Generally,
ollam referred to a professional poet or bard of literature and history, and a member of the highest of the seven ranks of
filí, achieved after at least twelve years of study. As part of a king's court, the ollam might combine the functions of poet, story-teller, and historian, including an accurate recitation of genealogies. The calling to the vocation was usually a family tradition. As early as 574, members of the
Ó hUiginn (
O'Higgins) clan were recorded as hereditary poets in the courts of Irish Princes and Chiefs. As such they were accorded a status of nobility second in rank only to the King and were entitled to wear the same number of colours in their robes. ==Other uses==