Cúscraid
Cúscraid (Irish: Cúscraid Mend Macha;[1] var. Cumscraid[2]) (pronunciation guides: /'ku:skrid m'eN 'maxa / (Maier 1997) /cŏŏs'crĭ/ (Cross & Slover 1936) /KOOS-kridh/ (Paddy Brown)[3]) known by the epithet Mend Macha (the "stammerer" or "inarticulate one" of Macha), is a son of Conchobar mac Nessa in the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology.
When he first took arms he led a foray against Connacht. He was met on the border by the Connacht hero Cet mac Mágach, who wounded him in the throat (or tip of the tongue) with a spear, giving him his speech impediment.[4][5]
The three most popular heroes with the women of Ulster were Cúscraid, Cúchulainn and Conall Cernach. The women imitated the peculiarity of the hero they loved the most: Cúscraid's fans stammered, Conall's crooked their necks, and Cúchulainn's squinted one eye in imitation of his warp spasm.[6]
After Conchobar's death, the Ulstermen invited his eldest son Cormac Cond Longas to succeed him as king of Ulster, but Cormac was killed before he could take the throne. It was then offered to Conall Cernach, who refused, recommending his foster-son Cúscraid instead, and Cúscraid became king.[7]
Footnotes
- Chadwick 1927
- Meyer 1894, pp. 51–64, The Story of Mac Dáthó's Pig and Hound, ¶14
- Paddy Brown. "The Ulster Cycle – Pronunciation Guide". Retrieved February 10, 2012.(personal webcite)
- Story of Mac Da Thó's Pig, Chadwick 1927, ¶14 (p.13 text, p.21 trans.); Meyer 1894, ¶14 (p.54 text, p.61 trans.) "..with a spear through thy throat..", etc.
- Coire Anmann #278 states Cet wounded Mend son of Sál-cholg 'Heel-sword' in the throat, and in #279 states " Cet wounded Cuscraid through his mouth, and shore off the point of his tongue, so that he was dumb (mend) thereafter."
- Serglige Con Culainn,translation: Leahy 1905, HRI, p.58,"each woman who loved Cuscraid Mend, .. stammered in her speech"
- The Battle of Airtech
References
- Scéla mucce meic Dá Thó — "The Story of Mac Dá Thó's Pig"
- Meyer, Kuno, ed. (1894), "The Story of Mac Dáthó's Pig and Hound", Hibernica Minora, Anecdota Oxoniensa, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 51–64 (ed. & tr.) [Rawl. B 512, f. 105v.-]
- Chadwick, Nora Kershaw, ed. (1927), "'The Scél Mucci Mic Dathó', or 'Story of Mac Dathó's Pig'" (NLS), Early Irish Reader, Cambridge University Press, pp. 9–24 (ed. & tr.) [LL version]
- Serglige Con Culainn
- Leahy, A. H. (1905), "The Sick-bed of Cuchulain" (google), Heroic Romances of Ireland, pp. 51–85, ISBN 9781414254487
- Battle of Airtech
- Best, Osborn (1915), "The Battle of Airtech", Ériu, 8: 170–190 : Irish and English at Thesaurus Linguae Hibernicae
- Cross, T. P. (Tom Peete); Slover, C. H. (Clark Harris) (1936), Ancient Irish tales (snippet), New York: Henry Holt
- Maier, Bernhard (1997), Cyril Edwards (translator), "Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture" (snippet), Lexikon der keltischen Religion und Kultur, Woodbridge, Suff., and Rochester, NY: Boydell & Brewer, ISBN 9780851156606