Óláfr Guðrøðarson (died 1153)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Óláfr Guðrøðarson
King of the Isles
Refer to caption
Óláfr's name and title as it appears on folio 35v. of British Library Cotton Julius A VII (the Chronicle of Mann): "Olavus rex".[1]
Reign1112/1115–1153
PredecessorDomnall mac Taidc
SuccessorGuðrøðr Óláfsson
Died29 June 1153
Mann
Wives
  • Ingibjǫrg Hákonardóttir
  • Affraic ingen Fergusa
Issuesons Guðrøðr, Rǫgnvaldr, Lǫgmaðr, and Haraldr; several daughters including Ragnhildr
HouseCrovan dynasty
FatherGuðrøðr Crovan

Óláfr Guðrøðarson (died 29 June 1153) was a twelfth-century King of Mann and the Isles.[note 1] As a younger son of Guðrøðr Crovan, King of Dublin and the Isles, Óláfr witnessed a vicious power struggle between his elder brothers in the aftermath of their father's death. At some point, the young Óláfr was entrusted to the care of Henry I, King of England, and like the contemporaneous Scottish monarchs, Alexander I and David I, Óláfr appears to have been a protégé of the English king. As King of the Isles, Óláfr contracted marital alliances with neighbouring maritime rulers. Although he appears to have overseen successful military operations to reclaim the northernmost territories once controlled by his father, he may have witnessed the loss of authority in Galloway as well. Like his counterpart David I, Óláfr was a reformer and moderniser of his realm. However, his four-decade reign ended in abrupt disaster when he was assassinated by three nephews in 1153. Following the ensuing power struggle, Óláfr's son Guðrøðr overcame the kin-slayers, and assumed the kingship of the Kingdom of the Isles.

The Isles—an archipelagic region roughly incorporating the Hebrides and Mann—was ruled by Guðrøðr Crovan for over two decades until his death in 1095, whereupon his eldest son Lǫgmaðr assumed control. Warring soon broke out between factions supporting Lǫgmaðr's younger brother Haraldr, which led to the intervention and encroachment of Irish power into the region. After a short period of Irish domination, the region lapsed into further conflict which was capitalised on by Magnús Óláfsson, King of Norway, who led two military campaigns throughout the Isles and surrounding Irish Sea region at about the turn of the twelfth century. Magnús dominated these regions until his death in 1103, whereupon control of the Isles appears to have fragmented into chaos once again.

Rather than allow ambitious Irish powers fill the power vacuum, Henry I appears to have installed Óláfr on the throne at some point between 1112 and 1115, about the time that Domnall mac Taidc relocated from the Isles to Ireland. Óláfr is recorded to have spent his youth at Henry I's court, and Óláfr's later religious foundations reveal that he was greatly influenced by his English upbringing. In the second quarter of the eleventh century, Óláfr founded Rushen Abbey, a reformed religious house on Mann. He further oversaw the formation of the Diocese of the Isles, the territorial extent of which appears to reveal the boundaries of his realm. Óláfr is recorded to have had at least two wives: Ingibjǫrg, daughter of Hákon Pálsson, Earl of Orkney; and Affraic, daughter of Fergus, Lord of Galloway. The unions seem to reveal that Óláfr shifted from an alliance with Orkney to that with Galloway. Not long after his marriage to Affraic, one of Óláfr's daughters married Somairle mac Gilla Brigte, Lord of Argyll, an emerging power in the region.

Although Óláfr's reign is recorded to have been peaceful, there is reason to suspect that his own succession was uncertain. In 1152, Guðrøðr travelled to Norway and rendered homage to Ingi Haraldsson, King of Norway. At about this time, the Diocese of the Isles was incorporated within the recently elevated Archdiocese of Niðaróss. Whilst this strengthened Norwegian links with the Isles, it secured the ecclesiastical independence of Óláfr's domain, and safeguard his secular authority in the region. Nevertheless, before Guðrøðr returned to the Isles, three sons of Haraldr confronted Óláfr, and demanded a share of the kingdom before slaying him. Although the three men appear to have taken significant steps to counter military intervention from Galloway, they were soon after crushed by Guðrøðr, who returned to the region strengthened by Norwegian military might. Óláfr's descendants went on to reign as kings of the Isles for over a century.

Background[]

Map of Britain and Ireland
Locations relating to Óláfr's life and times.

Óláfr was a member of the Crovan dynasty.[43] He was a son[44] of this family's eponymous ancestor, Guðrøðr Crovan, King of Dublin and the Isles.[45] Others sons of Guðrøðr Crovan include Lǫgmaðr[46] and Haraldr.[47] Óláfr's father appears to have secured the kingship of the Isles in the late 1070s,[48] and to have seized the kingship of Dublin in the early 1090s.[49] Guðrøðr Crovan's downfall came in 1094 when he was forced from Ireland altogether by Muirchertach Ua Briain, King of Munster.[50] There is reason to suspect that Guðrøðr Crovan was driven from Mann as well, since he is recorded to have died on Islay the following year.[51]

According to the thirteenth- to fourteenth-century Chronicle of Mann, Guðrøðr Crovan's eldest son, Lǫgmaðr, succeeded to the kingship of the Isles.[52] The chronicle further reveals that Lǫgmaðr faced opposition from within his own family in the form of a rebellion by his brother, Haraldr. Lǫgmaðr eventually overcame Haraldr, however, and is stated to have had him blinded and emasculated.[53] Afterwards, Lǫgmaðr appears to have faced further opposition in the form of a faction supporting his youngest brother, Óláfr. Apparently unable to overthrow Lǫgmaðr on their own, the dissidents turned to Muirchertach, whose recent conquest of Dublin gave him control of that realm's dominating naval forces.[54]

Refer to caption
The name of Domnall mac Taidc as it appears on folio 33v of British Library Cotton Julius A VII (the Chronicle of Mann): "Dompnaldum filium Tadc".[55]

If the chronicle is to be believed, Óláfr's supporters petitioned Muirchertach to provide a regent from his own kin—the Uí Briain—to govern the Isles until Óláfr was old enough to assume control himself.[56] Such a clause may well have been a condition of Muirchertach's involvement, rather than a request.[57] Nevertheless, the chronicle indicates that Muirchertach installed his nephew, Domnall mac Taidc, upon the throne.[56] Although Domnall had previously opposed Muirchertach over the kingship of Munster, he was the son of Muirchertach's brother, and further possessed strong familial connections with the Isles through his maternal descent from Echmarcach mac Ragnaill, King of Dublin and the Isles.[58] Regardless, the death of Domnall's brother, Amlaíb, recorded by the seventeenth-century Annals of the Four Masters in 1096,[59] suggests that Domnall and the rest of the Meic Taidc faced significant opposition in the Isles,[60] possibly in the form of Lǫgmaðr's adherents.[61] Domnall's reign appears to have been brief. The chronicle's account of warfare on the island in about 1097–1098 fails to mention him at all, a fact which seems to be evidence that he had lost control by then.[62]

Refer to caption
The name and title of Magnús Óláfsson as it appears on folio 46v of Oxford Bodleian Library Rawlinson B 489 (the Annals of Ulster).[63]

Probably late in 1097, Magnús Óláfsson, King of Norway turned his attention towards the Isles, and sent a certain Ingimundr into the region to take control on his behalf. Unfortunately for Magnús, Ingimundr was soon after slain on Lewis and Harris by leading Islesmen.[64] The following year Magnús took matters into his own hands, and led an invasion-fleet of his into the area.[65] As the invaders successfully carved their way through the Isles towards Mann, Lǫgmaðr was evidently overcome and captured.[66] From Mann, the Norwegians campaigned against the English in Anglesey. Although , within the thirteenth century Heimskringla, places this particular episode in the context of Norwegian conquest, it is likely that Magnús had merely assumed the same protector role that Óláfr's father had once filled with Gruffudd ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd.[67] Magnús gained the submission of Galloway,[68] and may have consolidated his campaign through a treaty with Edgar, King of Scotland.[69]

Black and white illustration of a mediaeval army
Nineteenth-century depiction of Magnús Óláfsson's forces in Ireland.[70][note 2]

