Brión MAC ECHACH MUIGMEDÓIN
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Brión MAC ECHACH MUIGMEDÓIN's father: Eochaid MUGMEDÓN ( -362)

Brión MAC ECHACH MUIGMEDÓIN ( - )

Name: Brión MAC ECHACH MUIGMEDÓIN 1
Sex: Male
Father: Eochaid MUGMEDÓN ( -362)
Mother: -

Individual Events and Attributes

Occupation High King of Ireland

Marriage

Spouse (unknown)
Children Feldelm FOLTCHAIN ( - )

Individual Note

Brión (or Brían), son of Eochaid Mugmedón, was a legendary and possibly historical Irish king, fl. 4th/5th century.

 

The older half-brother of Niall of the Nine Hostages and one of the three brothers whose descendants were known as the Connachta,[1] Brión is said to have been king of Connacht. According to the traditional Irish chronology, his father died in 362.[2] Brión's descendants, the Uí Briúin, gave rise to many Kings of Connacht and its ruling families over the next thousand years. A descendant of his via the Uí Briúin Ai was Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair, who became High King of Ireland in 1166.

 

"The Violent Death of Crimthann mac Fidaig and of the Three Sons of Eochaid Muigmedón" gives the story of the sons of Eochaid Mugmedón. According to this saga, Brión was the favorite son of his mother Mongfind, sister of Crimthann mac Fidaig (d. 367), the king of Munster. She wanted Brión to succeed Eochaid but upon his death, war broke out with her stepson Niall Noigiallach (d. 405). When she realized the war was not going in her favor she arranged for Crimthann to become high king and sent Brión away to learn soldiering. On Brión's return after seven years, Mongfind poisoned her brother in order to get the throne for Brión.

 

However, Niall acquired the throne and made Brión his champion and levier of his rents and hostages. Brión took the throne of Connacht leading to war with his brother Fiachrae. Brión defeated Fiachrae at the Battle of Damchluain (near Tuam, County Galway) who was taken captive to Tara. However, Fiachrae's son Nath Í rallied forces and defeated Brión who was slain at a second Battle of Damchluain. Brión was buried at Ross Camm. Fiachrae was released and became the new king of Connacht.[3]

 

Descendants

According to Tirechan, Patrick visited the "halls of the sons of Brion" at Duma Selchae in Mag nAi, but does not give their names. An equilvant passage in the Vita Tripartita, possibly of 9th-centry origin, names six sons. "A series of later sources daing from the eleventh century onward, meanwhile, enumerates Brion's progeny as no less than twenty-four. No doubt the increasing power of the Ui Briuin was responsible for this dramatic swelling of the ranks, as tribes and dynasties newly coming under Ui Briuin sway were furnished with ancestries that would link them genealogically to their overlords. Into this category fall the Ui Bruin Umaill, and likely also the Ui Bruin Ratha and Ui Bruin Sinna." (p485, "Ui Bruin", Anne Connon, in "Medieval Ireland:An Encyclopedia").

 

Children

Dauí Tenga Uma aka Duach Galaich

 

NOTES:

1 Francis J. Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, Second edition, 2001, Appendix 2, Table 1

2 All dates per Daniel P. McCarthy, The Chronology of the Irish Annals, 1998

3 "The Death of Crimthann son of Fidach" (translator unknown)2

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 160, 170-3.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bri%C3%B3n_mac_Echach_Muigmed%C3%B3in.