Cú Chonnacht is primarily known for his poem, Beith ré dán dlighidh ollam ("An ollam is entitled to practice his craft"), a petition to his patron,[1] Tomás Óg Mág Uidhir, king of Fermanagh, who reigned 1430-1471 (dying in 1480).[2] This poem was later included in the important Irish literary compilation of 1631, the Book of O'Conor Donn (Irish: Leabhar Uí Chonchubhair Dhoinn; 'donn' or 'dhoinn' to distinguish the brown O'Conor family from the O'Conor Roe, the 'red' clan), collected on the Continent, at Ostend.
References
^McManus, Damian (2016). "Cormac mac Airt in classical Irish poetry: Young in age but old in wisdom, and not entirely flawless - On the reception of Cormac's heroic biography in Irish classical poetry". In Boyd, Matthieu (ed.). Ollam: Studies in Gaelic and related traditions in honor of Tomás Ó Cathasaigh. Madison, New Jersey: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 132. ISBN9781611478358.
A Bardic Miscellany: Five Hundred Bardic poems from manuscripts in Irish and British libraries, edited by Damian McManus and Eoghan Ó Raghallaigh, Trinity Irish Studies, Dublin, 2010.
Caball, Marc (2018). "Language, Print and Literature in Irish, 1550–1630 - Poets and Patrons". In Ohlmeyer, Jane (ed.). The Cambridge history of Ireland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 411–433. doi:10.1017/9781316338773.019. ISBN9781316338773.