Book of Fenagh


The Book of Fenagh is a manuscript of prose and poetry written in Classical Irish by Muirgheas mac Pháidín Ó Maolconaire in the monastery at Fenagh, West Breifne. It was commissioned by Tadhg Ó Rodaighe, the coarb of the monastery, and is believed to derive from the "old Book of Caillín", a lost work about Caillín, founder of the monastery. Ó Maolconaire began work about 1516.

Contents

Marginal notes in Irish adorning the book are commentaries by the noted Irish antiquarian Tadhg O'Rodaighe from Crossfield in Fenagh.
The Book of Fenagh was used as a source for the Annals of Connacht and the Annals of the Four Masters.

Provenance

The O'Roddy coarbs and descendants retained the book down to Brian O'Roddy, parish priest of Kilronan in the mid-19th century, upon whose death it was retained by his successors as parish priest. It later passed to George Michael Conroy, Bishop of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise, for safe-keeping, before his successor Bartholomew Woodlock sold it in 1888 to the Royal Irish Academy for £10. This was on the advice of Denis Murphy, a Jesuit, that the RIA were best able to preserve it. Its catalogue number is RIA MS 23 P 26: Cat. No. 479.

Editions

made a facsimile transcript in 1828, and a manuscript English translation in 1830. The first published edition was in 1875, edited by William Maunsell Hennessy and translated by Denis H. Kelly from O'Donovan's facsimile. The Irish Manuscripts Commission published a supplementary volume in 1939 with material missing from previous versions.

Citations