemed in the
battle of Cennfebrat...
-
Irish Ó
Coinn or
Mac Cuinn. The
latter surname means "descendant of Conn". The
surname Quinn is also
rendered Ó
Cuinn or
Mac Cuinn in Irish. The surname...
-
Another view is that the
anglicised surname is
derived from the
Gaelic MacCuinn,
meaning 'son of Conn'. The
Gaelic personal name Conn is
derived from an...