Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Maps, figures and tables
- Preface and acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Notes on annals and names
- Introduction
- 1 The ‘Annals of Ulster’, 912–1100
- 2 The characteristics of the ‘Annals of Tigernach’ and Chronicum Scotorum
- 3 The Clonmacnoise group 912–1100 and its relationship with the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’
- 4 Shared items in the ‘Annals of Ulster’ and the Clonmacnoise group, A.D. 912–1100
- 5 The restructuring of the past in the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’
- 6 The chronology of the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’, 431–730
- 7 The original chronology of the Irish chronicles, ca 550–730
- 8 The Clonmacnoise-group redaction of medieval history A.D. 431–730 in the tenth and eleventh centuries
- Conclusion: chronicling medieval Ireland
- Appendices
- 1 A concordance of A.D. 431–730 including dates and a summary of lost and added kalends
- 2 Items shared by AU and AT or CS which are possibly- or difinitely-derived from a shared source
- 3 Diagrams of identified textual relationships, developments and sources
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Index of Vocabulary and Phrases in the Irish Chronicles
1 - A concordance of A.D. 431–730 including dates and a summary of lost and added kalends
from Appendices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Maps, figures and tables
- Preface and acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Notes on annals and names
- Introduction
- 1 The ‘Annals of Ulster’, 912–1100
- 2 The characteristics of the ‘Annals of Tigernach’ and Chronicum Scotorum
- 3 The Clonmacnoise group 912–1100 and its relationship with the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’
- 4 Shared items in the ‘Annals of Ulster’ and the Clonmacnoise group, A.D. 912–1100
- 5 The restructuring of the past in the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’
- 6 The chronology of the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’, 431–730
- 7 The original chronology of the Irish chronicles, ca 550–730
- 8 The Clonmacnoise-group redaction of medieval history A.D. 431–730 in the tenth and eleventh centuries
- Conclusion: chronicling medieval Ireland
- Appendices
- 1 A concordance of A.D. 431–730 including dates and a summary of lost and added kalends
- 2 Items shared by AU and AT or CS which are possibly- or difinitely-derived from a shared source
- 3 Diagrams of identified textual relationships, developments and sources
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Index of Vocabulary and Phrases in the Irish Chronicles
Summary
The following table is an attempt to show corresponding annals in AU, AT and CS, and to summarise the findings of chapters 6 and 7 on where and in which phase annals have been lost and added in these texts. Also dates are provided for the annals at the time when the papal and imperial items were included (at some point between A.D. 725 and ca 911) and, where possible, at the time when the annals were first written.
Key to the table:
+1 indicates that a kalend should be added somewhere in this annal (after the annal's surviving kalend) to correct the loss of a kalend.
-1 indicates that a kalend should be omitted to get back to the original chronology.
The stage in the development of the annals when the change occurred will be indicated with the following abbreviations:
>PI before the papal and imperial items were added (725×911).
>CI before the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’ (911), but after the papal and imperial items were added.
>Clon before the common source of AT and CS (ca 1110 × mid-fourteenth century), but after the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’.
AT in AT only.
CS in CS only.
AU in AU only.
/ If there is uncertainty over in which period the change took place, the possibilities will be all included, separated by / (for example ‘>CI/AU’ means that a change either took place after the papal and imperial items were added, but before the ‘Chronicle of Ireland’, or in AU only. >CI/Clon means either >CI or >Clon.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Present and the Past in Medieval Irish Chronicles , pp. 235 - 243Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2010