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Cethlenn
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=== Enniskillen === Some local historians in the 20th century and after refer to a legend that the Cethlenn was injured and swam to [[Enniskillen]] on [[Loch Erne]], [[County Fermanagh|Co. Fermanagh]], where she died.<ref name=livingstone/><ref name=mccusker/> The suggestion that Enniskillen is eponymous after Cethlenn is made in the early 17th century ''[[Annals of Clonmacnoise]]'', though nothing about her swimming there is remarked on by 19th century writers.<ref name=odonovan/><ref name=vinycomb/> The present-day town is still situated on a river island. The town centre can only be accessed by crossing a bridge from the surrounding mainland. The town was the location of an island fortress on the [[River Erne]] once maintained by the [[Maguire of Fermanagh]] and the castle river gate entrance still stands.<ref name=vinycomb/> According to local lore, the town has taken the name of a smaller island, Innis Cethlenn, located just south of today's East Bridge. It was long ago foretold that if the island was flooded by Erne waters, it would fall to its enemies. Just before the Flight of the Earls (the old Gaelic rulers) the island did flood and the town of Enniskillen fell to the English. In the nineteenth century the Enniskillen borough took measures to prevent the town ever being taken by an enemy again, by filling in the narrow waterway between the smaller island and the mainland. At the same time, the island's elevation was raised to the level of the mainland with earth filling enclosed inside a stone wall. This piece of ground can still be seen, home now to a stand of mature chestnut trees that overhang the river. Innis Cethleen is still enclosed by the stone wall that has prevented it flooding for the past two centuries. <ref>{{cite journal |title=Ancient Maps of Enniskillen and Its Environs |author=Earl of Belmore |journal=Ulster Journal of Archaeology |volume=2 |number=4 |year=1896}}</ref> [[ΓnrΓ Γ Muirgheasa]] suggested that this area ([[Breifne]]) which is the nexus between Ulster and Connacht should be investigated as the genuine location where the Balor legend was localized, rather than [[Tory Island]].<ref name=morris/>
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