Kingdom of Meath
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- defeat of Ulster
- In Ulster
…from the midland kingdom of Meath (Midhe, or Mide) led to Ulster’s disintegration in the 4th and 5th centuries. The province subsequently split into three kingdoms: Oriel, or Airgialla (in central Ulster), Aileach (in western Ulster), and the smaller kingdom of Ulaid (in eastern Ulster).
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- In Ulster
history of
- Ireland
- In Ireland: Political and social organization
These were Ulster (Ulaidh), Meath (Midhe), Leinster (Laighin), Munster (Mumhain), and Connaught (Connacht).
Read More - In Ireland: Early political history
…had passed to his midland kingdom of Meath, which was then temporarily associated with Connaught. In the 6th century, descendants of Niall, ruling at Tara in northern Leinster, were claiming to be overkings of three provinces, Ulster, Connaught, and Meath. Later they claimed to be kings of all of Ireland,…
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- In Ireland: Political and social organization
- Northern Ireland
- In Northern Ireland: Gaelic Irish and Anglo-Normans (c. 600–c. 1300)
…five provinces of Ulster (Ulaidh), Meath (Midhe, which later dissolved), Leinster (Laighin), Munster (Mumhain), and Connaught (Connacht). By the 8th century, Ulster was dominated by a dynasty called the Uí Néill (O’Neill), which claimed descent from a shadowy figure of the 5th century known as
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- In Northern Ireland: Gaelic Irish and Anglo-Normans (c. 600–c. 1300)
- Westmeath
- In Westmeath
…Teffia part of the ancient kingdom of Meath, Longford being south Teffia. With the Anglo-Norman conquest in the 12th century, it became part of the de Lacy earldom of Meath, but it was not intensively Anglicized. In 1241 the earldom lost its unity, and, with the deterioration of the English…
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- In Westmeath