- The
Delbhna Nuadat (Modern Irish:
Dealbhna Nuad; IPA:ˈdʲalˠəwnˠəˈn̪ˠuəd̪ˠ) were
lords of a
large section of what is now
Athlone in
County Roscommon, situated...
- In
Irish mythological history Mug
Nuadat (servant of Nuada) son of Mug Neit, son of Derg, son of Dergthene, son of Enna Munchain, son of Loch Mor, son...
- it at war with Mug
Nuadat, king of Munster.
According to the
medieval text Cath
Maige Leana ("the
battle of Mag Leana"), Mug
Nuadat's father, Mug Neit son...
-
Ollamh (or
Oilill Olum) in
Irish traditional history was the son of Mug
Nuadat and was a king of the
southern half of Ireland,
placed in the 3rd century...
- Tadg, son of Nuada, was a
druid and the
maternal grandfather of
Fionn Mac ****hail in the
Fenian Cycle of
Irish mythology. It is
unclear whether his father...
-
Nuada (Nuadu,
Nuadat, Nuadha) is an
Irish male name
meaning 'the
cloud maker' and is
borne by
several figures from mythology,
legend and history, including:...
-
Hundred Battles was Mug
Nuadat ("Nuada's Slave"). The Delbhna, a
people of
early Ireland, had a
branch called the
Delbhna Nuadat who
lived in
County Roscommon...
- hand of
Muirne Muncaim "of the fair neck",
daughter of the
druid Tadg mac
Nuadat, but Tadg
refused him, so ****hall
forcibly carried away
Muirne in elopement...
- Mug were Conn Cétchathach (Conn of the
Hundred Battles) and Éogan Mór Mug
Nuadat (the
Servant of Nuada),
whose armies in 123 AD
fought the
battle of Mag...
- "Muiren smooth-neck"), the
daughter of Tadg mac
Nuadat (in
Fotha Catha Chnucha) and
granddaughter of
Nuadat the
druid serving Cathair Mór who was high-king...