- In
Irish mythology, Naisi, Noíse or
Noisiu (modern spelling:
Naoise [ˈn̪ˠiːʃə]) was the
nephew of King
Conchobar mac
Nessa of Ulster, and a son of Uisneach...
- Son The
Story of Mac Dathó's Pig Bricriu's
Feast The
Exile of the Sons of
Usnech The
Dream of Óengus The
Cattle Raid of Fráech The Raid for the
Cattle of...
-
compiled from
various sources by
William Graham, 1908 The
Exile of the Sons of
Usnech Deirdre of the
Sorrows by J. M.
Synge The
Lament of
Deirdre John Coulter...
- the
Battle of the
Boyne The
Birth of Cú
Chulainn The
Exile of the Sons of
Usnech The
Battle of Ros na Ríg The
Death of
Conchobar Irish mythology in po****r...
-
includes the text
Clann Uisnigh or
Deirdre of the
Sorrows in
which Naoise mac
Usnech falls for Deirdre. However, King
Conchobar mac
Nessa imprisons her due to...
-
Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 273 "Deirdre, or the
Exile of the sons of
Usnech"
Archived 14 May 2011 at the
Wayback Machine (ed. & trans. unknown) MacKillop...
-
Debility of the Ulstermen". www.maryjones.us. "The
Exile of the Sons of
Usnech". www.maryjones.us. "On the
morrow a
valiant hero
called Úalu went and took...
- (how
Fergus mac Róich went to
Connaught after his
murder of the sons of
Usnech, and of his death); 3. the
arrival of Silvius,
grandson of Ascanius, in...
- of Regamna; The
intoxication of the Ulstermen; The
exile of the sons of
Usnech; The
adventures of Nera; Bricriu's feast; The cattle-raid of Cooley; The...
- Milne's poem
Galion (1953) and
Thomas Kinsella's
translation of The sons of
Usnech (1954).
Cranwill made her own
clothes and
cobbled her own
shoes into her...