The Battle of Airtech
An electronic edition
Responsibility for document creation and encoding:
Creation of machine readable-text by: Kate Butler
Proofed by: Niall Brady
Header creation and mark-up by: Kate Butler
Text revised and corrected by: Niall Brady
Extent of text: 895 words [5.03 kb]
Sources:
Printed source of this electronic edition
The Battle of Airtech, ed. R. I. Best, Ériu 8 (1916) 170-190
Manuscript source of printed text
Royal Irish Academy Ms 23 P 2 (The Book of Lecan), cat. no. 535, fol. 169 v
Other manuscript sources
Trinity College Dublin Ms H.3.18, cat. no. 1337, pp. 724-8
Language:
- Early Irish.
- The text ends with the Latin word Finit.
Published by:
Thesaurus Linguae Hibernicae,University College Dublin
Belfield, Dublin 4
http://www.ucd.ie/tlh/
Project funder: Professor Marianne McDonald (University of California, San Diego) via the Ireland Funds.
Date: Final mark-up completed, 2007-03-16
Text ID: rib.eriu.8.002
Availability:
Available only for academic teaching and research provided that this header is included in its entirety with any copy distributed. This edition may not be reproduced or used elsewhere without the explicit permission of the TLH project. For enquiries, please contact us.
Notes:
Due to current browser limitations, certain characters in printed editions may not always be similarly displayed in the electronic version. In such cases, the following representations have been chosen for display purposes:
- characters with punctum delens or other marks indicating lenition (this applies to f, s, m and n) are displayed with following h and underlining: thus fh, sh, mh and nh
- insular ampersand (‘Tironian et’) is displayed as &
Encoding principles:
Correction
TLH has not made any alterations to Best’s text.
Normalisation
This text has not been normalised.
Quotation
No quotations occur.
Hyphenation
End-of-line hyphenation of the printed edition has not been retained.
Tags declaration:
- The <expan> tag is used to encode text printed in italics to indicate editorial expansions of manuscript abbreviations.
- The <supplied> tag is used to encode additions to the text made by the print editor or the editor of the electronic text. The “resp” attribute indicates the source of the supplied text: “p” indicates print editor and “e” electronic editor.
- The <add> tag is reserved for additions made to the text in the original manuscript prior to the publication of modern editions.
© 2007 Thesaurus Linguae Hibernicae (UCD)