Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
Individuals: 97,713 Families: 61,838
Gedcom Last Modified: December 14, 2025 00:59:10
Dunlaing MacTuathal O'Muriedaig
- Preferred Name: Dunlaing MacTuathal O'Muriedaig[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
- Gender: M
- Death: 29 APR 1014 in Battle of Clontarf, near Dublin, Ireland at LATI: N3.3653 LONG: E6.1964 with note: Date standardized
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: *
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King of Leinster
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: [King Leinster]
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King/Leinster
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King
- Birth: 920 in Leinster, Ireland at LATI: N3.0833 LONG: E7
- Burial: in Glendalough, County Wicklow, Ireland at LATI: N3.0333 LONG: E6.2 with note: Standard
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King of Leinster
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: King in Leinster, Ireland at LATI: N3.0833 LONG: E7 with note: Data Standardization
- unknown: in FLHJ-SK at LATI: N8.67 LONG: E9.5
- FSID: LC38-YCJ
- National Identification: with note: Description: IND1088
- AFN: in FLHJ-SK at LATI: N8.67 LONG: E9.5
- unknown: in Acceded: 1014
- Fact: with note: Description: https://www.geni.com/people/D%C3%BAnlang-II-mac-Tuathail-King-of-Leinster/6000000002043263901?through=6000000003051255891
- National Identification: with note: Description: IND1089
- Died In Battle: in Battle of Clontarf, near Dublin, Ireland at LATI: N3.3653 LONG: E6.1964
- Notes:
=== !Weis. 239-3. ===
!Weis. 239-3.
=== !Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists 974. ===
!Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists 974.D2w
=== King of Leinster about 1014 AD. {MRDK} ===
King of Leinster about 1014 AD. {MRDK} King of Leinster about 1014 AD. {MRDK}
=== Acceded: 1014 ===
Acceded: 1014
=== 1. see AR 239-3. ===
1. see AR 239-3.
=== !Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Editio ===
!Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Edition line 239-3
=== Dunlong: eldest son of Tuathal; fought a ===
Dunlong: eldest son of Tuathal; fought at the battle of Clontarf, 1014, and was slain there. [Irish Landed Gentry]
_________________________________
The Battle of Clontarf
The battle of Clontarf, fought outside Dublin on Good Friday, 23 April 1014, was the greatest battle of the early period of Irish history. Its lustre has not, over the intervening centuries, been dimmed; rather has its fame increased, so that it has come to be remembered as an event of a golden age, a mighty feat of arms of which Ireland was capable 'ere her faithless sons betrayed her'.
Clontarf was a victory for the native side; Hastings, fought for the defence of England half a century later, was-on the same analysis-a defeat. Yet the Irish battle was not followed, as the victory of William the Conqueror was, by an era of nation building. It was followed by a century and more of disorder culminating in the successful invasion of Ireland by the victors of Hastings, the Normans. Since Clontarf ended in the tumbling of the Norsemen into the sea, and since Ireland experienced no more Viking raids after 1014, we regard it as the repulse of an invasion; but it was that only in a minor degree. Primarily it was a great and unsuccessful battle fought for the unity of Ireland. It is not, perhaps, surprising that we have chosen to remember the one aspect of it and to forget the other. We forget that an army of Leinster Irishmen fought beside the Norsemen on the losing side.
If Brian Boru-Brian of the Tributes-High King of Ireland, had been a younger man when he won the battle of Clontarf, and if he had lived to exploit his victory, his hand would, almost certainly, have descended heavily on the kingdom of Leinster. The Leinstermen had never willingly recognised a High King. By their action in opposing Brian at Clontarf they sought to destroy the unity of Ireland which he had envisaged ten years previously when, at a solemn moment in the church at Armagh, he declared himself Emperor of the Gael.
If Brian had been able to justify assumption of that title and to make good that unity, then Clontarf would have been a victory indeed. But he whose personality colours his age and whose name has come resounding down the centuries was an old man at the climax of his career and was killed at the moment of his success.
He began as the leader of the small state of Dál Chais at the mouth of the river Shannon. His neighbours were the Norse invaders, the descendants of the Vikings, who had founded the town of Limerick. By the end of the tenth century he had subdued these isolated Norsemen and had won for himself, first, the king ship of Munster and then, by defeating the Leinstermen and the Norse inhabitants of Dublin, the overlordship of the southern half of Ireland. The Dublin Norse were the founders of what was to become the capital of Ireland, and they ruled at this time over a considerable part of the seacoast stretching from the mouth of the river Boyne to Arklow.