Magnús overwintered in the Isles, and left for Norway in the summer. He made his return to the region, nearly four years later, in 1102 or 1103.[71] After reestablishing himself on Mann, Magnús entered into a marital alliance with Muirchertach formalised through the marriage between Magnús's young son, Sigurðr, and Muirchertach's young daughter, Bjaðmunjo.[72] The fact that Magnús intended to return to Norway reveals that Muirchertach benefited to most from the arrangement, although the alliance appears to have bound the kings against a common enemy in the region, Domnall Mac Lochlainn, King of Cenél nEógain.[73] Unfortunately for Muirchertach, and his long-term ambitions in the Isles, Magnús was slain in Ulster in 1103, and Sigurðr immediately repudiated his bride and returned to Norway. Although Muirchertach was able to regain control of Dublin and still had held considerable influence in the Isles, Magnús' death left a vacuum which neither Muirchertach nor Domnall Mac Lochlainn could fill.[74][note 3]

Restoration of the Crovan dynasty[]

Coloured illumination of a seated mediaeval king
Coloured illumination of two seated mediaeval kings
Twelfth- and thirteenth-century depictions of kings David I (left), Henry I (middle), and Stephen (right), neighbouring rulers whom Óláfr enjoyed amiable relations during his forty-year reign.[note 4]

If the Chronicle of Mann is to be believed, at one point in his career Lǫgmaðr repented the cruelty that he had inflicted upon Haraldr, and remorsefully resigned his kingdom before setting off to Jerusalem where he died.[78] The particular terminology employed by the chronicle—that Lǫgmaðr departed the kingdom "marked with the sign of the Lord's cross"—suggests that he participated in a crusade.[79] On the other hand, since the chronicle was compiled in the thirteenth century, during a period when the idea of a cross-bearing pilgrim was well established, it is possible that this depiction of Lǫgmaðr has been contaminated by anachronistic conceptions.[80]

Refer to caption
The name of Lǫgmaðr Guðrøðarson as it appears on folio 33v of AM 47 fol (Eirspennill): "Lǫgmaðr het son Guðrǫðar Suðr eyia konvngs". The excerpt describes Lǫgmaðr as the son of Guðrøðr Crovan, king of the Suðreyjar[81]—an Old Norse term meaning "Southern Islands", roughly equating to the Hebrides and Mann.[82]

If Lǫgmaðr was indeed a crusader, it is uncertain which particular crusade he undertook. One possibility is that he took part in the First Crusade,[83] a movement that reached its climax with the successful siege and capture of Jerusalem in mid 1099.[84] Lǫgmaðr could have embarked upon this enterprise in about 1096, the year the pope's calls reached England.[85] Alternately, in light of Lǫgmaðr's capture by the Norwegians in 1098, it is conceivable that his release from custody was made conditional upon his exile and participation in the First Crusade.[86] On the other hand, it is not impossible that Lǫgmaðr originally undertook a pilgrimage before catching wind of the crusade en route.[87]

Another possibility is that Lǫgmaðr regained some form of control in the Isles following Magnús' death, and afterwards joined Sigurðr's expedition to Holy Land in the first decade of the twelfth century.[88] The precise chronology of this enterprise is uncertain, although the Norwegian fleet certainly reached England before the end of the first decade of the twelfth century.[89] It may have been at this point, whilst Sigurðr overwintered at the English royal court, that Lǫgmaðr joined up with him. If Lǫgmaðr and Sigurðr indeed rendezvoused in England, this may have been the time when Óláfr was entrusted to the safekeeping of the English king.[90][note 5] Certainly, the chronicle reveals that Óláfr was brought up at the English court.[93] The reason why he was entrusted into the care of the English may have been because Henry I was thought to have been the only monarch who could guarantee Óláfr's safety.[94][note 6]

Refer to caption
The name of Havelok the Dane name as it appears on folio 207v of Oxford Bodleian Library Laud Miscellaneous 108: "Haueloc".[96] This literary character may have been first crafted because of Óláfr's presence at the English court.

A probable tenth-century ancestor of Óláfr was the Uí Ímair dynast Óláfr kváran, King of Northumbria and Dublin,[97] This man was likely the prototype of the mediaeval literary character variously known as Havelok the Dane.[98][note 7] The earliest surviving source detailing Havelok is the twelfth-century Estoire des Engleis.[101] The catalyst for Óláfr kváran's incorporation into twelfth-century English literature may have been Óláfr's stay at the court of Henry I. Conceivably, writers may have sought out the patronage of the young Óláfr by borrowing tales of his famous like-named forebear.[102]

Refer to caption
The name and title of Muirchertach Ua Briain as it appears on folio 19r of Oxford Bodleian Library Rawlinson B 488 (the Annals of Tigernach): "Muirchertaigh h-Úi Bríain, ríg Muman".[103] Under Muirchertach, the Irish Uí Briain kindred sought to extend its influence into the Isles.

According to the twelfth-century Historia regum Anglorum, Alexander I, King of Scotland struggled to maintain control of his kingdom.[104] One region which may have caused the Scots some concern was the Isles. In 1111, Domnall mac Taidc seized the kingship of the region, possibly with the aid of Muirchertach's northern opponent, Domnall Mac Lochlainn. This encroachment of competing Irish factions into the Isles may well have been as unpalatable to the English and Scots as the power vacuum left in the wake of Magnús' demise.[105]

The exact date of his accession to the kingship of the Isles is uncertain.[106] Although the chronicle claims that he began to reign in 1102,[107] it also states that he reigned for forty years,[108] and shows that he died in 1153.[109] If this reign length is correct, his accession probably dates to about 1112,[110] 1113,[111] 1114,[112] or 1115.[113][note 8] In any case, Óláfr's accession dates to about the time of Muirchertach's faltering authority in 1114.[115] Domnall may have been driven out of the Isles by force,[116] or he could have been drawn back to Ireland in an attempt to capitalise upon his uncle's failing health and fleeting authority.[117]

Óláfr's return to the Isles from England appears to have been the work of Henry I,[118] who would have likely welcomed a steadfast dependent in control a region of strategic importance. Although the English and Scottish kings were certainly at odds over Cumbria at about this time, it is likely that they would have cooperated to combat the extension of Uí Briain and Meic Lochlainn influence in the Isles. In fact, the Scottish king's participation in the 1114 English expedition against Gruffudd—a man who seems to have been an associate of Muirchertach—may have been undertaken in this context.[119][note 9] Furthermore, Muirchertach was closely associated with the Bellême-Montgomery family that had risen in a failed revolt against the English Crown in the first decade of the century.[121] According to the twelfth-century Gesta regum Anglorum, the English imposed a trade embargo against Muirchertach at some point during the reign of Henry I. Whilst it is possible that this action was a consequence of Muirchertach's familial relationship with his son-in-law Arnulf de Montgomery—and Muirchertach's apparent part in the Bellême-Montgomery insurrection—another possibility is that the sanctions concerned Muirchertach's ambitions in the Irish Sea region, especially since Óláfr had been entrusted into Henry I's care.[122] By establishing Óláfr in the Isles, Henry I may have sought to mitigate the extension of Irish influence in the Isles,[123] and escalate the expansion of English authority into the Irish Sea region.[121]

Alliances[]

hideSimplified pedigree depicting the degree of kinship between Óláfr, Henry I, Fergus, and Somairle.[124]
Henry I (died 1135)
Hákon (died 1137)Fergus (died 1161)unknown
Páll (died 1137)IngibjǫrgÓláfr (died 1153)Affraic
Somairle (died 1164)RagnhildrGuðrøðr (died 1187)
Refer to caption
The name of Óláfr's wife, Affraic ingen Fergusa, as it appears on folio 35v of British Library Cotton Julius A VII: "Affricam".[125]

According to the Chronicle of Mann, Óláfr married Affraic, daughter of Fergus, Lord of Galloway.[126] Although the union is not dated by contemporary sources,[127] it appears to have been arranged in the 1130s or 1140s.[128] Affraic is specifically identified as the mother of Guðrøðr by the chronicle.[129] The fact that he is recorded to have travelled to Norway on a diplomatic mission in 1152 suggests that he was an adult by this date, and may indicate that Óláfr and Affraic's union commenced in the 1130s.[127] Several contemporary sources concerning Fergus' descendants suggest that he had married an illegitimate daughter of Henry I in about the 1120s,[130] and that this woman was the mother of at least some of Fergus' offspring, including Affraic herself.[131][note 10] In fact, the shared kinship between Guðrøðr and Henry I's succeeding grandson, Henry II, King of England, is noted by the twelfth-century Chronica of Robert de Torigni, Abbot of Mont Saint-Michel.[134][note 11] The marital alliance forged between Óláfr and Fergus gave the Crovan dynasty valuable familial-connections with the English king, one of the most powerful rulers in western Europe.[136] Fergus profited from the marriage pact as well, since it bound Galloway more tightly to the Isles,[137] a neighbouring realm from which Galloway had been invaded during the time of Magnús' overlordship.[138][note 12] The union also ensured Fergus the protection of one of Britain's most formidable fleets, and gave him a valuable ally then outwith the orbit of the Scottish king.[139]

