[text copied in its entirety from Irish folklore list to be used for my research in the future] >Rathraige or Roithrige or Rothraige or Rodraige [Rathan] als. Corce Roide: > >From: >Nine men of the son (sons) of Glaschach, son of Mug Ruith from whom >are the Rodraige. Genealogical Tracts: Three sons of Mug Nuadat. > >One of the Achedtuatha. > >Dal ua Corp (Corb?) were: Dal nUiste; Fedraige, Gabraige, Glasraige, >Gregraige, Grandraige, Lugraige, Lusfraige, Mendraige *Mennraige*, >Mendtraige, Rathraige, Rochraige, Seinraige, Sodraige, Tradraige, >Uaraige, RC xx 336 > >-J This is very useful. So as far as I can see the reference to Mug Ruith as an eponymous ancestor of the Rodraige is taken from The Expulsion of the Déisi which has been dated to the 8th century so right near our earliest references to him. The narrative breaks off at various points to explore separate stories of individuals in the text and there are battles, druíd and magic but Mug Ruith remains undeveloped in the text appearing towards the end in a long list of the various subsets of the Déisi. When I try to find references to genealogies of Mug Nuadat I am not finding a Mog Ruith connection, instead I am only finding Eochaid Rothán listed as an alternative eponymous ancestor of the Rothrige but I'm still looking for a date for the composition. Have I missed something? At any rate it does seem to verify our assumption that Mog Ruith was linked from some of his earliest references to the Rothraige (of various spellings) but we seem to have an alternative in Eochaid Rothán also being put forward. We also have an earlier background for some of the narrative ideas in the Siege story and although we cannot push the date of its composition back any further we can see that it expands on a story of the Déisi and Cormac mac Airt that goes back to the 8th century. Looking at the Déisi story I came across a neat summary in a book by Will Parker called The Four Branches of the Mabinogi which looks very interesting so I'm quite grateful to this thread for bringing this to my attention - he explores various Irish texts in the book and their meaning in the Irish / Welsh context :) and I shall be looking to get this book in the near future: "Before we explore the other main themes in the Third Branch, the Wasteland Myth and the figure of the ‘Un-King’, we need to understand the background of the particular group that settled in Dyfed. These are identified in the medieval tradition as the Déisi or Dessi, a parallel branch of which inhabited a small tribal kingdom in the eastern coastlands of present day County Cork.According to an Old Irish text (dated by Meyer to the late eight century AD),666 the Déisi were a vassal people whose homeland was originally in the Meath area. In the reign of Cormac they suffered abuse at the hands of the high king’s son, and were subsequently forced into exile. In the course of their wanderings they spent some time in Leinster, before being moved on again in the time of the reign of the High King Crimthann. They were then moved on to the South, where they eventually established a territory among the peoples of Munster. The Expulsion of the Déisi, though an unremarkable tribal-historical tract in many respects, does include some interesting features. Telling as it does the story of a ‘wandering people’ (immerge), the Expulsion is perhaps necessarily anti-heroic. Throughout the story the Déisi are continually harried, routed and moved on by neighbouring tribal groups – resulting in their perpetual itinerant, landless status. While they are not portrayed as weak or cowardly, they are represented as suffering more than their fair-share of animosity and ill-fortune: a state of affairs that begins with the rape of one of their daughters by the High King Cormac’s son. It is interesting to note that one of leading protagonists from among the Déisi is a rather sinister female druidic figure, known as Eithne Uathach ‘Eithne Dread’ who was ‘reared on the flesh of little boys’ to ensure her preternatural growth. It was prophesied that through Eithne the Déisi would eventually ‘seize land on which they shall dwell’. And indeed, this proves to be the case. Eithne first marries the High King of the Mumu (Munster), then negotiates a homeland for the Déisi, her mother’s people. But this homeland is only secured when the Osraige (‘Deer-People’), rival claimants to the land, are finally overcome. This victory itself is again largely the work of Eithne, following a prophetic vision induced by ‘two jars full of wine … from the lands of Gaul’. In this vision, the Déisi receive the rather unheroic injunction that as long as they do not strike the first blow, victory will be theirs. To this end, they magically transform a passing serf into the shape of a ‘red, hornless cow’ and send this hapless proxy over to where the Osraige were advancing, who kill it before they realise ‘it was man that had been slain’. After this follows one of the few military victories achieved by the Déisi throughout this tribal-historic account, with the Osraige turning and running ‘like deer’. After this, the Déisi divide up the newly won territories, to be held ‘until the day of Judgement’. We are less concerned with the historical reality or otherwise of this mythico-legal tract. It was probably constructed largely to explain the presence of tribal groups with the name ‘Déisi’ in various parts of central, eastern and southern Ireland and to qualify the nature of the relationship of this last group with the high kings of Cashel (the Eoganachta of Mumu). It is an almost parenthetic reference to a fourth offshoot of the Déisi