In 1002 Brian Boru overawed the only other ruler who could rival him in power or in prospects, Malachy, King of Meath and holder of the High Kingship. Brian became High King. Malachy and the north and west of Ireland seem to have acquiesced in this assumption of a title of paramountcy which conferred on its holder as much authority as he could enforce. Leinster, in the persons of Maelmora, who was its king, and Gormflath, who was Maelmora's sister, did not acquiesce. The name of Gormflath, who, according to the Norsemen, was 'the fairest of all women' but who 'did all things ill over which she had any power', comes down to us in the drama of history as the evil genius of what followed.
Some of the romantic accounts of the battle that were written soon after it was fought make a great deal of the personalities concerned. According to their writers, the conflict of aontarf was a matter of the passions of a few people-the passions of Kings Brian and Malachy; of Murchad, who was Brian's son, of the Leinster pair, Maelmora and Gormflath; and of Sitric, the Norse-Irish King of Dublin, whose mother was the much married Gormflath and whose father was the Norseman Olaf Cmacran.
The story is complicated by the fact that the relationships of these people were involved. Gormflath, who incited her brother Maelmora to challenge Brian, was-most amazingly-the discarded wife of both Brian and Malachy. In view of this entanglement of the dramatis personae, aontarf was a domestic squabble of the first order. But there were much wider issues.
Leinster was a misfit in Brian's new kingdom. The Leinstermen must be coerced into submission to him; otherwise they might destroy him. They were, in their desire for independence, pre pared to break up the unity which he had built. The Dublin Norse, who were a rich and powerful body, had not yet been absorbed into the Irish system. They too were a dangerous element, an alien element in a country of explosive minor states. Until Malachy, King of Meath, had pushed them back some years before this, they had threatened to dominate the midlands. Out side Ireland the Norse peoples were still on the move. There were still Vikings on the seas. Svend, King of Denmark, had just then established his dominion over a great part of England. Half a century later Harold Hardrada of Norway, bent on plunder or conquest, was killed while leading a new invasion of England. The rise of a Norse kingdom of Ireland on the ruins of Brian's empire of the Gael was not an impossibility.
The story of Gormflath's jealousy that makes up the greater part of what the chroniclers have to tell us of Clontarf may be an intimate disclosure of real court intrigue; but there were greater forces moving in the background. There were motives other than personal ones for the strife.
The war began in 1013, with Brian and Malachy, the reigning High King and the previous one, on one side and Maelmora and Sitric, the brother of Gormflath and her son, on the other. According to the romantic literature, Gormflath chided Maelmora for his lack of spirit in paying tribute to Brian. Stung by her words, Maelmora was easily led to quarrel with Brian's son Murchad. There were angry passages, and Maelmora left Brian's court, vowing vengeance for the insults which he had received. He roused the Leinstermen and the Norsemen of Dublin against Brian, who collected his forces and marched against them. Dublin was besieged.
The first was a drawn round. Brian gave up the siege at Christmas and went home to his territory of Dal Chais. Both sides, however, made ready to renew the fight. When they took the field again in spring both had been reinforced. Sitric's Dublinmen had with them Sigurd from the Orkneys, Brodar from the Isle of Man, and their followers, a small but formidable gathering of the famous fighting material that had already overrun the Western Isles and that was to contribute so much, in the commingling of blood, to the Highland Scottish race. The Norse account of these happenings, the Saga of Burnt Njal, bears out the Irish ones in the extraordinary role attributed to Gormflath.
According to the Saga, Sitric promised his mother's hand, together with the rule of the Norse Kingdom of Dublin, to both Sigurd and Brodar. Maelmora's contribution to the Dublin force was the full hosting of the men of North Leinster. South Leinster, adopting the attitude of the greater part of Ireland, held aloof. The authority of the North Leinster rulers was seldom effective there.
On the other side were the warriors of the Dal Chais, assisted by the fighting men of the remaining parts of Munster and of the two Galway districts of Uí Maine and Uí Fiachrach Aidne, areas that stretched from the Shannon to the headwaters of Galway Bay and lay adjacent to the homeland of the Dal Chais. These, since Brian was over seventy years of age and too old to lead them, were commanded by Brian's son Murchad. Malachy's army of Meathmen was also in the field, but, as we shall see, was not engaged at Clontarf.