Photograph of an ivory gaming piece depicting a seated queen
A queen gaming piece of the so-called Lewis chessmen.[140] Almost nothing is known of queenship in the Isles.[141]

Óláfr's dealings with Furness Abbey—a religious house founded by the Lord of Lancaster, Stephen of Blois[142]—could be evidence that Óláfr and Stephen enjoyed amiable relations in the first third of the twelfth century, and may indicate that Óláfr supported Stephen as King of England after 1135.[143] At about this time, David I appears to have consolidated his overlordship of Argyll, a region located on the western periphery of the Scottish realm.[144] By about 1140, not only had Óláfr and Fergus bound themselves together,[145] but Somairle mac Gilla Brigte, Lord of Argyll married one of Óláfr's illegitimate daughters.[146] Although the name of this woman is not recorded by the Chronicle of Mann, she is identified as Ragnhildr by the thirteenth-century Orkneyinga saga.[147] The marital binding of Óláfr with two of David I's dependants—Fergus and Somairle—roughly coincided with the Scottish king's endeavour to establish control of Cumbria in the 1130s and 1140s.[148] During this period, David's authority extended southwards along the Cumbrian coast through Copeland, Furness, into Stephen's former honour of Lancaster, thereby making him a principal power in the northern Irish Sea region.[149] The martial alliances concerning Óláfr, therefore, may have formed part of a Scottish strategy to not only isolate him from an English alliance, but to project Scottish authority into the Irish Sea,[150] and draw Óláfr into David I's sphere of influence.[151]

Refer to caption
The name of Óláfr's father-in-law, Hákon Pálsson, as it appears on folio 37r of AM 47 fol: "Hakon s(on) Pals j(arls)".[152]

Besides his wife Affraic, the chronicle states that Óláfr had many concubines by whom he had several daughters—including the daughter married to Somairle—and three sons: Rǫgnvaldr, Lǫgmaðr, and Haraldr.[153][note 13] The B-text of the thirteenth-century Fagrskinna records that Óláfr married Ingibjǫrg, daughter of Hákon Pálsson, Earl of Orkney.[155] Whilst Ingibjǫrg is not referred to by the chronicle,[156] she is certainly linked to Óláfr by Orkneyinga saga,[157] although this source also incorrectly states—in a passage concerning Guðrøðr's son and successor, Rǫgnvaldr—that Ingibjǫrg was Guðrøðr's mother.[158] As a consequence of this error, there is reason to suspect that the saga has conflated Guðrøðr's son with Somairle's like-named son, Ragnall. The saga's confused entry, therefore, may be evidence that Ingibjǫrg was the mother of Óláfr's daughter, Ragnhildr.[159] The terminology employed by the sources documenting Affraic and Ingibjǫrg reveal that the latter's relationship with Óláfr came to be viewed differently in Orkney than the Isles.[160] Although Orkneyinga saga acknowledges that the union between Ingibjǫrg's own parents was not a canonical marriage either, the coupling formed the basis for her family's claim to the earldom.[161][note 14] Whatever the case, Óláfr's union with Ingibjǫrg likely predates his marriage to Affraic.[165] Accordingly, Óláfr appears to have turned from an alliance with Ingibjǫrg's brother and Norwegian dependant, Páll Hákonarson, Earl of Orkney, to establish an alliance with Fergus, who was then a rising power in the Irish Sea region. The end result of this shift may be alluded to by the chronicle which states that Óláfr held peaceful alliances with Irish and Scottish kings so that none "dared disturbed" the Kingdom of the Isles.[166]

Ecclesiastical foundations and appointments[]

Whilst at the English royal court, Óláfr could well have met members of the Scottish monarchy. For example, Henry I's wife was Matilda,[173] whose royal brothers, Alexander I and the future David I, King of Scotland, both resided in England before the onset of their reigns (the brothers respectively reigned in 1102–1124 and 1124–1153).[173] Óláfr would have certainly been exposed to Henry I's efforts to reform the English Church.[174] Both Matilda and her husband were renowned patrons of religious orders, the Augustinians in particular.[175] Although Óláfr's stay at Henry's court predated the arrival of the Savignac and Cisterian orders in England, Óláfr's experiences in England clearly influenced his decision to introduce reformed monastic orders into his own realm.[176] In fact, the ecclesiastical actions of Óláfr's Scottish contemporaries—David I, and his predecessing Alexander I—were similarly influenced by their time spent in England.[175] Óláfr's interest in religious reform is alluded to by the Chronicle of Mann, which declares: "he was devout and enthusiastic in matters of religion and was welcome both to God and men".[177]

The ecclesiastical jurisdiction within Óláfr's kingdom was the Diocese of the Isles. Little is known of its early history, although its origins may well lie with the Uí Ímair imperium.[178][note 16] Ecclesiastical interconnection between the Isles and Dublin seems to have been severed during a period of Irish overlordship of Dublin, at about the beginning of Guðrøðr Crovan's reign in the Isles.[182] By the time of Óláfr's reign, the diocese appears to have encompassed the islands that had formerly been claimed by Magnús,[183][note 17] and may well have included territory in western Galloway.[186] In a letter that appears to date to about 1113, at about start of his reign, Óláfr presented an unnamed bishop for consecration to an Archbishop of York. Although the letter identifies the bishop with the initial "G", which potentially could represent Gerald, whose tenure dates to 1100–1108,[187] the fact that Óláfr's reign appears to have commenced several years later suggests that the initial is erroneous, and that the initial "T" was intended, perhaps in reference to either archbishop Thomas, or the Thomas' successor, Thurstan.[188] No consecration is recorded in English sources, and Óláfr's candidate is not recorded in the chronicle.[189]

Ruinous Rushen Abbey, near Ballasalla. The actual abbey founded by Óláfr may have been located near Castletown, before removing to Ballasalla late in the twelfth century.[190]

In about 1134, the chronicle reveals that Óláfr founded the Rushen Abbey on Mann by granting Ivo, Abbot of Furness land to establish the house.[191] As a Savignac daughter house of nearby Furness Abbey—a religious house seated just across the Irish Sea in Lancashire—Rushen Abbey was the first reformed house in the Isles,[192][note 18] and its foundation partly evidences the importance of links between Mann and northern England.[196][note 19] During his tenure as archbishop (1114–1140), Thurstan was a proponent of ecclesiastical reform in northern England, and there is reason to suspect that he played an active role in Óláfr's foundation. Not only did it continue Thurstan's programme of monastic reform, but it further extended the ecclesiastical authority of the Archdiocese of York.[198] In any case, the abbey's foundation charter reveals that Óláfr granted the monks of Furness the right to elect the Bishop of the Isles,[199] a provision that not only emphasised Óláfr's royal prerogative,[200] but allowed Furness to funnel continental influences into the Isles.[201] The charter implies that episcopal authority within his realm had fallen to outsiders, and expresses the king's desire that the Isles be administered by its own bishop.[202] This could be evidence that the former diocesan bishop, Hamond, died several years previous, and that a period of vacancy ensued in which neighbouring bishops took up the slack.[203] The reestablishment of the Diocese of Whithorn in 1128, may have been undertaken in this context, and may also signal the loss of western Galloway from the Kingdom of the Isles.[204]

Refer to caption
The name of Wimund as it appears on folio 122v of British Library Cotton Vespasian B VI (Historia rerum Anglicarum).[205]

