Scéla Conchobair
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Scéla Conchobair maic Nessa (Scéla Conchobuir meic Nessa) or the Tidings of Conchobar mac Nessa is a title invented by Whitley Stokes for a short prose piece from the Ulster Cycle preserved in the 12th-century manuscript, the Book of Leinster. It is interpolated with lore not found elsewhere regarding the branches (halls) of the Ulster court at Emain Macha and the shields of the Ulstermen.


Description

In the codex (Book of Leinster, TCD 1339 olim H.2.18), the piece is bound in leaves immediately following the recension of the Táin Bó Cúailnge, and in the ''Catalogue'' is listed among the "Prose tales of Conchobar Mac Nessa, Cuchulaind, Athirne, Celtchair.". The beginning portion recapitulates the conception of Conchobair, and for this reason, the tale has also been referred to as a variant text of the ''Compert Conchobair''
Others class the tale as a variant of the tract on "How Conchobar obtained the Kingship of Ulster." In this tale is a description of the three halls, or branches of Conchobar. ''Croebrúad'' (Stokes: the Cróeb-ruad, O'Curry: the Royal Branch, Kinsella: Craebruad, the Red Branch), ''Téite Brecc'' (Stokes: the Téite Brecc, O'Curry: Speckled Branch, Kinsella: Téte Brec, the Twinkling Hoard ), ''Croibderg'' (Stokes: the Red Branch, O'Curry: the Red Branch, Kinsella: Craebderg, the Ruddy Branch). The first being the palace hall of the Ulstermen. The second was the armoury where the shields, weapons, and goblets were kept. The third stored all the heads and spoils. There follows a listing of the shields of the Ulstermen, eighteen in all, beginning with the Ochain of Conchobar. Some of the personages are difficult to identify since neither patronymics nor nicknames are given alongside the names. This portion was also treated by O'Curry in his lectures. Some of the shields are construed to be swords by contemporary translators and dictionarists The lore regarding the great ale/wine vat, Ol n-guala, and the rod with apples/balls for calling the crowd to attention, can be compared with the accounts found in the LU recension of Tochmarc Emer. This work has also been incorporated as one of the foretales in Kinsella's translation of ''The Táin''. This editorial decision is potentially confusing, since for the
Tain Bo Cuailnge Tain ( Gaelic: ''Baile Dhubhthaich'') is a royal burgh and parish in the County of Ross, in the Highlands of Scotland. Etymology The name derives from the nearby River Tain, the name of which comes from an Indo-European root meaning 'flow'. The ...
proper, he uses the first recension and not the Book of Leinster version. The work also contains interesting passage of hyperboles regarding the heptad of Fergus ( ga, sechtae), omitted by Kinsella, which states how Fergus had the appetite of seven men, a libido that could only be satisfied by seven women in the absence of his wife Flidas, and that the size of his phallus measured seven fists. On the last reference, it may be borne in mind that the upright stone on Tara Hill, by some considered the Lia Fail, was "still popularly called ''Bod Fhearghais'', that is, ''Penis Fergusii''" in the days of antiquarian George Petrie,


References


Manuscript sources

(Tidings/Story of Conchobar) * Book of Leinster (LL): p 106a 1 -107b 21 (RIA). (How Conchobar obtained the kingship) * Book of Ballymote (BB): f 167Va-b (fragment) *
Book of Lismore The Book of Lismore, also known as the Book of Mac Carthaigh Riabhach, is a late fifteenth-century Gaelic manuscript that was created at Kilbrittain in County Cork, Ireland, for Fínghean Mac Carthaigh, Lord of Carbery (1478–1505). Defective ...
: p 247a-248a (f 125b 1) (fragment)


Editions and translations

(Tidings/Story of Conchobar) L* * * (How Conchobar obtained the kingship) * * hort text from BB


Secondary literature

* (Coimpert Concobuir in so / The Conception of Conchobur, pp. 173–82) * ** * The paper was "read 24th April, etc..., 1837". The particular mention regarding Fergus's stone occurs on p. 159.


External links


MS-OMIT


* ttp://www.maryjones.us/ctexts/index_irish.html Celtic Literature Collective (Irish) {{DEFAULTSORT:Scela Conchobair Early Irish literature Texts in Irish Narratives of the Ulster Cycle