The Irish forces present at the battle were, as is apparent, drawn only from a limited part of the country. None hailed from the northern half of the island. It is clear, however, that by contemporary standards the opposing armies were big ones. We have no parade states to guide us. The Irish literary genius of the past ran neither to statistics nor to simple narrative; the writers were too busy weaving high drama from the loves and hates of Gormflath, or too active in pursuing endless genealogies to improbable beginnings, to have either the energy or the ability left to make plain statements of fact; and so there are no contemporary pronouncements of strength. It has been reckoned that at the battle of Hastings, where the Normans won Britain in 1066, Harold's army may have been as low as 4,000 and Duke William's no bigger than 5,000. Since Clontarf was certainly not a bigger battle than Hastings, we may perhaps conclude that the total strength of both sides added together did not exceed 5,000 men. Even at that, the battle would have stood out as a great one of its age, a clash of the most powerful forces yet seen in Ireland.
=== Sources: A. Roots 239; "Some Ancestral L ===
Sources: A. Roots 239; "Some Ancestral Lines of Edmond Hawes, AliceFreeman and Thomas James" (1984), compiled by Henry James Young;Kraentzler 1605. Roots and Young: Dunlang, King of Leinster, died 1014. K: Dunlang, died 1014 at Glendalough.
=== ! From Helen Wilson Mossman Dunwell's Re ===
! From Helen Wilson Mossman Dunwell's Research. Royal Ancestors of Some L.D.S. Families by Michel L. Call. 1975, p.140.
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 5 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.
=== Ancestral File Number: HPG0-FM ===
Ancestral File Number: HPG0-FM
=== !NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of ===
!NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of the Delaware-West Family of VA; 1958;116; Nelson Family History Center 1152 N Forest Mesa, AZ 85203.
=== !DEATH: Michael Raffin ===
!DEATH: Michael Raffin
=== !SOURCE: "Royal Ancestors," PC #559. ===
!SOURCE: "Royal Ancestors," PC #559.
=== Reigned from 1006 to 1014. ===
=== !Title: King of Leinster. !Title: King o ===
!Title: King of Leinster. !Title: King of Leinster. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 ===
THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) P.114; WURT'S MAGNA CHARTA (GS NUMBER 942 D22W) VOL 3 P.428; ROYAL ANCESTORS OF MAGNA CHARTA BARONSBY CARR P. COLLINS, P.145; ANCESTRAL FILE, LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY;
=== FamilySearch showed this additional info ===
FamilySearch showed this additional information:
Name - Description: Dunlong O'Toole King
=== King of Leinster from about 1014 - 1016. ===
King of Leinster from about 1014 - 1016. {MRDK} King of Leinster from about 1014 - 1016. {MRDK}
=== !AKA: Dunland, King of Leinster - Doc. L ===
!AKA: Dunland, King of Leinster - Doc. Line 239-3 !CHILDREN: Of Dunlang and [ ] Maelcorcre (daughter) - Doc. Line 239-3 !DEATH: Date: 1014 - Doc. Line 239-3
=== NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of ===
NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of the Delaware-West Family of VA; 1958;116; Nelson Family History Center 1152 N Forest Mesa, AZ 85203. Sources: Ancestral File
=== Source: Brian Tompsett, http://www.dcs.h ===
Source: Brian Tompsett, http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/
=== !NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of ===
!NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of the Delaware-West Family of VA; 1958;116; Nelson Family History Center 1152 N Forest Mesa, AZ 85203.
=== Dunlong: eldest son of Tuathal; fought a ===
Dunlong: eldest son of Tuathal; fought at the battle of Clontarf, 1014, and was slain there. [Irish Landed Gentry]
_________________________________
The Battle of Clontarf
The battle of Clontarf, fought outside Dublin on Good Friday, 23 April 1014, was the greatest battle of the early period of Irish history. Its lustre has not, over the intervening centuries, been dimmed; rather has its fame increased, so that it has come to be remembered as an event of a golden age, a mighty feat of arms of which Ireland was capable 'ere her faithless sons betrayed her'.
