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Donn Cuailnge

 
Celtic Mythology: Donn Cuailnge

also Donn Tarb
[Irish, brown bull]

The famous Brown Bull in the Táin Bó Cuailnge [Cattle Raid of Cooley], over whom the central conflict takes place. Originally a pig-keeper of Bodb Derg named Friuch [boar's bristle (?)] who contended bitterly with Rucht [boar's grunt (?)], the pig-keeper of Ochall. Their ferocious conflicts took them through various manifestations: as ravens, water beasts, stags, warriors, phantoms, dragons, and water worms, until they became transformed into the Brown Bull of Cuailnge and the White Bull of Connacht. They take different names through each shift of shape, and are known ultimately as Donn Cuailnge and Finnbennach. The coveting of Donn Cuailnge by Medb, queen of Connacht, sets the action of the Táin in motion, provoking war with Ulster. At the end Donn Cuailnge meets and kills Finnbennach, but departs from the battle mortally wounded himself. Note also the possible Continental parallel in Donnotaurus.

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In the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology Donn Cúailnge, the Brown Bull of Cooley, was an extremely fertile stud bull over whom the Táin Bó Cúailnge (Cattle Raid of Cooley) was fought.

He was originally one of Bodb Dearg's pig-keepers, who fell out with a fellow pig-keeper. The two fought, transforming into various animal and human forms, ultimately becoming two worms which were swallowed by two cows and reborn as two bulls, Donn Cuailnge and Finnbhennach ("White-horned"). Donn belonged to Dáire mac Fiachna, a cattle-lord of Ulster; Finnbhennach was born into the herds of queen Medb of Connacht, but considered belonging to a woman beneath him and joined the herds of her husband, Ailill.

The Mórrígan had a heifer which she took to Cooley to be bulled by Donn. The result was a bull-calf which fought Finnbhennach and narrowly lost. After seeing that, Medb was determined to see Finnbhennach fight the bull-calf's sire.

When Medb discovered that owning Finnbhennach made Ailill richer than her, she resolved to even the account by possessing Donn Cuailnge. She sent messengers to Dáire with an extremely generous offer of land and treasure, and if necessary sexual favours, if he would loan the bull to her for a year. Dáire agreed. However the messengers got drunk, and one boasted that if he hadn't agreed Medb would have taken the bull by force. When Dáire heard that he backed out of the deal.

Medb raised an army to steal Donn, and marched on Ulster. The Mórrígan, in the form of a crow, warned Donn of the coming army, and he and his herds fled to Slieve Gullion. Medb ultimately tracked him down and captured him, although she lost many soldiers under his hooves.

The army was prevented from taking Donn back to Connacht by Cúchulainn, who invoked the right of single combat, defeating a series of champions in a standoff lasting months. Eventually, after a pitched battle with the Ulster forces, Medb's armies were forced to retreat, but they managed to bring Donn Cuailnge back to Cruachan. He and Finnbhennach fought. After a long and gruelling battle Donn killed his rival. Mortally wounded himself, he wandered around Ireland inspiring placenames before returning to Cooley to die.

Julius Caesar, in his Gallic Wars, refers to a Gaulish ally called Valerius Donnotaurus, an interesting Celtic parallel to the Donn Tarbh of Cooley.


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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 "Donn Cuailnge" Read more