In a letter that probably dates not long after his foundation, Óláfr wrote to Thurstan, and confirmed the candidate elected by the monks of Furness.[206] Hamond's successor appears to have been the shadowy Wimund, Bishop of the Isles.[207] According to the twelfth-century Historia rerum Anglicarum, Wimund began his ecclesiastical career at Furness before removing to Rushen.[208] Although a twelfth-century chronicle of the ecclesiastical history of York states that Wimund professed obedience to Thomas, this archbishop's early tenure (1109–1114) suggests he has been confused with Thurstan.[209] The fact that this source identifies Wimund's see as sancta ecclesia de Schith ("the holy Church of Skye") seems to be evidence that the diocesan seat had not yet been permanently centred on Mann,[210] and that Wimund was seated at the site of the later mediaeval Snizort Cathedral.[211] As a monk of Furness, Wimund may have originally relocated to Mann in the context of Óláfr's foundation of Rushen.[212] He appears to have been the first Bishop of the Isles elected by the monks of Furness,[213] and seems to have been consecrated by Thurstan.[207] Wimund appears to have used his elevated position to violently seek the inheritance of an Earl of Moray in the late 1140s. Wimund's warring against the Scots eventually forced David I to cede him lands near Furness before his capture and mutilation in 1152.[214] It is likely that Wimund's campaigning led to the abandonment of his diocesan see,[215] and that his actions posed a serious threat to Óláfr's authority.[216]

Map of Britain and Ireland
Extent of the Diocese of the Isles, c.1300.[217]

The fact that Wimund is not listed amongst other diocesan bishops by the Chronicle of Mann could be evidence that Óláfr eventually came to repudiate him.[218] A letter from Óláfr to the chapter of York suggests that the king unsuccessfully attempted to have a replacement, a certain Nicholas, consecrated by Robert de Ghent, Dean of York.[219] The fact that Óláfr interacted with the dean suggests that the correspondence dates between the 1147 deposition of William fitz Herbert, Archbishop of York and the 1152 consecration of Henry Murdac, Archbishop of York.[220] Óláfr's inability to have his man consecrated may have been due to the Wimund episode being unresolved at the time.[221] According to Robert de Torigni's Chronica[222] and the thirteenth-century Wendover version Flores historiarum, Henry Murdac consecrated John, a Benedictine monk from Normandy, as Bishop of the Isles in 1152.[223] The fact that the Chronicle of Mann fails to record John's name amongst other diocesan bishops appears to indicate that he was an unacceptable candidate to Óláfr and the Islesmen, and that John never occupied his see.[224]

Ecclesiastical and secular independence[]

Photograph of Furness Abbey
Ruinous Furness Abbey. Óláfr forged close connections with the monks of this Lancashire religious house, and granted them the right to elect his Bishop of the Isles.

By way of his ecclesiastical actions, Óláfr firmly established the Diocese of the Isles to correspond to the territorial borders of his kingdom,[225] and seems to have initiated the transfer the ecclesiastical obedience of the Isles from the Archdiocese of Canterbury to the Archdiocese of York. Such changes may have been orchestrated as a means to further distance his diocese from that of Dublin, where diocesan bishops were consecrated by the Archbishop of Canterbury.[226] In 1152, steps were undertaken by the papacy to elevate the Diocese of Dublin to an archdiocese. Dublin's political and economic ties with the Isles could have meant that the Bishop of the Isles was now in danger of becoming subordinate to the Archbishop of Dublin. For Óláfr, such an event would have threatened to undermine both his ecclesiastical authority and secular power within his own realm.[227] As a result of Óláfr's inability to have Nicholas formally consecrated, and his refusal to accept John as bishop, the episcopal see of the Isles appears to have been vacant at the same time of Dublin's ecclesiastical ascendancy. In consequence, without a consecrated bishop of its own, Óláfr's diocese seems to have been in jeopardy of falling under Dublin's increasing authority.[228] Moreover, in 1152, David I attempted to have the dioceses of Orkney and the Isles included within the prospective Scottish Archdiocese of St Andrews.[229]

Refer to caption
The name and title of Nicholas Breakspeare as they appear on folio 57v of AM 47 fol: "Nikolas cardinali af Romaborg".[230]

It may have been in the context of this ecclesiastical crisis in the Isles that Guðrøðr undertook his journey to Norway in 1152. Guðrøðr's overseas objective, therefore, may have been to secure the patronage of a Scandinavian metropolitan willing to protect the Diocese of the Isles.[231] Certainly, Guðrøðr's stay in Norway coincided with the Scandinavian visit of the papal legate Nicholas Breakspeare, Cardinal-Bishop of Albano,[232] a man who had been tasked to create Norwegian and Swedish ecclesiastical provinces in order to further extend the papacy's authority into the northern European periphery.[233] Eventually the newly created Norwegian province—the Archdiocese of Niðaróss—encompassed eleven dioceses within and outwith mainland Norway. One such overseas diocese was that of the Isles,[234] officially incorporated within the province in November 1154.[235][note 20] Although Óláfr did not live long enough to witness the latter formality, it is evident that the remarkable overseas statecraft undertaken by Óláfr and Guðrøðr secured their kingdom's ecclesiastical and secular independence from nearby Dublin.[237] The establishment of the Norwegian archdiocese bound outlying Norse territories closer to Norwegian royal power.[238] In effect, the political reality of the Diocese of the Isles—its territorial borders and nominal subjection to far-off Norway—appears to have mirrored that of the Kingdom of the Isles.[239]

Kingship[]

Photograph of Tynwald Hill
Tynwald Hill, near St John's may have been a national assembly site of the Kingdom of the Isles.[240] It may well have been the place where the Islesmen publicly inaugurated their kings,[241] proclaimed new laws, and resolved disputes.[242] Nevertheless, much of the visible site dates only to the eighteenth-, nineteenth-, and twentieth century.[240][note 21]

In some respects, Óláfr's kingship may be comparable to that of David I, a significant moderniser of the Scottish realm.[247] Due to his time spent in England, Óláfr seems to have introduced modern forms of feudalism into his realm,[248] and to have developed manorialism on Mann.[27] Óláfr seems to have introduced the parochial system into the Isles;[249] and like David I, Óláfr transformed the church within his realm, creating a territorially defined diocese.[250] His establishment of a more modern territorial kingship, which came to be associated with its demesne on Mann, may have led to the alienation of outlying areas.[27] Although climatic conditions in the Isles improved in the eleventh century, and agricultural production appears to have increased as a result, there appears to have been a decrease in manufacturing by the twelfth century.[251] Evidence of an eleventh-century mint on Mann exists prior to Guðrøðr Crovan's rule, but there is no evidence of one during Óláfr's reign, and no coins bearing the names of any of the members of his dynasty have been found.[252][note 22]

The acclamation or election of a king was an important component of kingship in northern mediaeval Europe. There are several examples of the role played by chieftains in the kingship of the Isles during Óláfr's floruit.[254] For instance, the leading men of the realm are recorded to have brokered the deal to have Muirchertach provide a regent until Óláfr was old enough to reign,[255] whilst disaffected chieftains are reported to have brought about the dramatic end of Ingimundr's regency,[256] and chieftains are said to have accompanied Óláfr from England to begin his reign.[257] Even in the immediate aftermath of Óláfr's demise, the Chronicle of Mann reveals that the chieftains of the Isles (principes insularum) gathered together and unanimously elected Guðrøðr as king.[258]

Refer to caption
The title of Óláfr's son and successor, Guðrøðr, as it appears on folio 40r British Library Cotton Julius A VII: "rex insularum" ("King of the Isles").[259]

There is surviving evidence of only twenty royal charters dating from the reign of the Crovan dynasty. Of these, only one dates to the reign of Óláfr.[260][note 23] Óláfr styled himself rex insularum,[261] a Latin equivalent of a Gaelic title first accorded to his 10th century predecessor, Guðrøðr Haraldsson, King of the Isles.[262] Surviving sources indicate that Óláfr was the first of several kings from his dynasty to claim to rule dei gratia ("by the grace of God").[263] The use of this formula was common amongst contemporary European monarchs but its use by the kings of the Isles, like the kings of Scotland, appears to have been adopted in imitation of the charters issued by the Angevin kings of England. Like the Scots, Óláfr and his successors appear to have adopted the formula to emphasise their sovereign right to kingship, to take their place amongst the leading monarchs of their time.[264] Óláfr's use of the formula exemplifies the fact that—in comparison to his royal predecessors in the Isles—he was a new kind of ruler and the real founder of later Manx kingship.[265] The fact that Óláfr was brought up at the English royal court could suggest that he, like David I, was knighted by the English king.[266] Certainly, several of Óláfr's thirteenth-century royal successors were knighted by their English counterpart.[267]

Refer to caption
The name of Óláfr's daughter, Ragnhildr, as it appears on folio 143r of GKS 1005 fol (Flateyarbók): "Ragnhilldi".[268] Ragnhildr married Somairle mac Gilla Brigte.