Clontarf was a victory for the native side; Hastings, fought for the defence of England half a century later, was-on the same analysis-a defeat. Yet the Irish battle was not followed, as the victory of William the Conqueror was, by an era of nation building. It was followed by a century and more of disorder culminating in the successful invasion of Ireland by the victors of Hastings, the Normans. Since Clontarf ended in the tumbling of the Norsemen into the sea, and since Ireland experienced no more Viking raids after 1014, we regard it as the repulse of an invasion; but it was that only in a minor degree. Primarily it was a great and unsuccessful battle fought for the unity of Ireland. It is not, perhaps, surprising that we have chosen to remember the one aspect of it and to forget the other. We forget that an army of Leinster Irishmen fought beside the Norsemen on the losing side.
If Brian Boru-Brian of the Tributes-High King of Ireland, had been a younger man when he won the battle of Clontarf, and if he had lived to exploit his victory, his hand would, almost certainly, have descended heavily on the kingdom of Leinster. The Leinstermen had never willingly recognised a High King. By their action in opposing Brian at Clontarf they sought to destroy the unity of Ireland which he had envisaged ten years previously when, at a solemn moment in the church at Armagh, he declared himself Emperor of the Gael.
If Brian had been able to justify assumption of that title and to make good that unity, then Clontarf would have been a victory indeed. But he whose personality colours his age and whose name has come resounding down the centuries was an old man at the climax of his career and was killed at the moment of his success.
He began as the leader of the small state of Dál Chais at the mouth of the river Shannon. His neighbours were the Norse invaders, the descendants of the Vikings, who had founded the town of Limerick. By the end of the tenth century he had subdued these isolated Norsemen and had won for himself, first, the king ship of Munster and then, by defeating the Leinstermen and the Norse inhabitants of Dublin, the overlordship of the southern half of Ireland. The Dublin Norse were the founders of what was to become the capital of Ireland, and they ruled at this time over a considerable part of the seacoast stretching from the mouth of the river Boyne to Arklow.
In 1002 Brian Boru overawed the only other ruler who could rival him in power or in prospects, Malachy, King of Meath and holder of the High Kingship. Brian became High King. Malachy and the north and west of Ireland seem to have acquiesced in this assumption of a title of paramountcy which conferred on its holder as much authority as he could enforce. Leinster, in the persons of Maelmora, who was its king, and Gormflath, who was Maelmora's sister, did not acquiesce. The name of Gormflath, who, according to the Norsemen, was 'the fairest of all women' but who 'did all things ill over which she had any power', comes down to us in the drama of history as the evil genius of what followed.
Some of the romantic accounts of the battle that were written soon after it was fought make a great deal of the personalities concerned. According to their writers, the conflict of aontarf was a matter of the passions of a few people-the passions of Kings Brian and Malachy; of Murchad, who was Brian's son, of the Leinster pair, Maelmora and Gormflath; and of Sitric, the Norse-Irish King of Dublin, whose mother was the much married Gormflath and whose father was the Norseman Olaf Cmacran.
The story is complicated by the fact that the relationships of these people were involved. Gormflath, who incited her brother Maelmora to challenge Brian, was-most amazingly-the discarded wife of both Brian and Malachy. In view of this entanglement of the dramatis personae, aontarf was a domestic squabble of the first order. But there were much wider issues.
Leinster was a misfit in Brian's new kingdom. The Leinstermen must be coerced into submission to him; otherwise they might destroy him. They were, in their desire for independence, pre pared to break up the unity which he had built. The Dublin Norse, who were a rich and powerful body, had not yet been absorbed into the Irish system. They too were a dangerous element, an alien element in a country of explosive minor states. Until Malachy, King of Meath, had pushed them back some years before this, they had threatened to dominate the midlands. Out side Ireland the Norse peoples were still on the move. There were still Vikings on the seas. Svend, King of Denmark, had just then established his dominion over a great part of England. Half a century later Harold Hardrada of Norway, bent on plunder or conquest, was killed while leading a new invasion of England. The rise of a Norse kingdom of Ireland on the ruins of Brian's empire of the Gael was not an impossibility.
The story of Gormflath's jealousy that makes up the greater part of what the chroniclers have to tell us of Clontarf may be an intimate disclosure of real court intrigue; but there were greater forces moving in the background. There were motives other than personal ones for the strife.
