Macha Mong Ruad ("red hair"), daughter of
Áed Rúad ("red fire" or "fire lord" – a name of
the Dagda), was, according to medieval legend and historical tradition, the only queen in the
List of High Kings of Ireland. Her father Áed rotated the kingship with his cousins
Díthorba and
Cimbáeth, seven years at a time. Áed died after his third stint as king, and when his turn came round again, Macha claimed the kingship. Díthorba and Cimbáeth refused to allow a woman to take the throne, and a battle ensued. Macha won, and Díthorba was killed. She won a second battle against Díthorba's sons, who fled into the wilderness of
Connacht. She married Cimbáeth, with whom she shared the kingship. Macha pursued Díthorba's sons alone, disguised as a
leper, and overcame each of them in turn when they tried to have sex with her, tied them up, and carried the three of them bodily to
Ulster. The Ulstermen wanted to have them killed, but Macha instead enslaved them and forced them to build
Emain Macha (Navan Fort near Armagh), to be the capital of the
Ulaid, marking out its boundaries with her brooch (explaining the name
Emain Macha as
eó-muin Macha or "Macha's neck-brooch"). Macha ruled together with Cimbáeth for seven years, until he died of plague at Emain Macha, and then a further fourteen years on her own, until she was killed by
Rechtaid Rígderg. The
Lebor Gabála synchronises her reign to that of
Ptolemy I Soter (323–283 BC). The chronology of Keating's
Foras Feasa ar Éirinn dates her reign to 468–461 BC, the
Annals of the Four Masters to 661–654 BC.
Marie-Louise Sjoestedt writes of this figure: "In the person of this second Macha we discover a new aspect of the local goddess, that of the warrior and dominator; and this is combined with the sexual aspect in a specific manner which reappears in other myths, the male partner or partners being dominated by the female." ==Macha, wife of Cruinniuc==