Óláfr appears to have been an energetic king who consolidated his rule in the northern portion of the Isles by way of military force. There is reason to suspect that this region had fallen under Orcadian influence before being reclaimed by the Islesmen under Óláfr.[269] According to Hebridean tradition preserved by the seventeenth-century Sleat History, he was aided by Somairle in military operations (otherwise unrecorded in contemporary sources) against the "ancient Danes north of Ardnamurchan".[270][note 24] Together with its claim that Óláfr also campaigned on North Uist, this source may be evidence that the bitter struggle between Guðrøðr and Somairle (fought after Óláfr's demise) took place in the context of Somairle taking back territories that he had originally helped secure into Óláfr's kingdom.[270] Somairle first emerges into the historical record in the 1130s supporting an unsuccessful rival branch of the Scottish royal family against David I. By about the time of Somairle's marriage to Óláfr's daughter, David I seems to have successfully imposed his authority over Argyll. As a result of this apparent overlorship, Somairle may have been encouraged to redirect his energies from Scotland into the Isles.[272]

Photograph of an ivory gaming piece depicting a seated king
One of the king gaming pieces of the so-called Lewis chessmen.[273]

There is reason to suspect that the Kingdom of the Isles lost control of territories in Galloway during Óláfr's floruit.[274] Earlier in the mid eleventh century, the Rhinns of Galloway may have been ruled by Guðrøðr Crovan's predecessor, Echmarcach.[275] By the last years of the century, the region was ruled by , who may have been a descendant of Guðrøðr Crovan's immediate predecessor, Fingal mac Gofraid. Whether Mac Congail ruled independently or subordinate to Guðrøðr Crovan is unknown.[276] The installation of Gilla Aldan as Bishop of Whithorn, in the third decade of the twelfth century, may mark the date when the Rhinns finally separated from the Kingdom of the Isles.[277] Although support from the rulers of Galloway and Scotland may well have strengthened Óláfr's position in the Isles,[278] and the chronicle portrays his reign as one of peacefulness,[279] other sources vaguely recount the mainland depredations wrought by Wimund.[278] The latter's warring against the Scots suggests that Óláfr may have struggled to maintain control of his far-flung kingdom.[280][note 25]

Refer to caption
The name and title of Ingi Haraldsson as they appear on folio 57v of AM 47 fol: "Ingi konvngr Haʀalldz s(on)".[283]

It is uncertain how the Diocese of the Isles was organised during Óláfr's reign. There may well have been several regional centres where diocesan bishops, accompanied by retinues of clerics and warriors, would have visited each successive region, living off the rendered tithes.[284] In time however, the ecclesiastical endowments on Mann, commenced by Óláfr and further developed by his successors, would have reduced the need for such peripatetic diocesan bishops. As the kings of the Isles became more identified with their seat on Mann, so too were the bishops of the Isles, which may have resulted in the alienation of outlying areas.[285]

The now-ruinous ecclesiastical site of Cille Donnain, near on South Uist, could well have been a bishop's seat[286] and twelfth-century power-centre in the Isles.[287] Its precise place in the organisation of the Isles is uncertain. Certainly, Lǫgmaðr is associated with the Uists by a particular verse of poetry, attributed to the contemporary skald Gísl Illugason, preserved by the early thirteenth-century Morkinskinna.[288] This contemporary composition could be evidence of a connection between him, or an associated bishop, with the Uist chain of islands. It is possible that, at a later date, the Cille Donnain site could have formed a residence for the peripatetic diocesan bishops of the Isles during their periodic visitations in the Uists.[289]

Death[]

Refer to caption
The name of Rǫgnvaldr Haraldsson, Óláfr's kin-slaying assassin, as it appears on folio 36r of British Library Cotton Julius A VII: "Regnaldus".[290]

The year 1153 was a watershed in the history of the Kingdom of the Isles. Not only did David I die late in May,[291] but Óláfr himself was assassinated about a month later on 29 June, whilst Guðrøðr was still absent in Norway.[292] According to the Chronicle of Mann, Óláfr had been confronted by three Dublin-based nephews—the Haraldssonar—the sons of his exiled brother, Haraldr. After hearing the demands of these men—that half of the kingdom should be handed over to them—a formal council was convened in which one of the Haraldssonar—a man named Rǫgnvaldr—approached Óláfr, raised his axe as if to salute the king, and decapitated him in a single stroke. In the resulting aftermath, the chronicle relates that the Haraldssonar partitioned the island amongst themselves.[293][note 26] Whether the men attained any form of authority in the rest of the Isles is unknown.[296] Once in control of Mann, the chronicle reveals that the men fortified themselves against forces loyal to Guðrøðr, the kingdom's legitimate heir, by launching a preemptive strike against his maternal grandfather, Fergus.[297] Although the invasion of Galloway was repulsed with heavy casualties, once the Haraldssonar returned to Mann the chronicle records that they slaughtered and expelled all resident Gallovidians that they could find.[298] This ruthless reaction evidently reveals an attempt to uproot local factions adhering to Guðrøðr and his mother.[299]

Photograph of an ivory gaming piece depicting an armed warrior
A rook gaming piece of the so-called Lewis chessmen.[300] The Scandinavian connections of leading members of the Isles may have been reflected in their military armament, and could have resembled that depicted upon such gaming pieces.[301]

Within months of his father's assassination, Guðrøðr executed his vengeance. According to the chronicle, he journeyed from Norway to Orkney, enstrengthened by Norwegian military support, and was unanimously acclaimed as king by the leading Islesmen. He is then stated to have continued on to Mann where he overcame his three kin-slaying cousins, putting one to death whilst blinding the other two, and successfully secured the kingship for himself.[302] Guðrøðr's reliance upon Norwegian assistance, instead of support from his maternal-grandfather, could suggest that the attack upon Galloway was more successful than the compiler of the chronicle cared to admit.[299] Additionally, the account of incessant inter-dynastic strife amongst the ruling family of Galloway, recorded in the twelfth-century Vita Ailredi, suggests that Fergus may have struggled to maintain control of his lordship by the mid 1150s, and may also explain his failure to come to Guðrøðr's aid following Óláfr's death.[303]

The fact that Óláfr sent Guðrøðr to Norway in 1152 could suggest there had been anxiety over the succession of the Kingdom of the Isles, and that Guðrøðr rendered homage to Ingi Haraldsson, King of Norway in an effort secure assistance in safeguarding the kingship.[304] The chronicle's account of Guðrøðr's return from Norway notes that he arrived with a fleet of five ships, which could indicate that overseas support was indeed obtained.[305] The earlier episode of conflict between Óláfr's elder brothers, his own slaying at the hands of his nephews, and the later internecine struggles endured by his descendants, reveal that competition for the kingship of the Isles was incredibly competitive and exceptionally violent.[306] The turn to Ingi occurred at about the same time that Norwegian encroachment superseded roughly thirty years of Scottish influence in Orkney and Caithness,[307] and could be evidence of a perceived wane in Scottish royal authority in the first years of the 1150s. In November 1153, following the death of David I, Somairle seized the initiative and rose in revolt against the recently inaugurated Malcolm IV, King of Scotland. The dynastic challenges faced by Malcolm, and the ebb of Scottish influence in the Isles, may partly account for Guðrøðr's success in consolidating control of the kingdom, and may be perceptible in the seemingly more aggressive policy he pursued as king in comparison to his father.[280]

Photograph of a stone chapel
St Oran's Chapel, the oldest intact building on Iona, may have been built by Óláfr, his family, Somairle mac Gilla Brigte, or the latter's family.

