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The Annals


The Irish Annals represent one of the greatest achievements of medieval scholarship anywhere in Europe, a tradition of systematic, year-by-year historical record-keeping that began in Irish monasteries in the sixth century and continued with remarkable consistency for over a thousand years, preserving an irreplaceable window into the history of Ireland, Britain, and the wider early medieval world. The impulse behind the annalistic tradition was fundamentally monastic the need to calculate the correct date of Easter required careful astronomical and chronological record-keeping, and this discipline of marking time naturally expanded into the recording of significant events. The major collections that survive the Annals of Ulster (the most important and reliable for the early period), the Annals of the Four Masters (compiled in the 1630s by Franciscan scholars as a conscious act of cultural preservation in the face of the destruction of Gaelic civilization), the Annals of Tigernach, the Annals of Inisfallen, the Chronicum Scotorum, and others draw on a complex web of earlier sources, shared exemplars, and independent local traditions that scholars are still working to untangle. At their core the annals record with terse precision the deaths of kings, abbots, and scholars, the outcomes of battles, the ravages of plague and famine, the raids of Vikings, the burning of monasteries, extraordinary natural phenomena like eclipses and comets and mysterious lights in the sky, and occasionally small human details of piercing vividness a scholar’s nickname, a king’s peculiarity, a miracle attributed to a saint that illuminate the texture of daily life in a way no other source can match.

What elevates the Irish Annals beyond mere chronicle is the extraordinary depth and continuity of the tradition and the remarkable self-awareness of the scholars who maintained it. The annalists understood themselves to be participants in a sacred act of memory preserving the deeds of the past against the erosion of time in exactly the same spirit that the filid preserved genealogies and the Dindshenchas preserved the lore of places. The Annals of the Four Masters in particular compiled by Mícheál Ó Cléirigh and his collaborators between 1632 and 1636 in the ruins of a Gaelic world being systematically dismantled by English colonization represent one of the most moving acts of cultural defiance in European history, a desperate and magnificent attempt to gather and preserve everything that could still be saved of the Irish learned tradition before it was lost forever. The annals are not without their problems as historical sources earlier entries blend genuine history with mythological tradition in ways that can be difficult to disentangle, political biases shape the recording and emphasis of events, and the chronology of the earliest sections is often unreliable but as a sustained monument to the Irish conviction that the past must be remembered, recorded and honored, they stand without equal in the medieval world, and without them our knowledge of early medieval Ireland, Scotland, and Viking Age Britain would be impoverished beyond measure.


Annala Uladh/Annala Senait: The Annals of Ulster

v.1: 431 AD – 1201v.1: 431 AD – 1201
v.2: 1202 – 1378v.2: 1202 – 1378
v.3: 1379 – 1588v.3: 1379 – 1588

Annála Ríoghachta Éireann: The Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters

v.1: Anno Mundi 2242 – 897 Anno Dominiv.1: Anno Mundi 2242 – 897 Anno Domini
v.2: 903 AD – 1163v.2: 903 AD – 1163
v.3: 1172-1372v.3: 1172-1372
v.4: 1373-1493v.4: 1373-1493
v.5: 1501-1581v.5: 1501-1581
v.6: 1589-1616v.6: 1589-1616

The Annals of Innisfallen

pre-Patrician section (Irish): no datespre-Patrician section (English): no dates
The Annals of Innisfallen (Irish): 433-1284The Annals of Innisfallen (English): 433-1284

Annála Locha Cé: Annals of Loch Cé

v.1: 1014-1345v.1: 1014-1345
v.2: 1349-1590v.2: 1349-1590

Fragmentary Annals from Mac Carthaigh’s Book

1114-14371114-1437
1237-13141237-1314
1392-14071392-1407

Seathrún Céitinn/Geoffrey Keating

Foras Feasa ar Éirinn I-IIHistory of Ireland, complete: Michael Doheny 1857 trans.
Foras Feasa ar Éirinn I-IIHistory of Ireland, I: David Comyn 1902 trans. (Irish Texts Society)

Miscellaneous Annals

Annals of Tigernach (Irish): 488-1170
Annála Connacht: 1224-1562Annals of Connacht: 1224-1562
Cottonian Annals: AM 1 – 1257 ADAnnals in Cotton MS. Titus A. XXV
Chronicon ScotorumChronicles of the Irish
Fragmentary Annals of IrelandFragmentary Annals of Ireland
Lebor BretnachHistoria Brittonum
Fragment of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History
Annála Gearra as Proibhinse Ard Macha
Short Annals of TirconaillShort Annals of Tirconaill
Short Annals of Fir Manach
Short Annals of Leinster
Fragment of Irish Annals
Memoranda Gadelica
Egerton Annals: Mionannala
Leabhar OirisThe Book of Oris
Cathréim Cellacháin CaisilVictorious Career of Cellachan of Cashel
The circuit of Ireland by Muircheartach mac Néill

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