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Conall Cra Bhuidhe

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89:'s cave. It threatened to kill him, but it was blind in one eye, and Conall said he could cure that eye, and blinded it in the other instead. In the morning, the giant ordered him to free the goats. Conall killed one and in its hide escaped with the rest. The giant realized this and offered him a ring for his stalwartness. Conall told it to throw it to the ground and he would take it; he did, and it called to the giant when he called to it, and Conall could not take it off. He cut off his finger and threw it into the sea, and when it called back to the giant, the giant followed it and drowned. Conall took all its gold and silver and offered as proof that he was in fact missing a finger. 92:
The king told him he had won his next youngest son, and if he could tell him of a still harder case, he would give him his (next) oldest son. Conall told him that he was married, but went to sea and found a woman trying to slit the throat of a baby by a cauldron. He asked her, and she told him that
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Conall went with his sons to Lochlann, and there he told them to seek out the king's miller. They stayed with him, and Conall bribed the miller to put him and his sons in the sacks of bran he delivered to the king. In the stables, Conall had his sons make hiding holes before they tried to steal the
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Conall Cra Bhuidhe was a royal tenant and had four (or three) sons. One day, his sons and the king's fought, and the king's big son was killed. The king told Conall that he could save his sons if he stole the brown horse of the king of Lochlann. Conall told him that he would steal the horse to
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Conall told of a time when he went to get a cow and its calf with his servant, and they met with cats. The head bard among them told cat after cat to sing a cronan to Conall, and demanded that he pay a reward for it. First he had to give the calf, then the cow, then (in Campbell's version) the
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Conall told his story, and because he had had to steal it, the king said he would not hang him, but he would hang his sons. He told Conall that if he were ever in a worse situation than his sons, and told him the story, he would give Conall his youngest son.
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servant, and finally the cats went after him. He got up a tree and killed a cat that came after him, but the cats dug at the tree's roots. Fortunately a priest was traveling with delving men and heard the noise, and they came to his rescue.
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The king's mother was listening to this, and told him that she had been the woman and he had been the baby, so Conall had saved his life. The king gave him the horse, gold and silver, and all the lives of his sons.
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The king told him he had won his youngest son, and if he could tell him of a still harder case, he would give him his next youngest son. Conall told of a time that he followed some smoke and fell into a
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horse. When they tried, it kept making such noise that the servants would come. They would hide, but in time, the king realized that there were men in the stables, and found Conall and his sons.
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Uther, Hans-Jörg (2004). The Types of International Folktales: Animal tales, tales of magic, religious tales, and realistic tales, with an introduction. FF Communications. p. 592.
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the giant there would kill her if she did not. He managed to trick the giant but the giant caught him, and Conall barely managed to kill him in time.
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please the king, even if his sons were in no danger. His wife lamented that he had not rather let the king kill his sons than endanger himself.
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Professional researcher and storyteller Csenge Virág Zalka lists the tale type as folklore material that depicts loving fathers.
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The Types of International Folktales: Animal tales, tales of magic, religious tales, and realistic tales, with an introduction
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MacEdward Leach located a Celtic version from Cape Breton, which he first obtained from Ronald Smith.
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removed a variant, "The Robber and His Sons," from the final edition of
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Campbell lists his informant as James Wilson, blind fiddler in Islay.
