An difríocht idir athruithe ar: "Lughaidh na Riabh Dearg"
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Líne 24:
==Roghaí eile==
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[[Lucius Gwynn]] suggested that an earlier [[Ard-Rí na hÉireann|Ard-Rí]] known as [[Lughaidh Réoderg]] may have become confused with a separate and minor character from the [[Rúraíocht]] associated with Cú Chulainn.<ref>Lucius Gwynn, [https://www.jstor.org/pss/30007892 "De Sil Chonairi Móir"], in ''Ériu 6'' (1912): 130–43.</ref> [[T. F. O'Rahilly]], on the other hand, believed the epithet ''Riab nDerg'' to simply be a corruption of the earlier ''Réoderg'',<ref>O'Rahilly, p. 486</ref> and does not believe them to be distinct legendary figures.
''The view advanced by O'Rahilly was that Lugaid Riab nDerg is yet another emanation of the heroic mytho-dynastic figure [[Lugaid Mac Con|Lugaid]], closely associated with the prehistoric [[Érainn]],<ref>O'Rahilly, ll. 201-2</ref> a population of late [[Iron Age]] Ireland who provide Irish legend with its earliest known Kings of Tara. One of their most notable representatives in that office is Lugaid's immediate predecessor, Conaire Mór.▼
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''Specifically, O'Rahilly believed Lugaid Riab nDerg to be the double of [[Lugaid mac Con Roí]], whose alternative epithet was ''mac Trí Con'' "son of Three Hounds", and who himself is to some extent identical with [[Lugaid Mac Con]].<ref>O'Rahilly, ll. 486–7, 79–80</ref> The last, usually known simply as Mac Con "Hound's Son", is an Érainn king matching Conaire Mór in importance in Irish legend. Another is [[Cú Roí mac Dáire]], or simply [[Dáire]],<ref>O'Rahilly, lch. 49</ref> father of Lugaid mac Con Roí. A 'fourth' Lugaid and 'ancestor' of Mac Con was [[Lugaid Loígde]].▼
▲''Specifically, O'Rahilly believed Lugaid Riab nDerg to be the double of
==Achar ama==
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