The Eight Sons of Niall Noígíallach
Posted: Mon, 2025-Jun-09 2:17 am
Although Niall Noígíallach is attributed with 14 sons in the Book of Ballymote and 16 sons in Dubaltach Mac Fir Bisig's Great Book of Genealogies, according to Geoffrey Keating in his General History of Ireland, only 8 sons had significance due to their progeny.
¹Keating gives the name as Fiacaidh which likely derives from Fíacháid which in turn derives from Fíachád = fía + cád; that is, "holy/noble/pure lord". So Fíachu is a diminutive of Fíachád. The same pattern seems to exist with Eochu being Eóchu which is a diminutive of Eóchád; that is, "holy/noble/pure salmon/yew tree".
²The epithet is also given as Err Breg (hinder-part of Brega or chariot-fighter of Brega) in some texts. The word eirr (chariot-fighter) did indeed mutate to err, but breg seems more likely a mutation of/conflation with bríg (power/strength/force/authority/vigour/virtue) rather than a reference to the territory of Brega. So, Eirr Bríg is a chariot-fighter of power/strength/force/authority/vigour/virtue.
- Fíachád¹ (AKA Fiachu)
- Láegaire
- Conall Eirr Bríg² (AKA Conall Cremthinnæ)
- Maine
- Eógan
- Conall Gulban Guirt
- Cairbre
- Énnae
- R-S588
- R-DF85
- R-ZS8379
- R-FT17642
- R-A10642
- R-A223
- R-FGC4133
- R-BY35726
- R-FGC32796
- R-BY119411
- R-FT168685
- R-FT105225
- R-BY93859
- R-FTC610
- R-BY35748
- R-FT168547
- R-Y61966
- R-FT236610
- R-BY226893
- R-FTT142
- R-FT224542
- R-FTB60193
¹Keating gives the name as Fiacaidh which likely derives from Fíacháid which in turn derives from Fíachád = fía + cád; that is, "holy/noble/pure lord". So Fíachu is a diminutive of Fíachád. The same pattern seems to exist with Eochu being Eóchu which is a diminutive of Eóchád; that is, "holy/noble/pure salmon/yew tree".
²The epithet is also given as Err Breg (hinder-part of Brega or chariot-fighter of Brega) in some texts. The word eirr (chariot-fighter) did indeed mutate to err, but breg seems more likely a mutation of/conflation with bríg (power/strength/force/authority/vigour/virtue) rather than a reference to the territory of Brega. So, Eirr Bríg is a chariot-fighter of power/strength/force/authority/vigour/virtue.