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Tadhg Dall Ó hÚigínn


Tadhg Dall Ó hÚigínn (c. 1550-c.1591) was an Irish poet. His name in Gaelic should be written Tadhg Dall Ó h-Uiginn.

A well-known late-Gaelic era poet, Tadhg Dall Ó hÚigínn was a member of a family of professional poets from north Connacht. He was called dall because he was blind. His mother's name is unknown. His father was Mathghamhain mac Maolmhuire, a direct descendant of Tadg Óg Ó hÚigínn (died 1448). His brother, Maol Muire Ó hÚigínn, Archbishop of Tuam, died in 1590. Tadhg had lands at Doughrarane in Achonry, and Coolrecuil in Kilmactigue, among other parcels in County Sligo and served as a juror. Eleanor Knott suggested that these were lands originally granted to his ancestors by the O'Conor Sligo family, who were patrons of the family.

Ó hÚigínn evidently enjoyed high status in his lifetime, reflected in the lords to whom he addressed some of his poems. They included Cú Chonnacht Mag Uidhir (died 1589), Patrick Plunkett, Baron Dunsany (d. 1601), Aodh Mag Uidhir (died 1600), Cormac Ó hEadhra (died 1612), Brían na Múrtha Ó Ruairc (died 1591), Conn Ó Dónaill (died 1583), Aodh Ó Dónaill (died 1600), Turlough Luineach O'Neill (died 1595), John Burke (died 1580), Myler Burke (died 1586). Further indication of his status among contemporaries and in the decades after is the sizable number of his compositions that are found in the Book of O'Conor Don and in the Ó Gadhra manuscript (RIA MS 23 F 16), compiled in Ostend in 1631 and Brussels/Lille c. 1659 respectively.

A constant theme of his work is a very distinct sense of Irish nationalism, acutly aware of the political situation in late 16th-century Ireland. Irish soverigenty under threat from England features in several, along with restructuring invasion stories found in Lebor Gabala Erenn for the Norman-Irish, who were now heavily Gaelicised.


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