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Zipes, Jack. The Complete Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm. 2003.
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Folktales of Newfoundland: The Resilience of the Oral Tradition
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The Blue Mountains and Other Gaelic Stories from Cape Breton
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The Blue Mountains and Other Gaelic Stories from Cape Breton
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A Canadian variant, "Red Conall of the Tricks," appears in
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literary version, “The Sons of the Bandit,” appears in
169:because it too closely resembled the Greek myth of 112:The tale type is likely to have a literary origin. 183:, softening one episode and noting it occurred as 316:de Alta Silva, Johannes; Gilleland, Bray (1981). 318:Dolopathos, or, The King and the Seven Wise Men 245:. University of California Press. p. 179. 292:Halpert, Herbert; Widdowson, J. D. A. (1996). 109:system as ATU 953 "The Robber and His Sons". 8: 296:. Garland Publishing, Inc. p. 578. 220: 130:to classical literary productions like 186:The Black Thief and Knight of the Glen 354:. London: David Nutt. pp. 34–46. 118:Discussing the tale type as a whole, 7: 105:The tale has been classified in the 49:Popular Tales of the West Highlands 25: 446:Male characters in fairy tales 167:Children’s and Household Tales 1: 231:. FF Communications. p. 592. 365:Richmond, W. Edson (1957). 472: 107:Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index 268:"C is for Caring fathers" 227:Uther, Hans-Jörg (2004). 241:Thompson, Stith (1977). 126:compared the use of the 350:Jacobs, Joseph (1892). 272:The Multicolored Diary 456:John Francis Campbell 44:John Francis Campbell 436:Fiction about giants 431:Scottish fairy tales 132:The Canterbury Tales 390:Shaw, John (2007). 367:Studies in Folklore 27:Scottish fairy tale 441:Fictional families 410:Conall Cra Bhuidhe 352:Celtic Fairy Tales 181:Celtic Fairy Tales 156:John of Alta Silva 124:J. D. A. Widdowson 32:Conall Cra Bhuidhe 36:Conall Yellowclaw 18:Conall Yellowclaw 16:(Redirected from 463: 396: 395: 387: 381: 380: 362: 356: 355: 347: 341: 338: 332: 331: 313: 307: 304: 298: 297: 289: 283: 282: 280: 278: 263: 257: 256: 238: 232: 225: 38:" is a Scottish 21: 471: 470: 466: 465: 464: 462: 461: 460: 416: 415: 405: 400: 399: 389: 388: 384: 377: 364: 363: 359: 349: 348: 344: 339: 335: 328: 315: 314: 310: 305: 301: 291: 290: 286: 276: 274: 266:Zirag, Csenge. 265: 264: 260: 253: 240: 239: 235: 226: 222: 217: 205: 179:included it in 144: 120:Herbert Halpert 103: 66: 58: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 469: 467: 459: 458: 453: 448: 443: 438: 433: 428: 418: 417: 414: 413: 404: 403:External links 401: 398: 397: 382: 375: 357: 342: 333: 326: 308: 299: 284: 258: 252:978-1162917306 251: 233: 219: 218: 216: 213: 212: 211: 204: 201: 199:by John Shaw. 163:Brothers Grimm 143: 140: 102: 99: 65: 62: 57: 54: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 468: 457: 454: 452: 449: 447: 444: 442: 439: 437: 434: 432: 429: 427: 424: 423: 421: 412: 411: 407: 406: 402: 393: 386: 383: 378: 376:0-8371-6208-4 372: 368: 361: 358: 353: 346: 343: 337: 334: 329: 327:0-86698-006-7 323: 319: 312: 309: 303: 300: 295: 288: 285: 273: 269: 262: 259: 254: 248: 244: 237: 234: 230: 224: 221: 214: 210: 207: 206: 202: 200: 198: 193: 190: 188: 187: 182: 178: 177:Joseph Jacobs 174: 172: 168: 164: 159: 157: 153: 149: 141: 139: 137: 133: 129: 125: 121: 116: 113: 110: 108: 100: 98: 94: 90: 88: 82: 78: 74: 70: 63: 61: 55: 53: 51: 50: 45: 42:collected by 41: 37: 33: 19: 409: 391: 385: 366: 360: 351: 345: 336: 317: 311: 302: 293: 287: 275:. Retrieved 271: 261: 243:The Folktale 242: 236: 228: 223: 196: 194: 191: 189:in Ireland. 184: 180: 175: 166: 160: 151: 145: 117: 114: 111: 104: 95: 91: 83: 79: 75: 71: 67: 59: 47: 35: 31: 29: 451:ATU 850-999 426:Fairy tales 128:frame story 420:Categories 277:14 January 215:References 171:Polyphemus 152:Dolopathos 136:HeptamĂ©ron 40:fairy tale 203:See also 148:medieval 142:Variants 101:Analysis 64:Synopsis 209:Cyclops 134:or the 373:  324:  249:  56:Origin 34:" or " 87:giant 371:ISBN 322:ISBN 279:2022 247:ISBN 161:The 122:and 154:by 46:in 422:: 270:. 173:. 158:. 146:A 138:. 52:. 379:. 330:. 281:. 255:. 30:" 20:)

Index

Conall Yellowclaw
fairy tale
John Francis Campbell
Popular Tales of the West Highlands
giant
Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index
Herbert Halpert
J. D. A. Widdowson
frame story
The Canterbury Tales
Heptaméron
medieval
John of Alta Silva
Brothers Grimm
Polyphemus
Joseph Jacobs
The Black Thief and Knight of the Glen
Cyclops
ISBN
978-1162917306
"C is for Caring fathers"
ISBN
0-86698-006-7
ISBN
0-8371-6208-4
Conall Cra Bhuidhe
Categories
Fairy tales
Scottish fairy tales
Fiction about giants

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