tribe – this time over the Irish Sea – that interests us in this particular context. This is mentioned shortly after the birth of Eithne, just as the Déisi are attempting to find a foothold in the South: Eochiad, son of Artchorp, went over the sea with his descendants into the territory of the Demed [i.e. Dyfed], and it is there that his sons and grandsons died. And from them is the race of Crimthann over there, of which there is Tualodor son of Rigin, son of Catacuin, son of Caittien, son of Clotenn, son of Naee, son of Artuir, son of Retheoir, son of Congair, son of Gartbuir, son of Alchoil, son of Trestin, son of Aed Brosc, son of Corath, son of Eochaid Allmuir, son of Artchorp. Interestingly enough, almost precisely the same geneaological sequence is found in the Harleian genealogies of the kings of Dyfed, based on traditions current at the court of Owain ap Hywel, in tenth century Wales. Through this, we can fairly confidently link the name of ‘Gartbuir son of Alchoil’ with the ‘Vorteporix Protectoris’ commemorated on the aforementioned inscribed stone (in both Latin and ogham characters) at Narbeth in Dyfed. Gartbuir/Vorteporix can in turn be linked to Vortipor the tyrannus demetorium ‘the tyrant of Dyfed’ – a figure mentioned by Gildas, his sixth century contemporary. What this tells us is that even into the Early Middle Ages there was at least a memory of a common tradition linking the Expulsion of the Déisi with the extensive Irish settlements in Dyfed. It would even seem likely that the two regions involved, Dyfed and Southern Ireland, remained in close contact for some generations after this settlement. The Irish presence in Dyfed is testified, as we have seen, in numerous ways: including the presence of ogham stones and Irish-style raths as well as a number of toponymic and linguistic indicators. Both the ogham tradition and the raths would seem to point to a particular connection with the southern area of Ireland: a connection which is also recognised by the medieval tradition. While we cannot be certain about the accuracy of the origin myths or even the genealogies involved, it is clear that these were traditions that were recognised on both sides of the Irish Sea, even into the Early Middle Ages. If we are looking, then, for the original Irish-Demetian tradition on which the Third Branch probably drew, we should at first consider this Southern Irish context, and any significant mythical parallels that might be found in it. The latter points most heavily to the exile myth of the Déisi outlined above, as well as the ‘un-king’ tale (with its Wasteland associations) found also in the Irish tale Cath Maige Mucrama, which we shall consider in due course." - Parker, THE FOUR BRANCHES OF THE MABINOGI (2007) It is interesting that in the Déisi story we have the same use of magic to acquire land and that Parker notes this might be considered anti-Heroic in the same way that Mark Williams describes the Siege story: "The conscious manipulation of apocalyptic and apocryphal story elements that we see in Forbuis Droma Damhghaire perhaps has a satirical purpose. Does it diminish Mug Ruith to dress him, as it were, in the garments of Antichrist? In Forbuis Droma Damhghaire, he is an impressive, dignified figure, but it is possible that the very excess of magic in the text is satirical. Magic undercuts the heroic code: enchantment diminishes. The new synthesis that led druidic cloud-divination to emerge as a motif in the twelfth century, or perhaps slightly before, shows us that Irish presentations of the wonder-workers of their pagan past were certainly not static: new elements were brought in to revivify these literary representations. These were often remarkably ambivalent, as with the dual influence of both Magi and diabolical magi in the creation of néladóracht. We have seen that early Irish writers drew on Isidore as the standard description of wicked magical practices, though they emphasized different aspects of his account." Williams, FIERY SHAPES (2010) So some possible interesting emerging connections - - Eithne Uathach in the Déisi story and the other instances of úatha in Irish stories and their connection with the Morrígain (cf. Borsje, The ‘terror of the night’ and the Morrígain: Shifting faces of the supernatural at http://dare.uva.nl/document/133032) - the idea of acquiring or defending land through magic rather than through direct (heroic?) battle - the Morrígain assumes the form of an eel to attack Cú Chulainn in the Táin Bó Cúailnge and a similar (yet fatal) attack by an ally of Mog Ruith in the Siege story. - the Morrígain's familial connections show a heavy leaning towards incest and one of the unique features of the Irish Antichrist myth as opposed to the rest of Europe is that he is to be born incestuously so it may be significant that Irish texts place this emphasis on incest in the birth of characters with a dread nature about them If anything I wold say we are moving further and further away from a sun-god connection and more to the darker side of things.
musings on the magical mythical Mog Ruith
28 September 2012 by Me
I am the author of Gods of The Nowhere: A Novel of Halloween. My story retells the battle between Tara and Munster, between Cormac MacAirt and King Broadcrown, where Mog Ruith is summoned to aid in the fight. The novel is really about druids, the descendants of Mog Ruith and focuses on Samhain.
It is purely a work of fiction and by no means an academic assertion, but you will really get a kick out of it. It’s a fun read.
http://www.amazon.com/Gods-The-Nowhere-Novel-Halloween/dp/0988243318
Happy Halloween,
James TIpper