Through Guðrøðr, Óláfr was the patrilineal-ancestor of later rulers of the Crovan dynasty, a kindred whose tenure of power in the Isles lasted until the second half of the thirteenth century. Through Ragnhildr, Óláfr was an important ancestor of the rulers of Clann Somairle, the descendants of Ragnhildr's husband Somairle.[28] Whilst the union certainly testifies to Somairle's esteemed status,[308] the key to his successful career may well have been the marriage itself.[309] In fact, the early rulers of Clann Somairle appear to have owed their claim to the kingship of the Isles by right of their genealogical link to Óláfr through Ragnhildr.[310]

Although the burial place of Óláfr is unrecorded and unknown, by the second quarter of the thirteenth century Rushen Abbey appears to have filled the role of royal mausoleum for the Crovan dynasty.[311] Guðrøðr was himself buried on Iona,[312] an island upon which the oldest intact building is St Oran's Chapel.[313] Certain Irish influences in this building's architecture indicate that it dates to about the mid twelfth century.[314] The chapel could well have been erected by Óláfr or Guðrøðr.[315][note 27] Certainly, their family's remarkable ecclesiastical activities during this period suggest that patronage of Iona is probable.[317]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Since the 1990s, academics have accorded Óláfr various personal names in English secondary sources: Amhlaibh,[2] Amhlaoibh,[3] Amlaíb,[4] Amlaim,[5] Olaf,[6] Óláf,[7] Olafr,[8] Ólafr,[9] Óláfr,[10] and Olav.[11] Likewise, academics have accorded Óláfr various patronyms in English secondary sources: Amhlaíbh Derg mac Gofhraidh,[12] Amlaíb mac Gofraid Méránaich,[13] Amlaíb mac Gofraid,[14] Olaf Godredsson,[15] Olaf Gudrodson,[16] Óláf Guðrøðsson,[17] Óláfr bitlingr Guðrøðsson,[18] Olafr Godredsson,[8] Óláfr Godredsson,[19] Óláfr Gothfrithsson,[20] Óláfr Guðrǫðarson,[21] Óláfr Guðröðarson,[22] Ólafr Guðrøðarson,[23] Óláfr Guðrøðarson,[24] Óláfr Guðrøðarsson,[25] Óláfr Guðrøðson,[26] Óláfr Guthfrithsson.[13] and Olav Gudrødsson Bitling.[11] Similarly, academics had accorded Óláfr various epithets in English secondary sources: Amhlaíbh Derg mac Gofhraidh,[12] Amlaíb 'the Red',[27] Amlaíb Derg,[28] Olaf Bitling,[29] Olaf Kleining,[30] Olaf the Diminutive,[31] Olaf the Red,[32] Olaf "the Red",[33] Olaf Titbit,[13] Óláfr Bitling,[13] Óláfr bitlingr Guðrøðsson,[18] Óláfr Bitlingr,[34] Óláfr klíningr Guðrøðarson,[35] Ólafr Suðreyjakonungr,[36] Óláfr Titbit,[37] and Olav Gudrødsson Bitling.[11] Óláfr is accorded several epithets in important mediaeval primary sources. The thirteenth-century Orkneyinga saga accords him the Old Norse byname bitlingr, which can translate to "bit", "the diminutive", "little-bit", "morsel", "tit-bit".[38] The Old Norse byname klíningr, which can translate to "Buttered Cake", "buttered bread", is accorded to Óláfr by within the thirteenth-century saga-compilation Heimskringla.[39] If these two epithets refer to Óláfr's stature, in the sense of "the small one" or "the little one", it is possible that they either refer in a literal sense to the small stature, or in an ironical sense to great height.[40] Another epithet, "the Red", is accorded to Óláfr by the seventeenth-century Sleat History.[41] This name contrasts "the black", the translation of an epithet accorded to his like-named grandson, Óláfr Guðrøðarson, King of the Isles.[42]
  2. ^ The illustration depicts Magnús' troops setting forth from their ships at sunrise.[70]
  3. ^ According to Magnúss saga berfœtts, Magnús' epithets berfœttr ("barefoot") and berbeinn ("bare-legged") refer to the clothing that he and his men adopted from the natives during their time spent west overseas (in Vestrlǫnd, the "Western Lands"). Specifically, the saga states that they went bare-legged in the streets, and wore short tunics and overcoats. This source also accords Magnús two other epithets: hávi ("the tall"), and Styrjaldar- ("Warfare", or "Age of Unrest" in reference to war).[75]
  4. ^ The portrait of David I is depicted by an illuminated twelfth-century charter of his son, Malcolm IV, King of Scotland.[76] The portraits of Henry I and Stephen are depicted upon folio 8v of the thirteenth-century British Library Royal 14 C VII (Historia Anglorum).[77]
  5. ^ Sigurðr's Old Norse epithet Jórsalafari ("Jerusalem-farer") refers to this crusade. According to within Heimskringla, Sigurðr assisted Baldwin I, King of Jerusalem in the Siege of Sidon.[91] If Lǫgmaðr participated in the First Crusade, he may have perished on campaign in Syria and Anatolia.[92]
  6. ^ Several sons of prominent men are known to have been raised at Henry I's court. One was Brian fitz Count, illegitimate son of Alan IV, Duke of Brittany. Another was Raymond, son of the Count of Poitou.[95]
  7. ^ This character is accorded two names: various forms of Havelok and Cuaran. The first name is cognate to a Celtic form of the Old Norse personal name Óláfr, the second corresponds to the Gaelic epithet cúarán ("shoe", "sandal", possibly in reference to a boot).[99] Only one historical personage is known to have borne both names: Óláfr kváran, a dominant figure in northern Britain and the Irish Sea region.[100]
  8. ^ The chronicle erroneously dates Óláfr's death to 1142/1143.[114]
  9. ^ Gruffudd was born in Dublin, and seems to have sought military assistance from Muirchertach during his career.[120]
  10. ^ The thirteenth-century Chronica of Roger de Hoveden describes Fergus' son, Uhtred, as a kinsman of Henry II, King of England.[132] The date of the marriage between Fergus and Henry I's daughter can be estimated due to that fact that Uhtred witnessed a charter dating to about 1136. The fact that he appears as a witness suggests that he was at least fifteen years-old at the time.[133]
  11. ^ Henry II's mother was Matilda, daughter of Henry I.[135] Robert de Torigni's Chronica notes that Guðrøðr and Henry II were related by blood through Matilda, stating in Latin: "Est enim prædictus rex consanguineus regis Anglorum ex parte Matildis imperatricis matris suæ" ("For the aforesaid king is the cousin of the English king on the side of Matilda the empress, his mother").[134]
  12. ^ In 1098, during Magnús' conquest of the Isles, the chronicle reports that Magnús used Mann as a base from where he subdued the Gallovidians. The chronicle specifies that Magnús forced the Gallovidians to render a tribute of timber, which he then used to construct fortresses on Mann.[138]
  13. ^ In another passage, the chronicle states that Óláfr "over indulged in the domestic vice of kings", which likely refers to the concubines associated with Óláfr in the same source.[154]
  14. ^ During the twelfth century, the Church sought to emphasise the sanctity of marriage, and took steps to combat concubinage.[162] In the winter of 1176/1177, the chronicle reveals that Guðrøðr's marriage to Findguala Nic Lochlainn was formalised by a visiting papal legate.[163] This episode could be evidence that the papal representative sought to personally reinforce a stricter rule of marriage in the region on this occasion.[164]
  15. ^ The so-called chessmen consist of gaming pieces from at least four different sets.[168] They were likely crafted in Norway in the twelfth- and thirteenth centuries,[169] and were found in the early nineteenth century in Lewis.[170] Although the hoard itself appears to have been deposited on the island sometime in the early thirteenth century, some of the pieces may have originally arrived in the Isles as a result of Guðrøðr's journey to Norway in 1152, possibly in the form of a gift between kings, or as a gift from the Archbishop of Niðaróss to the Bishop of the Isles.[171] The pictured piece depicts a seated bishop, holding a crozier with two hands, and wearing a chasuble as an outer garment. The simple horned mitre worn by this particular piece may be evidence that it dates to the mid twelfth century, when horns began to be positioned on the front and back, as opposed to the sides of the headdress.[172]
  16. ^ The diocese is generally called Sodorensis in mediaeval sources.[179] This Latin term is derived from the Old Norse Suðreyjar,[180] and therefore means "of the Southern Isles", in reference to Mann and the Hebrides as opposed to the Northern Isles.[181]
  17. ^ The diocese did not include the peninsula of Kintyre.[184] According to saga-tradition, Magnús had his ship drawn across the peninsula's isthmus to demonstrate his right to the land.[185]
