TARA
Tara, which attained the climax of its fame under Cormac, is said to have been rounded by the Firbolgs, and been the seat of
kings thenceforth. Ollam Fodla first gave it historic fame by founding the Feis or Triennial Parliament, there, seven or eight
centuries before Christ. It is said it was under, or after, Eremon, the first Milesian high king that it, one of the three pleasantest
hills in Ireland, came to be named Tara - a corruption of the genitive form of the compound word, Tea Mur - meaning "the
burial place of Tea" the wife of Eremon, and daughter of a king of Spain. In its heyday Tara must have been impressive. The
great, beautiful hill was dotted with seven duns, and in every dun were many buildings - all of them, of course, of wood, in those
days - or of wood and metal. The greatest structure was the Mi Cuarta, the great banqueting hall, which was on the Ard Righ’s
own dun. Each of the provincial kings had, on Tara, a house that was set aside for him when he came up to attend the great
Parliament. There was a Grianan (sun house) for the provincial queens, and their attendants. The great Feis was held at Samain
(Hallowday). It lasted for three days before Samain and three days after. But the Aonach or great fair, the assembly of the
people in general, which was a most important accompaniment of the Feis, seems to have begun much earlier. At this Feis the
ancient laws were recited and confirmed, new laws were enacted, disputes were settled, grievances adjusted, wrongs righted.
And in accordance with the usual form at all such assemblies, the ancient history of the land was recited, probably by the high
king’s seanachie, who had the many other critical seanachies attending to his every word, and who, accordingly, dare not
seriously distort or prevaricate. This highly efficient method of recording and transmitting the country’s history, in verse, too,
which was practised for a thousand years before the introduction of writing, and the introduction of Christianity and which
continued to be practised for long centuries after these events was a highly practical method, which effectively preserved for us
the large facts of our country’s history throughout a thousand of the years of dim antiquity when the history of most other
countries is a dreary blank.
As from the great heart and centre of the Irish Kingdom, five great arteries or roads radiated from Tara to the various parts of
the country the Slighe Cualann, which ran toward the present County Wicklow, the Slighe Mor, the great Western road, which
ran via Dublin to Galway, the Slight Asail which ran near the present Mullingar, the Slighe Dala which ran southwest, and the
Slighe Midluachra, the Northern road. "Great, noble and beautiful truly was our Tara of the Kings." Seat of the high Kings of Ireland
in the first millenium A.D. Infused with the legends of the goddess Mebd. From the hills of Tara, one can see the four provinces of Ireland.
It's Lia Fa'il, or stone of destiny, was said to roar in recognition when stood on by kings.