Bricriu followed
Fergus mac Róich into exile in Connacht following the
Deirdre affair. While he was a guest at
Cruachan he caused a lot of trouble for Fergus and another lover of his,
Flidais, which culminated at the
Táin Bó Flidhais. In the
Echtra Nerai, Bricriu mocks the singing of Fergus, comparing it to a bull-calf's bellowing. Fergus strikes him with 5
fidchell pieces, injuring him severely. Later, Bricriu recovered but died at Cruachan at the end of the
Táin Bó Cuailnge (Cattle Raid of Cooley), trampled to death by the two bulls as they fought.
Fled Bricrenn is preserved in the near-contemporary
Leabhar na h-Uidhri (The Book of the Dun Cow) and in four later manuscripts. The name of the village of
Loughbrickland, near
Banbridge,
County Down, is thought to derive from
Irish Loch Briccrend or Bricriu's Lake, where he was a chieftain and lived in the 'Watery Fort' (
ringfort) overlooking the loch. ==See also==