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Derbforgaill

 
Celtic Mythology: Derbforgaill

1. Princess of Lochlainn who suffers unrequited love for Cúchulainn. Hearing stories of the hero's prowess but without having seen him, Derbforgaill and a servant take the forms of swans to seek Cúchulainn. Not knowing their identity, the hero casts a stone at one swan, who, fallen to the ground, becomes Derbforgaill. He sucks the blood from her wound, saving her, but because he has tasted her blood, is forbidden carnal relations with her; Cúchulainn then gives Derbforgaill to his foster-brother (or foster-son) Lugaid Riab nDerg. The marriage is happy, but Derbforgaill dies an ugly death. Provoked into a contest to prove her sexual allure, by seeing which woman can send her urine furthest through a pillar of snow, Derbforgaill wins, only to bring down the wrath of the other courtly women, who jealously mutilate and kill her. Cúchulainn vengefully slaughters 150 women of the household, but Lugaid perishes of grief or shock.

2. One of the most famous adulteresses of medieval Irish history. Wife of Tigernán Ua Ruairc [O'Rourke], she departed with Diarmait mac Murchada [Dermot MacMurrough], perhaps willingly (1152), but returned home the next year. The resultant bitterness between the families led to the Anglo-Normans coming to Ireland, and thus the end of Irish freedom. In repentance, Derbforgaill founded the Nuns’ church at Clonmacnoise.

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For other people named Derbforgaill, see Derbforgaill (disambiguation)

Derbforgaill (1108-1193) was a daughter of Murchad Ua Maeleachlainn, king of Meath, and of his wife Mor (d.1137), daughter of Muirchertach Ua Briain. She is famously known as the "Helen of Ireland" as her abduction from her husband Tigernán Ua Ruairc by Diarmait Mac Murchada, king of Leinster, in 1152 played some part in bringing the Anglo-Normans to Irish shores, although this is a role that has often been greatly exaggerated and often misinterpreted.

Unlike many other women, she is mentioned no less than five times in contemporary annals: her abduction by Diarmait in 1152 (Annals of Clonmacnoise), (although by the end of the next year she had left Leinster and returned to her family's lands in Meath, possibly after negotiations with her father's family); her donation to the Cistercian abbey of Mellifont of altar cloths, a gold chalice, and 60 ounces of gold during the consecration ceremony in 1157 (Annals of the Four Masters); her completion of the Nuns' Church at Clonmacnoise in 1167 (Annals of the Four Masters); her retirement to Clonmacnoise in 1186 (Annals of Ulster, Annals of Loch Ce); and her death in Clonmacnoise in 1193 (Annals of Ulster, Annals of the Four Masters).

Tigernán Ua Ruairc had three children, Melaghlin (d.1162), Aed, described as crown prince of Breifne, killed by the Anglo-Normans (d.1171) and Dowchawley (d.1171), wife to Ruaidri Ua Conchobair, high king of Ireland, but whether or not Derbforgaill was their mother is less certain.

The abduction episode of 1152 has been variously interpreted. It seems that Derbforgaill went willingly, and that she took her cattle and chattels with her, all at the persuasion of her younger brother Maeleachlainn. It has been suggested that this was an attempt on the part of her paternal family, the royal family of Meath, to forge a new alliance through marriage, with Diarmait Mac Murchada. Formalising treaties through marriage seems to have been standard practice in twelfth-century Ireland, witness Diarmait Mac Murchada's betrothal of his daughter Aoife to Strongbow, while in 1165 the king of Uladh's daughter was taken hostage by the high king presumably just to prevent her father using her cement a new alliance.

Most historians are agreed that there was no romance involved, and that dynastic politics were at the base of the dispute. However, it does seem that Tigernán held the grudge, insisting on claiming legal compensation of 100 ounces of gold from Diarmait in 1167, which was enforced by Ruaidri Ua Conchobair.

Sources

  • Flanagan, Marie-Therese, Irish Society, Anglo-Norman Settlers, Angevin Kingship, Oxford, 1989.
  • Ni Ghradaigh, Jenifer, ' 'But what exactly did she give?' Derbforgaill and the Nuns' Church', in Clonmacnoise Studies II, ed. H. King, Dublin, 2003, pp.175-207.

 
 
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Celtic Mythology. A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Copyright © James MacKillop 1998, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Derbforgaill" Read more