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・ Catharine Cox Miles
・ Catharine Dixon
・ Catharine E. B. Cox Award for Excellence in the Visual Arts
・ Catharine Edwards (historian)
・ Catharine Elizabeth Bean Cox
・ Catharine Frydendahl
・ Catharine Furnace
・ Catharine Garmany
・ Cathal Mac Coille
・ Cathal mac Conchobair
・ Cathal mac Conchobar mac Taidg
・ Cathal mac Davok Ó Con Ceanainn
・ Cathal mac Domhnall Ó Conchobair
・ Cathal mac Donnubáin
・ Cathal mac Dúnlainge
Cathal mac Finguine
・ Cathal mac Muiredaig
・ Cathal mac Muirgiussa
・ Cathal mac Murchadh
・ Cathal mac Néill
・ Cathal mac Ruaidhri
・ Cathal mac Ruaidri Ó Conchobair
・ Cathal mac Tadg
・ Cathal mac Tigernán
・ Cathal mac Áeda
・ Cathal mac Áedo
・ Cathal mac Ógán
・ Cathal Maenmaighe
・ Cathal Magee
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Cathal mac Finguine : ウィキペディア英語版
Cathal mac Finguine

Cathal mac Finguine (died 742) was an Irish King of Munster or Cashel, and effectively High King of Ireland as well. He belonged to the Eóganacht Glendamnach sept of the dominant Eóganachta kin-group whose members dominated Munster from the 7th century to the 10th. His father, uncle, grandfather, and great-grandfather had also been kings of Cashel, so too were his son and grandson.
Cathal's conflict with the Uí Néill kings, Fergal mac Máele Dúin, Flaithbertach mac Loingsig, and Áed Allán, son of Fergal mac Máele Dúin, is reported at some length in the Irish annals, and again northern and southern versions provide differing accounts. Cathal also appears as a character, not always portrayed sympathetically as in ''Aislinge Meic Con Glinne'' where he is possessed by a demon of gluttony, in a number of prose and verse tales in the Middle Irish language.
Widely regarded as the most powerful Irish king of the first half of the 8th century, and the strongest (historical) king from Munster before Brian Bóruma,〔Mac Shamhráin 2005〕 Cathal mac Finguine is believed to be the last king mentioned in the ''Baile Chuinn Chétchathaig''.〔Mac Shamhráin and Byrne 2005, pp. 210–12〕 The most expansionist historical Eóganacht king before him was Faílbe Flann mac Áedo Duib (d. 639).
==Background==

The Eóganachta kingship, which had its chief seat at Cashel and chief church at Emly, was the most powerful in the southern half of Ireland, while the various branches of the Uí Néill and Connachta dominated the northern half. At this time the Uí Néill were striving to be the sole Kings of Tara, with the succession generally alternating between the northern and southern branches of the Uí Néill,〔The presumed expansion of the Eóganachta and Uí Néill is shown in Duffy, pp. 18–19. For the Uí Néill king lists and genealogies, see Byrne, pp. 275–277 & 280–284; Charles-Edwards, chapter 12 & pp. 600–608.〕 although the ancient ceremonial kingship had not long before been held by the Laigin and Ulaid, and more distantly the Dáirine and Érainn. The kingship of Cashel, argued in early Munster sources, e.g. the ''Uraicecht Becc'',〔D. A. Binchy, ("The Date and Provenance of Uraicecht Becc" ), in ''Ériu 18'' (1958): 44–54.〕 as actually the most powerful in Ireland, was founded in the middle of the 5th century by the descendants of Conall Corc and Aimend, the "inner circle" of the Eóganachta, who after a century and a half of able politicking had come to supersede the overlordship of the Corcu Loígde in Munster.
For the century and a quarter until Cathal's death, the kingship of Cashel was dominated by the Eóganacht Chaisil and Eóganacht Glendamnach septs of the inner circle.〔For king lists and genealogies, see Byrne, pp. 277–279 & 291–296; Charles-Edwards, pp. 612–617.〕 The lands of the Glendamnach lay to the south-west of Cashel, in the middle valley of the Blackwater.〔Byrne, pp. 172–173.〕 Cathal's father, Finguine mac Cathail Con-cen-máthair(d.696), uncle, Ailill mac Cathail (d. 701), grandfather, Cathal Cú-cen-máthair (d. 665/666), and great-grandfather, Cathal mac Áedo (d. 628), had been kings of Cashel.〔
Cathal's immediate predecessor was probably Cormac mac Ailello of the Caisil sept, who was killed in battle against the Déisi in 713. Eterscél mac Máele Umai, who had been king and did not die until 721, had probably abdicated much earlier, so that Cathal was king at Cashel from around 713 onwards.〔Irwin. For the death of Cormac at the battle of ''Cam Feradaig'', ''Annals of Innisfallen'', s.a. 713, and ''Annals of Ulster'', s.a. 713; for the death of Eterscél, ''Annals of Innisfallen'', s.a. 721.〕
While the Uí Néill and Eóganachta were the most important kingships in Ireland, the kings of Leinster and the kings of Connacht were significant forces. Leinster, once a much larger region, the northern parts of which had been conquered by the Uí Néill, was the target of expansionist Uí Néill kings, and also of the Eóganachta. The contest for control of Leinster would play a major part in Cathal's reign, and indeed in relations between the Eóganachta and Uí Néill in the centuries which followed. The kings of Connacht claimed a common kinship with the Uí Néill, and were largely favourable towards them. The remaining provincial kingship, that of the kings of Ulster, controlled a much smaller area than the later province of Ulster, largely confined to the lands north and east of Lough Neagh, and was generally hostile to the Uí Néill.〔Byrne, pp. 126–129.〕 Finally, in the vast province of Munster itself there were several respectable but peripheral dynasties, such as the Uí Liatháin (for whom see below), whose relationships with the Eóganachta were rather distant and ambiguous.

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