  18. ^ The 1153 bull of Pope Eugenius III to Furness makes note of Óláfr's gift of Manx lands to the abbey: "ex dono nobilis viri Olavi regis insularum".[193] Although the ruins of Rushen Abbey stand near Ballasalla today, there is evidence to suggest that the original site was located at Scarlett (near Castletown), until the abbey relocated to Douglas in 1192, and finally to its present location in about 1196.[190] Until its dissolution in the sixteenth century, Rushen Abbey was the principal monastic establishment on Mann.[194] The house may have turned Cistercian in about 1147.[195]
  19. ^ The Crovan dynasty's continuing contacts with England appear to have stemmed from Óláfr's English exile.[197]
  20. ^ Today Niðaróss is known as Trondheim.[236] Of the eleven dioceses, five were centred in Norway and six in colonies overseas (two in Iceland, one in Orkney, one in the Faroe Islands, one in Greenland, and one in the Isles).[234]
  21. ^ Evidence of local assembly sites within the kingdom may exist in the Hebridean placenames Tiongal (known in Scottish Gaelic as Cnoc an Tiongalairidh) in Lewis (grid reference NB1937),[243] and Tinwhil (perhaps grid reference NG415583) within the Hinnisdale area on Skye.[244] Like the Manx site, these four Hebridean placenames are derived in part from the Old Norse þing ("assembly").[245] Sites such as these, and others now lost, may have been established before the dominance of Manx-based kings and their national assembly site.[246]
  22. ^ There appears to have been no Manx coinage between the late eleventh and early fourteenth centuries.[253]
  23. ^ The evidence exists in originals, copies, and abstract versions of royal charters. The lone original charter dates to the reign of Óláfr's great-grandson, Magnús Óláfsson, King of Mann and the Isles.[260]
  24. ^ In the eighteenth-century Book of Clanranald, the term "Dane" loosely refers to a Scandinavian.[271]
  25. ^ Historia rerum Anglicarum states that Wimund attacked and attempted exacted tribute from a certain bishop. One possibility is that this ecclesiast was Gilla Aldan himself,[281] and that Wimund sought to extract a levy from Galloway that had recently terminated on account of Gilla Aldan's elevation.[282]
  26. ^ If the chronicle's chronology of Haraldr's mutilation is correct, it would mean that the Haraldssonar were at least in their fifties when they confronted their uncle,[294] a man who must have been at least in his late fifties.[295]
  27. ^ Other potential candidates include Somairle and Ragnall.[316]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 62–63; Cotton MS Julius A VII (n.d.).
  2. ^ Brown, M (2004).
  3. ^ Coira (2012).
  4. ^ Ní Mhaonaigh (2018); Wadden (2014); Smith; Taylor; Williams (2007); Woolf (2005); Woolf (2001); Duffy (1993); Holland (2000); Duffy (1992).
  5. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005).
  6. ^ McDonald, RA (2019); Tinmouth (2018); Crawford, BE (2014); Sigurðsson; Bolton (2014); Wadden (2014); Wolf (2014); Downham 2013; Macniven (2013); Thomas (2010); Davey, PJ (2008); Green, J (2007); McDonald, RA (2007b); Smith; Taylor; Williams (2007); Davey, PJ (2006b); Davey, PJ (2006c); Green, JA (2006); Macniven (2006); Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005); Hudson (2005); Raven (2005); Bridgland (2004); Brown, M (2004); Oram, RD (2004); Woolf (2004); Woolf (2003); Beuermann (2002); Davey, P (2002); Duffy (2002a); Jennings (2001); McDonald, RA (2000); Sellar (2000); Sellar (1997–1998); McDonald, RA (1997); Scott (1997); McDonald, A (1995); Watt (1994); Oram, RD (1993); Fleming; Woolf (1992); Oram, RD (1988); Power (1986); Macquarrie, AD (1982).
  7. ^ Duffy (2004); Williams, DGE (1997).
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Lowe (1988).
  9. ^ Brown, DJF (2015); Woolf (2007); Davey, PJ (2006a).
  10. ^ McDonald, RA (2016); Finlay; Faulkes (2015); Beuermann (2014); Sigurðsson; Bolton (2014); MacDonald (2013); Beuermann (2012); McDonald, RA (2012); Oram, RD (2011); Beuermann (2008); Smith; Taylor; Williams (2007); McDonald, RA (2007a); McDonald, RA (2007b); Williams, G (2007); Duffy (2006); Macniven (2006); Pollock (2005); Power (2005); Oram, R (2004); Oram, RD (2000).
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b c Rekdal (2003–2004).
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b McLeod (2002).
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Smith; Taylor; Williams (2007).
  14. ^ Wadden (2014).
  15. ^ McDonald, RA (2019); Wadden (2014); Thomas (2010); Hudson (2005); Oram, RD (2004); Beuermann (2002); Jennings (2001); Oram, RD (1993); Oram, RD (1988); Power (1986).
  16. ^ Crawford, BE (2014).
  17. ^ Williams, DGE (1997).
  18. ^ Jump up to: a b Macniven (2006).
  19. ^ Pollock (2005).
  20. ^ Oram, RD (2000).
  21. ^ Beuermann (2012).
  22. ^ Beuermann (2014); Sigurðsson; Bolton (2014).
  23. ^ Brown, DJF (2015).
  24. ^ McDonald, RA (2016); McDonald, RA (2012); McDonald, RA (2007b); Duffy (2004).
  25. ^ McDonald, RA (2007a).
  26. ^ Oram, RD (2011).
  27. ^ Jump up to: a b c Woolf (2001).
  28. ^ Jump up to: a b Woolf (2005).
  29. ^ Macniven (2006); Sellar (2000).
  30. ^ Fleming; Woolf (1992).
  31. ^ Macniven (2013).
  32. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b); Barrow (2006); Raven (2005); Brown, M (2004); Woolf (2003); Sellar (2000); Sellar (1997–1998).
  33. ^ Sellar (1997–1998).
  34. ^ Duffy (2004).
  35. ^ Finlay; Faulkes (2015).
  36. ^ Woolf (2007).
  37. ^ Williams, G (2007).
  38. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 65, 65 n. 41; Macniven (2006) p. 236; Sellar (2000) p. 191, 191 n. 21; Williams, DGE (1997) p. 80 n. 93; Zoëga (1967) p. 53; Vigfusson (1887) pp. 210 ch. 110, 422; Cleasby; Vigfusson (1874) p. 64; Munch; Goss (1874a) p. 167, 167 n. b; Anderson; Hjaltalin; Goudie (1873) p. 181 ch. 104.
  39. ^ Finlay; Faulkes (2015) p. 229 ch. 17; Hollander (2011) p. 784 ch. 17; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 65, 65 n. 41; Sellar (2000) p. 191, 191 n. 21; Zoëga (1967) p. 242; Anderson (1922) p. 248, 248 n. 7; Jónsson (1911) p. 609 ch. 17; Storm (1899) p. 629 ch. 17; Cleasby; Vigfusson (1874) p. 343; Munch; Goss (1874a) p. 167, 167 n. b; Unger (1868) p. 772 ch. 17; Laing (1844) p. 293 ch. 17.
  40. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 65 n. 41; Sellar (2000) p. 191 n. 21.
  41. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 65, 65 n. 41; Sellar (2000) p. 191; Macphail (1914) pp. 11, 13.
  42. ^ Sellar (2000) p. 191.
  43. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 27 tab. 1.
  44. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. ix tab. 1; Oram, RD (2011) p. xvi tab. 5; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 27 tab. 1; Power (2005) p. 34 tab.; Brown, M (2004) p. 77 tab. 4.1; Sellar (2000) p. 192 tab. i; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 259 tab; Anderson (1922) p. 467 tab.
  45. ^ McDonald, RA (2012) p. 150.
  46. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. ix tab. 1; Oram, RD (2011) p. xvi tab. 5; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 27 tab. 1; Power (2005) p. 34 tab.; Sellar (2000) p. 192 tab. i; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 259 tab.
  47. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. ix tab. 1; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 27 tab. 1; Power (2005) p. 34 tab.
  48. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 172; Duffy (2004); Duffy (1992) p. 106.
  49. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 234; Hudson (2005) p. 178; Duffy (2004); Oram, RD (2000) p. 19; Duffy (1992) p. 107.
  50. ^ Duffy (2006) pp. 63–64; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 235; Duffy (2004); Duffy (1992) pp. 107–108.
  51. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 47–48; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 235; Duffy (1992) p. 108.
  52. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 23; Oram, RD (2011) p. 48; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 235; Oram, RD (2000) p. 20; Candon (1988) p. 404; Anderson (1922) p. 98; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55.
  53. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. 23, 64–65; Parsons (2019) p. 277; Oram, RD (2011) p. 48; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 84, 96; Duffy (2006) pp. 63, 65; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 235; Hudson (2005) p. 198; Power (2005) p. 11; Beuermann (2002) pp. 421–423; Oram, RD (2000) pp. 21, 58; Gade (1994) p. 199; Power (1986) p. 115; Macquarrie, AD (1982) p. 56; Anderson (1922) p. 98; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55.
