-
Cellach Tosach mac
Donngaile (died 809) was a king of the Uí
Cheinnselaig of
South Leinster. He
belonged to the Sil
Chormaic sept of this
branch of the...
-
their tosach forebears by
holding their position as a
feudal grant from the crown,
rather than the
almost independent status held by a
tosach. Thanes...
- in the Bríatharogam
Morann mic Moín
tosach frecrai - "beginning of an answer" in the Bríatharogam Mac ind Óc
tosach garmae - "beginning of calling" in...
- 'Willow' lí ambi "pallor of a
lifeless one" lúth bech "sustenance of bees"
tosach mela "beginning of honey" ᚅ N Nin 'Branch-fork'
costud síde "establishing...
- lúth lego "sustenance of a leech" étiud
midach "raiment of physicians"
tosach n-échto "beginning of slaying" Its
meaning is
probably "[the act of] wounding"...
- Aejang, king of
Silla (b. 788)
Aureolus of Aragon,
Frankish nobleman Cellach Tosach mac Donngaile,
Irish king Elfodd,
Welsh bishop (approximate date) Gang,...
- 141–142, on the
difficulty of
tacking in a keel-less
modern currach: Ar a
tosach a choimeád sa
bhfarraige agus gan í a
ligeant i
leith a cliatháin uirthi...
-
succeeded by his
brother Dub
Calgaid mac Laidcnén (died 769). His son
Cellach Tosach mac
Donngaile (died 809) was also a King of Uí Cheinnselaig.[citation needed]...
-
Boundary in a
Shetland Island Community (Manchester, 1987), p. 137.
James Tosach Clark,
Genealogical Collections made by
Walter Macfarlane, vol. 2 (SHS:...
- mic Moín lúth bech: "sustenance of bees" in the Bríatharogam Mac ind Óc
tosach mela: "beginning of honey" in the Bríatharogam Con Culainn.
While medieval...