Saltair na Rann explained

The title Saltair na Rann ("Psalter of Quatrains") refers to a series of 150 early Middle Irish religious cantos, written in the tenth century—for the most part apparently around 988.[1] The number of the cantos imitates the number of psalms in the Bible.[2] Together they narrate the sacred history of the world, from its creation down to the last days of humanity. In the principal manuscript, Rawlinson B 502 (Bodleian, Oxford), it is followed by two poems of devotion and ten ‘Songs of the Resurrection’, which were added in the late tenth century.

Contents

Authorship

In the second devotional poem, Poem 152, the author identifies himself as Óengus Céile Dé: is me Oengus céle Dé (line 8009). Whitley Stokes took this to mean that the work as a whole was ascribed to the famous Óengus mac Óengobann, monk of Tallaght and author of the Félire Óengusso (Martyrology of Óengus), who since the 17th century also happens to have been nicknamed Céile Dé (Culdee). However, since the ascription occurs in appended material and therefore outside the core of Saltair na Rann, it is possible that it refers to the one or two devotional poems, which were either attributed to the earlier Óengus or composed by a late tenth-century namesake.[3]

See also

Primary sources

Poem 151, beginning "Isam aithrech (febda fecht)" (c. 987):

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Gearóid S. Mac Eoin, 'The Date and Authorship of Saltair na Rann', Zeitschrift Für Celtische Philologie, 28 (1961), 51-67; .
  2. Brian Murdoch, 'An Early Irish Adam and Eve: Saltair na Rann and the Traditions of the Fall', Mediaeval Studies, 35 (1973), 146–177 (p. 178); .
  3. Follett, Céli Dé in Ireland. 162.