Misplaced Pages

Cormac Mac Con Midhe

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Irish poet

Cormac Mac Con Midhe, a.k.a. Cormac mac Cearbhaill Mac Con Midhe (died 1627) was an early Modern Irish poet.

Manuscript H.5.6, held at Trinity College, Dublin, contains a poem of 24 stanzas apparently written by Mac Con Midhe for Toirealach Ó Néill of Sliocht Airt Óig of Tyrone and his wife, Sorcha. It survives in another copy of 188 lines in MS 1291 (formerly H.1.17), also in Trinity, both being made by Hugh O'Daly in the middle 18th century for a Dr. Sullivan. According to Ó Diobhlin (2000), "Because of the corruptness of the copy the poem has never been edited, nor have its contents been deciphered ... Toirealach was transplanted to Connacht, and then he disappears from history after the Jacobite rebellion."

References

  • Manuscript H.1.7, Trinity College, Dublin.
  • Manuscript H.5.6, Trinity College, Dublin.
  • Tyrone's Gaelic Literary Legacy, by Diarmaid Ó Diobhlin, in Tyrone: History and Society, 403–432, ed. Charles Dillon and Henry A. Jefferies, Geography Publications, Dublin, 2000. ISBN 0-906602-71-8.
Irish poetry
Topics
Poets
Bardic
15th/16th century
17th century
18th century
19th century
20th century
21st century
Poems
Anthologies
Epics
Bardic
18th century
19th century
Contemporary
Organisations
Publishers
Publications
Events
Awards / prizes


Stub icon

This article about an Irish poet is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: