- Mac
Coitir and Mac
Oitir are
masculine surnames in the
Irish language. The
names translate into
English as "son of
Oitir".
These surnames originated as...
- mac
Oitir (Old Norse: Bárðr Óttarsson, died 914) was a
Viking leader who may have
ruled the Isle of Man in the
early 10th century. Bárid mac
Oitir is mentioned...
- time
Oitir Mac mic
Oitir, one of the
Hebridean nobles, took
Dublin by
force and held it for six
years before his ********ination in 1148.
Oitir's son Thorfinn...
-
Sandbank (Scottish Gaelic: an
Oitir or
Taigh a' Chladaich) is a
village on the
Cowal peninsula in
Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It is
located 2.5
miles (4...
- M916.14[918]:
Oitir and the
foreigners went from Loch
Dachaech to Alba; and Constantine, the son of Aedh, gave them battle, and
Oitir was slain, with...
-
balance distributed over 280 townships. In
addition to the
major North Ford (
Oitir Mhòr) and
South Ford
causeways that
connect North Uist to
Benbecula via...
- The
Cotter family (Irish Mac
Coitir or Mac
Oitir) of
Ireland was a Norse-Gaelic
family ****ociated with
County Cork and
ancient Cork city. The
family was...
-
considered to be part of the
Inner Hebrides (see below) Abbot's Isle An
Oitir Barmore Island Black Islands Burnt Islands (comprising
Eilean Mòr, Eilean...
- Óttar of
Dublin (or Óttarr of Dublin), in
Irish Oitir Mac mic
Oitir (
Oitir the son of a son of
Oitir), was a Hiberno-Norse King of Dublin,
reigning in...
-
Sheep Island, to the
north east.
Located on the
north s**** of
Sanda is the
Oitir Buidhe (yellow sand spit), a
pronounced area of sand
exposed at low tide...