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Ireland's Queen Maeve

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The sheer magnitude of machiavellian machinations leading to Queen Maeve's metamorphosis as a sovereignty goddess compelled the author to redeem her honour in his 'Ireland's Queen Maeve', having already told her story in 'Hand of History' ( www.handofhistory.com ). Her ancestry is traced back to the celebrated Celtic Chief, Louernius, King of the Arverni c. 130 BC. His grandson Congantiatus (Commius to the Romans, Gann to the Celts) fled his Rome-ruled homeland on completing his classical Roman education to seek asylum among the Celtic Belgae. Caesar made him king of the Atrebates and Morini when their anti-Roman rulers fled to Britain. He sent him to seek their submission before invading Britain. Commius (Gann) led them to erect the Belgic defensive system against his legions, resulting in Caesar's 55/54 BC defeats. In the 53 BC pan-Celtic revolt, Vercingetorix, King of the Arverni, chose Commius as a leader in the war against Caesar. Vercingetorix was defeated at Alesia in a dramatic suppression of the revolt before Commius arrived. Commius alone, the most wanted man in Europe, refused to submit. After amazing escapes, he led Celtic Belgic tribes to Britain where he ruled over them for 20 years.
Preparing for full-scale Roman invasion, Commius (Gann) led noncombatants to an Irish safe-haven. Heading Rome's hit-list, he left Britain knowing his presence among the British Celts would attract Rome's wrath upon them. His son, Tincommius (Sengann), succeeded him by 20 BC. Archaic Irish texts tell that "Gann led the Belgae (Fir Belg) to Clare and Limerick in Ireland's Shannon Estuary" precisely where the Greek Cartographer, Ptolemy, located the Gangani (Gann's followers). Greek, Roman, British and Irish sources corroborate one another.
In 40 AD Verica (Ferach), Gann's great-grandson, left Britain. Irish tradition tells that Ferach Mor, Maeve's father, went from Magh Fremhen ('thar Fremaind adthuaidh'), where Gann was interred, to become Overking of the Fir Belg (Belgic) tribes at Turoe (Ri Temhroit). He resided at Turoe's Rath Ferach Mhor ("ced rig do suid ar tus i Temhroit de Fhearaibh Belg"), Ptolemy's Regia E Tera (Temhra), beside the illustrious Turoe Stone. He made Maeve (Medb) Queen of Ol nEchmacht at Athenry's Rath Cruachan. She erected the linear earthworks around Magh Muc Dhruim ('Cath Magh Muccdhruime', spurious Muccrima).
Ulster's King, Conor Mac Nessa, was Maeve's (Medb) first husband, not her own choice. She forsook him for Ailill Mac Mata. The story of her cattle-raid against Conor was retold through the centuries as the 'Tain Bo Cuailgne'. It grew from the basic oral tale through a fictional stage (8th/9th centuries) to its grossly manipulative phase (10th/12th centuries) when it was fraudulently reworked and embellished to reincarnate Maeve (Medb in Old Irish) for ulterior agendas in the 12th century Book of Leinster.
A seismic shift occurred in Medb's identity with each retelling, elevating the Tain to the level of a Greek Odyssey. She underwent gross character assassination in a machiavellian metamorphosis. Modern authors herald her as a sovereignty goddess. The Medb they cast was a Medb framed in grossly manipulated pseudo-historic versions of the Tain Bo Cuailgne, not the Medb of Ol nEchmacht reigning at Athenry's Rath Cruachan who was assassinated at Conor Mac Nessa's deathbed behest and interred in Fert Medba at Athenry's "Releg na Ri lamh le Cruachain". This was a Medb they never knew, suppressed by a pseudo-history which deliberately misplaced the abodes of kings and queens, and of the whole Celtic Pantheon, indiscriminately. This work restores Medb's pristine history. Its Flickr link http://www.flickr.com/photos/44485145@N04/ will enhance the readers browsing experience.

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