The war began in 1013, with Brian and Malachy, the reigning High King and the previous one, on one side and Maelmora and Sitric, the brother of Gormflath and her son, on the other. According to the romantic literature, Gormflath chided Maelmora for his lack of spirit in paying tribute to Brian. Stung by her words, Maelmora was easily led to quarrel with Brian's son Murchad. There were angry passages, and Maelmora left Brian's court, vowing vengeance for the insults which he had received. He roused the Leinstermen and the Norsemen of Dublin against Brian, who collected his forces and marched against them. Dublin was besieged.
The first was a drawn round. Brian gave up the siege at Christmas and went home to his territory of Dal Chais. Both sides, however, made ready to renew the fight. When they took the field again in spring both had been reinforced. Sitric's Dublinmen had with them Sigurd from the Orkneys, Brodar from the Isle of Man, and their followers, a small but formidable gathering of the famous fighting material that had already overrun the Western Isles and that was to contribute so much, in the commingling of blood, to the Highland Scottish race. The Norse account of these happenings, the Saga of Burnt Njal, bears out the Irish ones in the extraordinary role attributed to Gormflath.
According to the Saga, Sitric promised his mother's hand, together with the rule of the Norse Kingdom of Dublin, to both Sigurd and Brodar. Maelmora's contribution to the Dublin force was the full hosting of the men of North Leinster. South Leinster, adopting the attitude of the greater part of Ireland, held aloof. The authority of the North Leinster rulers was seldom effective there.
On the other side were the warriors of the Dal Chais, assisted by the fighting men of the remaining parts of Munster and of the two Galway districts of Uí Maine and Uí Fiachrach Aidne, areas that stretched from the Shannon to the headwaters of Galway Bay and lay adjacent to the homeland of the Dal Chais. These, since Brian was over seventy years of age and too old to lead them, were commanded by Brian's son Murchad. Malachy's army of Meathmen was also in the field, but, as we shall see, was not engaged at Clontarf.
The Irish forces present at the battle were, as is apparent, drawn only from a limited part of the country. None hailed from the northern half of the island. It is clear, however, that by contemporary standards the opposing armies were big ones. We have no parade states to guide us. The Irish literary genius of the past ran neither to statistics nor to simple narrative; the writers were too busy weaving high drama from the loves and hates of Gormflath, or too active in pursuing endless genealogies to improbable beginnings, to have either the energy or the ability left to make plain statements of fact; and so there are no contemporary pronouncements of strength. It has been reckoned that at the battle of Hastings, where the Normans won Britain in 1066, Harold's army may have been as low as 4,000 and Duke William's no bigger than 5,000. Since Clontarf was certainly not a bigger battle than Hastings, we may perhaps conclude that the total strength of both sides added together did not exceed 5,000 men. Even at that, the battle would have stood out as a great one of its age, a clash of the most powerful forces yet seen in Ireland.
=== !Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists 974. ===
!Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists 974.D2w
=== King of Leinster about 1014 AD. {MRDK} ===
King of Leinster about 1014 AD. {MRDK} King of Leinster about 1014 AD. {MRDK}
=== Ancestral File Number: HPG0-FM ===
Ancestral File Number: HPG0-FM
=== !Title: King of Leinster. !Title: King o ===
!Title: King of Leinster. !Title: King of Leinster. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== !SOURCE: "Royal Ancestors," PC #559. ===
!SOURCE: "Royal Ancestors," PC #559.
=== NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of ===
NAME: Family Book; The Noble Lineage of the Delaware-West Family of VA; 1958;116; Nelson Family History Center 1152 N Forest Mesa, AZ 85203. Sources: Ancestral File
=== Sources: A. Roots 239; "Some Ancestral L ===
Sources: A. Roots 239; "Some Ancestral Lines of Edmond Hawes, AliceFreeman and Thomas James" (1984), compiled by Henry James Young;Kraentzler 1605. Roots and Young: Dunlang, King of Leinster, died 1014. K: Dunlang, died 1014 at Glendalough.
=== King of Leinster from about 1014 - 1016. ===
King of Leinster from about 1014 - 1016. {MRDK} King of Leinster from about 1014 - 1016. {MRDK}
=== 1. see AR 239-3. ===
1. see AR 239-3.
=== !Weis. 239-3. ===
!Weis. 239-3.
