Énna Mac Murchada,[2] or Enna Mac Murchada,[3] also known as Énna mac Donnchada,[4] and Énna mac Donnchada mic Murchada,[5] was a twelfth-century ruler of Uí Chennselaig, Leinster, and Dublin. Énna was a member of the Meic Murchada, a branch of the Uí Chennselaig dynasty that came to power in Leinster in the person of his paternal great-grandfather. Énna himself gained power following the death of his cousin Diarmait mac Énna. Throughout much of his reign, Énna acknowledged the overlordship of Toirdelbach Ua Conchobair, King of Connacht, although he participated in a failed revolt against the latter in 1124 before making amends. When Énna died in 1126, Toirdelbach successfully took advantage of the resulting power vacuum.
Background
Énna was a son of Donnchad mac Murchada, King of Leinster.[6] Donnchad had two other sons: one slain in 1115,[7] and another named Diarmait.[8] The men were members of the Uí Chennselaig.[7] In the 1040s, the family seized possession of the provincial kingship of Leinster in the person of the King of Uí Chennselaig, Diarmait mac Máel na mBó, Énna's paternal great-grandfather. Diarmait mac Máel na mBó eventually gained the kingship of Dublin, and further laid claim the high-kingship of Ireland itself.[9] For over a century afterwards the royal rulers of Leinster were regularly drawn from the family.[10] Énna and his immediate family were members of the Meic Murchada, a branch of the Uí Chennselaig descended and named after Diarmait mac Máel na mBó's son, Murchad.[11]
In 1117, the kingship of Uí Chennselaig, Leinster, and Dublin was held by Énna's first cousin, Diarmait mac Énna. When the latter died within the year,[12] Énna succeeded to the kingship of Uí Chennselaig, and Leinster. Unlike other recent Uí Chennselaig monarchs, Énna did not face any serious inter-dynastic opposition to his position.[13]
At some point afterwards, Énna apparently gained the kingship himself, as he is accorded the title rí Laigen ⁊ Gall by the Annals of Ulster in an entry recording his submission to Toirdelbach in 1122.[18][note 1] Rather than control Dublin directly himself, Toirdelbach appears to have allowed Énna to rule in Dublin as his subordinate.[20] Although the two appear to have generally enjoyed amiable relations, the former participated in a revolt against the latter in 1124,[21] spearheaded by Cormac Mac Cárthaigh,[22] before relations were finally restored,[23] as Toirdelbach travelled to Dublin and is recorded by the Annals of Tigernach to have handed the kingship over to Énna.[24] Énna's reign in Dublin is further evidenced by the record of his gift of the estate of "Realgeallyn" to the Church of the Holy Trinity, Dublin's ecclesiastical centre.[25]
Énna's early death in 1126 is recorded in numerous sources such as the Annals of Inisfallen,[26] the Annals of Tigernach,[27] the Annals of the Four Masters, and the Annals of Ulster.[28] The Book of Leinster further reveals that he died in Wexford.[29] His death there suggests that the Meic Murchada were patronising this Norse-Gaelic enclave,[30] and it appears that this town and Dublin were the primary concentrations of Leinster's wealth.[31]
Toirdelbach seized upon the power vacuum caused by Énna's demise, and the following year installed his own son, Conchobar, as King of Dublin.[32] Toirdelbach also invaded the core territory of the Uí Chennselaig, and deposed an unnamed Meic Murchada, before installing Conchobar as king.[33] The aforesaid Meic Murchada may well have been Máel Sechlainn mac Diarmata, a first cousin once removed of Énna.[34] Another possibility, however, is that the unnamed Meic Murchada was Énna's aforesaid younger brother, Diarmait, an apparent rival of Máel Sechlainn.[35]
Crooks, P (2005). "Mac Murchada, Diarmait". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Ireland: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. pp. 299–302. ISBN0-415-94052-4.
Downham, C (2013). "Living on the Edge: Scandinavian Dublin in the Twelfth Century". No Horns on Their Helmets? Essays on the Insular Viking-Age. Celtic, Anglo-Saxon, and Scandinavian Studies. Aberdeen: Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies and The Centre for Celtic Studies, University of Aberdeen. pp. 157–178. ISBN978-0-9557720-1-6. ISSN2051-6509.
Flanagan, MT (1998). "Strategies of Lordship in Pre-Norman and Post-Norman Leinster". In Harper-Bill, C (ed.). Anglo-Norman Studies. Vol. 20. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. pp. 107–126. ISBN0-85115-573-1. ISSN0954-9927.
Flanagan, MT (2008) [2005]. "High-Kings With Opposition, 1072–1166". In Ó Cróinín, D (ed.). Prehistoric and Early Ireland. New History of Ireland. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 899–933. ISBN978-0-19-821737-4.
Hudson, B (2005). "Diarmait mac Máele-na-mBó (Reigned 1036–1072)". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Ireland: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. pp. 127–128. ISBN0-415-94052-4.
Hudson, BT (2005). Viking Pirates and Christian Princes: Dynasty, Religion, and Empire in the North Atlantic. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-516237-0.
Jefferies, HA (2005). "Mac Carthaig (Mac Carthy)". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Ireland: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. pp. 289–290. ISBN0-415-94052-4.
Lydon, J (2001). "Dublin in Transition: From Ostman Town to English Borough". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Dublin. Vol. 2. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 128–141. ISBN1-85182-607-6.
O'Byrne, E (2005a). "MacMurrough". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Ireland: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. pp. 302–303. ISBN0-415-94052-4.
O'Byrne, E (2005b). "Ua Conchobair, Tairrdelbach (1088–1156)". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Ireland: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. pp. 471–474. ISBN0-415-94052-4.