- Áed Sláine
Áed mac Diarmato (died 604), called Áed Sláine (Áed of Slane) was the son of
Diarmait mac Cerbaill . Legendary stories exist of Áed's birth. SaintColumba is said to have prophesied his death. His descendants, theSíl nÁedo Sláine —the seed of Áed of Slane—were prominent in 7th and early 8th centuryIreland .Origins
Áed's mother is said to have been Mugain Mór, perhaps an euhemerisation of a
Munster sovereignty goddess. This Mugain is called the daughter of Conchrad mac Duach, the king ofOsraige . Mugain and Diarmait's marriage is barren, and Mugain is humiliated by Diarmait's chief wife until she is given blessedholy water to drink by SaintFinnian of Moville , after which she gives birth to a lamb, then to a salmon, and finally to Áed.Finnian prophesied that Áed would "surpass his brethren and more kings will come from him than from the sons of others". This prophecy may perhaps be dated to the period before 750, when the Síl nÁedo Sláine were dominant, after which the descendants of Áed's brother
Colmán Már —Clann Cholmáin —were clearly the most important group descended from Diarmait mac Cerbaill. A third brother of Áed,Colmán Bec , was also an ancestor figure, but of the less important Caílle Follamain. The many legends surrounding his father name other brothers of Áed, but their historical existence is uncertain.Áed and his kin were considered by later
genealogies and histories to be members of the southern branch of theUí Néill kindred, but this may be a later addition to include the descendants of Diarmait mac Cerbaill, supposed to be great-grandson ofNiall of the Nine Hostages , among the ranks of the dominant Uí Néill. The other branches of the Uí Néill, the greatCenél Conaill and theCenél nEógain , and the lesser Cenél Lóegairi, Cenél Maine, Cenél nÉndai,Cenél Coirpri and Cenél Fiachach, traced their ancestry rather to sons of Niall.Life
Compared to his father and his sons, relatively little is said of Áed, either in the
Irish annals or in other sources such ashagiography or heroic verse.Adomnán recountsColumba 's prophecy to Áed in his "Life of St Columba". Columba told Áed that he would be as great a king as his father—Adomnán calls Diarmait king of Ireland—only if he avoided kinslaying. If he killed a kinsman he would be king only of his own people and that for only a short time.According to some later king lists, Áed was jointly
High King of Ireland withColmán Rímid of the Cenél nEógain after the death ofÁed mac Ainmuirech in 598. Áed mac Ainmuirech died in battle nearBaltinglass , modernCounty Wicklow , fighting againstBrandub mac Echach ,King of Leinster .It was to distinguish him from that Áed and from others that Áed mac Diarmato received his
cognomen , "Áed of Slane", referring to the Hill of Slane, a prehistoric site near theHill of Tara which lay within his lands. Some sources omit Áed from the list of kings, including the earliest, that found in the "Baile Chuind Chétchathaig ", a work of dynastic propaganda compiled in the reign of Áed's grandsonFínsnechta Fledach . His omission from this is believed to be a transcription error, and it very likely that he was High King.In 600 Áed had his nephew,
Suibne mac Colmáin Már , killed, "treacherously" says Adomnán. According toMarianus Scotus , Suibne, rather than Áed and Colmán Rímid, had been High King. In 604 both Áed and Colmán Rímid died by violence. Colmán was murdered by a kinsman and Suibne's sonConall Guthbinn killed Áed. This may perhaps have happened in battle and Áed may have been allied with the Uí Failgi, neighbours of Conall's. Áed and Colmán Rímid were followed as High King byÁed Uaridnach .Áed's recorded children are at least six sons, including Diarmait and Blathmac, and a daughter named Rontud. Áed's grandchildren included Fínsnechta Fledach,
Sechnassach andCenn Fáelad . His wife's name is recorded as Eithne.References
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