=== !Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Editio ===
!Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Edition line 239-3
=== Acceded: 1014 ===
Acceded: 1014
=== Reigned from 1006 to 1014. ===
=== !DEATH: Michael Raffin ===
!DEATH: Michael Raffin
=== FamilySearch showed this additional info ===
FamilySearch showed this additional information:
Name - Description: Dunlong O'Toole King
=== Source: Brian Tompsett, http://www.dcs.h ===
Source: Brian Tompsett, http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/
=== ! From Helen Wilson Mossman Dunwell's Re ===
! From Helen Wilson Mossman Dunwell's Research. Royal Ancestors of Some L.D.S. Families by Michel L. Call. 1975, p.140.
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 5 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.
=== THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 ===
THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) P.114; WURT'S MAGNA CHARTA (GS NUMBER 942 D22W) VOL 3 P.428; ROYAL ANCESTORS OF MAGNA CHARTA BARONSBY CARR P. COLLINS, P.145; ANCESTRAL FILE, LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY;
=== !AKA: Dunland, King of Leinster - Doc. L ===
!AKA: Dunland, King of Leinster - Doc. Line 239-3 !CHILDREN: Of Dunlang and [ ] Maelcorcre (daughter) - Doc. Line 239-3 !DEATH: Date: 1014 - Doc. Line 239-3
Preferred Parents:
Father: Tusthal MacAugaire O'Muiredag, b. 890 in Leinster Castle, Leinster, Ireland d. 958 in Slain by Mal Ulster in Leinster, Ireland
Family 2: Aife Ingen Gilla Patraic, b. 965 in Diocese of Ossory, Leinster, Ireland d. 1068 in Ireland
Family 3: Dunlaing O'Toole Queen of Leinster, b. ABT 921 in of Leinster,Ireland
- Duncuan MacDunlaig O'Tuathail "The Simpleton" of Leinster, Ireland, b. ABT 950 in Leinster, Ireland d. 23 APR 1014 in Clontarf, County Dublin, Ireland
Family 4: Princess Ellen Macdunlaing of Leinster, b. 950 in Diocese of Dublin, Leinster, Ireland d. 1019 in Leinster, Ireland
Sources:
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: (r 1006-1014) (Dunlaing) Dunlang King of Leinster - death:
Author: Ancestral File.LDS Church. Family History Library.
Note: death:
birth: about 0920; Ireland
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2198868384
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Dunlaing -
Author: Ancestral Roots of Certain Americian Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr, Page number: 239-3
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736741115
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Donncuan King Of LEINSTER - birth: 0950; Leinster Province, Ireland
Author: v11t4329.FTW, Not Given
Note: birth: 0950; Leinster Province, Ireland
Source Media Type: Other
death: 1018; Leinster Province, Ireland
Source Media Type: Other
Source Media Type: Other
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222792
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: (r 1006-1014) (Dunlaing) Dunlang King of Leinster -
Author: Ancestral File (R), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2041640822
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Donncuan King Of LEINSTER - birth: 0950; Leinster Province, Ireland
Author: 13143.GED, Not Given
Note: birth: 0950; Leinster Province, Ireland
Source Media Type: Other
death: 1018; Leinster Province, Ireland
Source Media Type: Other
Source Media Type: Other
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222793
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Donncuan King Of LEINSTER -
Author: Ancestral File (TM), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222795
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: (r 1006-1014) (Dunlaing) Dunlang King of Leinster -
Author: Ancestral File (TM), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222795
- Title: Ancestry Family Trees
Author: Ancestry Family Tree
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Dunlaing -
Author: Irish Landed Gentry, 2nd Ed; John O'Hart {1887}, Page number: 153-154
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736743140
- Title: Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-Current
Publication: Name: http://search.ancestry.com/collections/9289/records/6722257;
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: (r 1006-1014) (Dunlaing) Dunlang King of Leinster - birth:
Author: 13143.GED, Not Given
Note: birth:
Source Media Type: Other
death:
Source Media Type: Other
Source Media Type: Other
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222793
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Dunlaing -
Author: Magna Charta; John S Wurts, Brookfield Publishing Company, New York {1942}, Page number: 428
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2750741080
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Donncuan King Of LEINSTER -
Author: Ancestral File (R), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2041640822
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Dunlaing -
Author: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton {1968}, Page number: 114
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742370
Master Index
| Pedigree Chart
| Descendency Chart
Please send genealogical corrections, additions, or comments to Michael Matthew Groat PhD
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(Internal GEDCOM data structures and GEDCOM file parsing) Copyright 2014-2021 © Giulio Genovese (giulio.genovese@gmail.com)
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