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Thomas Owen Clancy

 
Wikipedia: Thomas Owen Clancy
Thomas Clancy redirects here. You may also be looking for an American author, Tom Clancy.

Professor Thomas Owen Clancy is an American academic and historian who specializes in the literature of the Celtic Dark Ages, especially that of Scotland. He did his undergraduate work at NYU, and his Ph. D at the University of Edinburgh. He is currently at the University of Glasgow. In 2005 he became Professor and Chair of Celtic, and has been the head of Glasgow University's Celtic Department.

In 2001 argued that St. Ninian was a Northumbrian spin-off of the name Uinniau (Irish St Finnian), the British missionary to whom St. Columba was a disciple, who in Great Britain was associated with Whithorn. He argued that the confusion is due to an eighth century scribal spelling error, for which the similarities of "u" and "n" in the Insular script of the period were responsible. [1] Dr. Clancy has also done work on the Lebor Bretnach, arguing that it written in Scotland.

His works include:

  • (with Gilbert Márkus OP), Iona: the earliest poetry of a Celtic monastery, (Edinburgh University Press: Edinburgh, 1995)
  • (ed.), The Triumph Tree: Scotland’s Earliest Poetry, 550–1350, (Canongate: Edinburgh, 1998) with translations by G. Márkus, J.P. Clancy, T.O. Clancy, P. Bibire and J. Jesch
  • "The Scottish provenance of the ‘Nennian’ recension of Historia Brittonum and the Lebor Bretnach " in: S. Taylor (ed.),Picts, Kings, Saints and Chronicles: A Festschrift for Marjorie O. Anderson (Four Courts: Dublin, 2000) 87–107
  • "A Gaelic Polemic Quatrain from the Reign of Alexander I, ca. 1113" in: Scottish Gaelic Studies vol.20 (2000) 88–96
  • Clancy, Thomas O (2001). "The real St Ninian". Innes Review 52: pp. 1–28. ISSN 0020-157X. 
  • "Philosopher-King : Nechtan mac Der-Ilei" in: the Scottish Historical Review, 83 (2004), 125–249.

Notes

  1. ^ Although subsequently James E. Fraser has argued that the mistake was probably deliberate. See Fraser, James E (2002). "Northumbrian Whithorn and the Making of St Ninian". Innes Review 53: pp. 40–59. ISSN 0020-157X. 

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