Saltair na Rann

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Saltair_na_Rann an entity of type: Abstraction100002137

Cnuasach 150 dán Meán-Ghaeilge creidimh is ea Saltair na Rann. Scríobhadh iad go formhór sa 10ú haois, tuairim is an bhliain 988. Is ionann líon na ndánta agus 'séard atá ann i Leabhar na Salm. Insítear iontu stair naofa an domhain, óna gcruthú go dtí na laethanta deiridh. Sa phríomh lámhscríbhinn, Rawlinson B 502 (Bodleian, Oxford), tá ann ina ndiaidh dhá dhán crábhaidh agus 'Deich-dhuan an Aiséirí’ (Deichdúan na heisseirge), a cuireadh leis an saothar nua déanaí sa deichiú haois. rdf:langString
The title Saltair na Rann ("Psalter of Quatrains") refers to a series of 150 early Middle Irish religious cantos, written in the tenth century—for the most part apparently around 988. The number of the cantos imitates the number of psalms in the Bible. Together they narrate the sacred history of the world, from its creation down to the last days of humanity. In the principal manuscript, Rawlinson B 502 (Bodleian, Oxford), it is followed by two poems of devotion and ten ‘Songs of the Resurrection’, which were added in the late tenth century. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Saltair na Rann
rdf:langString Saltair na Rann
xsd:integer 20745677
xsd:integer 1095191627
rdf:langString Cnuasach 150 dán Meán-Ghaeilge creidimh is ea Saltair na Rann. Scríobhadh iad go formhór sa 10ú haois, tuairim is an bhliain 988. Is ionann líon na ndánta agus 'séard atá ann i Leabhar na Salm. Insítear iontu stair naofa an domhain, óna gcruthú go dtí na laethanta deiridh. Sa phríomh lámhscríbhinn, Rawlinson B 502 (Bodleian, Oxford), tá ann ina ndiaidh dhá dhán crábhaidh agus 'Deich-dhuan an Aiséirí’ (Deichdúan na heisseirge), a cuireadh leis an saothar nua déanaí sa deichiú haois.
rdf:langString The title Saltair na Rann ("Psalter of Quatrains") refers to a series of 150 early Middle Irish religious cantos, written in the tenth century—for the most part apparently around 988. The number of the cantos imitates the number of psalms in the Bible. Together they narrate the sacred history of the world, from its creation down to the last days of humanity. In the principal manuscript, Rawlinson B 502 (Bodleian, Oxford), it is followed by two poems of devotion and ten ‘Songs of the Resurrection’, which were added in the late tenth century.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3569

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