ÃÂnna Aignech ('spirited, swift', an epithet usually applied to horses), son of ÃÂengus Tuirmech Temrach, was, according to medieval Irish legend, a High King of Ireland. He took power after killing his predecessor, and relative's killer, Nia Segamain, and ruled for twenty or twenty-eight years, after which he was killed by Crimthann Coscrach, the grandson of the man who had killed ÃÂnna's grandfather, in the Battle of Ard Crimthainn. Crimthann was killed by Rudraige mac Sithrigi, the great-grandson of the killer of one of ÃÂnna's ancestors. The Lebor Gabála ÃÂrenn synchronises his reign with that of Ptolemy VIII Physcon in Egypt (145âÂÂ116 BC). The chronology of Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar ÃÂirinn dates his reign to 219âÂÂ191 BC, that of the Annals of the Four Masters to 313âÂÂ293 BC.