  54. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 48; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 235–236; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21.
  55. ^ Duffy (2006) p. 63; Duffy (1992) p. 109 n. 76; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55; Cotton MS Julius A VII (n.d.).
  56. ^ Jump up to: a b Ní Mhaonaigh (2018) p. 146, 146 n. 83; Wolf (2014) pp. 71–72; Oram, RD (2011) p. 48; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 168; Duffy (2006) pp. 63–64; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 235–236; Duffy (2002a) p. 57; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21; Ní Mhaonaigh (1995) p. 375; Duffy (1992) pp. 108–109; Anderson (1922) pp. 100–101; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55.
  57. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 235–236; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21.
  58. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 236; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21; Duffy (1992) p. 109.
  59. ^ Annals of the Four Masters (2013a) § 1096.8; Annals of the Four Masters (2013b) § 1096.8; Ó Corráin (2010) p. 225; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 65 n. 37; Candon (2006) p. 116; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 236; Power (2005) pp. 11–12; Duffy (2002a) p. 57; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21; Duffy (1992) p. 109; Anderson (1922) p. 99.
  60. ^ Candon (2006) p. 116; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 236; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21.
  61. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 236; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21.
  62. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 236; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21; Anderson (1922) pp. 101–102; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 56–57.
  63. ^ The Annals of Ulster (2012) § 1103.6; The Annals of Ulster (2008) § 1103.6; Bodleian Library MS. Rawl. B. 489 (2008).
  64. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 48; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 236–237; Oram, RD (2000) p. 21; Power (1986) pp. 115–116.
  65. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 48–49; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 237.
  66. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 49; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 237; Power (2005) p. 12.
  67. ^ Finlay; Faulkes (2015) pp. 135–136 ch. 10; Hollander (2011) pp. 676–677 ch. 10; Oram, RD (2011) p. 50; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 237; Duffy (2002a) p. 57, 57 n. 16; Oram, RD (2000) p. 42; Duffy (1992) p. 110, 110 n. 82; Anderson (1922) pp. 110–111; Jónsson (1911) p. 524 ch. 10; Storm (1899) pp. 538–539 ch. 10; Unger (1868) pp. 647–648 ch. 11; Laing (1844) pp. 131–133 ch. 11.
  68. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 49; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 237; Duffy (1992) p. 110, 110 n. 81.
  69. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 49, 51; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 237–238.
  70. ^ Jump up to: a b Hollander (2011) p. 684 ch. 23; Storm (1899) p. 544.
  71. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 51; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 239.
  72. ^ Ní Mhaonaigh (2018) pp. 146–147; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 239–240; Bracken (2004); Duffy (2002a) pp. 58–59; Holland (2000) pp. 129–130, 130 n. 86; Oram, RD (2000) p. 43; Duffy (1997) p. 43; Ní Mhaonaigh (1995) p. 375, 375 n. 71; Duffy (1993) pp. 37–38; Duffy (1992) pp. 110–112; Candon (1988) pp. 406–407; Power (1986) pp. 125–126.
  73. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 239–240.
  74. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 51; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 240; Oram, RD (2000) p. 44.
  75. ^ Finlay; Faulkes (2015) p. 139 ch. 16; Peterson (2012) p. 44; Hollander (2011) p. 681 ch. 16; Jónsson (1911) p. 528 ch. 16; Storm (1899) p. 542 ch. 16; Unger (1868) p. 654 ch. 18; Laing (1844) p. 139 ch. 18.
  76. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 110 fig. 3.1.
  77. ^ Royal MS 14 C VII (n.d.) p. 110 fig. 3.1.
  78. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 23; Parsons (2019) p. 277, 277 n. 26; McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; Beuermann (2014) p. 85; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 84; Duffy (2006) p. 63; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 235; Hudson (2005) p. 198; Oram, RD (2000) pp. 21, 58; Candon (1988) p. 404; Power (1986) p. 115; Macquarrie, AD (1982) pp. 19, 56–57; McRoberts (1969) p. 85; Anderson (1922) p. 98; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55.
  79. ^ Parsons (2019) pp. 277–278; Casey (2014) pp. 130–132; Hudson (2005) p. 198; Kostick (2003); Anderson (1922) p. 98; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55.
  80. ^ Parsons (2019) p. 278; Kostick (2003).
  81. ^ Jónsson (1916) p. 118; AM 47 Fol (n.d.).
  82. ^ Dumville (2018) p. 113; McDonald, RA (2012) p. 152; Williams, G (2007) pp. 130–132 n. 8.
  83. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; Oram, RD (2011) p. 49 n. 40; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 237; Kostick (2003); Riley-Smith (2002) p. 214; Runciman (1999) p. 47; Macquarrie, A (1982); Macquarrie, AD (1982) pp. 19, 56–59; McRoberts (1969) p. 85.
  84. ^ Riley-Smith (1999) pp. 1–2.
  85. ^ Macquarrie, AD (1982) pp. 56–59.
  86. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 49 n. 40; Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) p. 237.
  87. ^ Kostick (2003).
  88. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 23; Parsons (2019) p. 278; Casey (2014) p. 132; Hudson (2005) pp. 198–199.
  89. ^ Doxey (1996).
  90. ^ Hudson (2005) pp. 198–199.
  91. ^ Finlay; Faulkes (2015) pp. 152–153 ch. 11; Hollander (2011) pp. 696–697 ch. 11; Jesch (2005) pp. 132–133; Jónsson (1911) pp. 538–539 ch. 11; Storm (1899) pp. 552–553 ch. 11; Unger (1868) pp. 667–668 ch. 11; Laing (1844) pp. 156–158 ch. 11.
  92. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 49 n. 40.
  93. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) pp. 340–341; Downham (2013) p. 171; McDonald, RA (2007a) p. 74 n. 37; Green, JA (2006) p. 288; Beuermann (2002) p. 425; Holland (2000) p. 131; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 218; Anderson (1922) p. 134; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  94. ^ McDonald, RA (2007a) p. 65.
  95. ^ Green, JA (2006) p. 288; Davis (1910) pp. 302–303.
  96. ^ Skeat (1902) pp. fpc, 24.
  97. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 83 fig. 3; Duffy (2004); Oram, RD (2000) p. 19.
  98. ^ Parker (2016) p. 428 n. 2; McGuigan (2015) p. 24; Hudson (2005) pp. 33, 210; Levy (2004) p. 284; Ege (2000) pp. 192–193; Lambdin (2000).
  99. ^ Hines (2014) pp. 203–205; Hudson (2005) pp. 33, 36–37; Kleinman (2003) pp. 246, 246–247 n. 4; Ege (2000) pp. 192–193.
  100. ^ Hudson (2005) pp. 33, 36–37.
  101. ^ Hudson (2005) pp. 33, 210; Kleinman (2003) p. 245; Ege (2000) p. 192.
  102. ^ Hudson (2005) pp. 203–204.
  103. ^ The Annals of Tigernach (2010) § 1088.3; Annals of Tigernach (2005) § 1088.3; Bodleian Library MS. Rawl. B. 488 (n.d.).
  104. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 59; Anderson (1908) p. 155 n. 1; Arnold (1885) p. 275 ch. 210; Stevenson (1855) p. 611.
  105. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 59; Duffy (1992) p. 115.
  106. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 11.
  107. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 11; Anderson (1922) p. 137; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  108. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. 11, 65; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 85; Duffy (2006) p. 64 n. 73; Duffy (2002a) p. 60; Oram, RD (2000) p. 59; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 37; Power (1986) pp. 115–116; Anderson (1922) p. 134; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  109. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 11; Anderson (1922) pp. 137 n. 1, 225; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65.
  110. ^ Wadden (2014) p. 31; Oram, RD (2011) p. 59; Oram, RD (2000) p. 59; Duffy (1992) p. 126; Anderson (1922) p. 134; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  111. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. 11, 65; McDonald, RA (2012) p. 150; McDonald, RA (2007a) pp. 51, 74 n. 37; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 27 tab. 1, 85, 65, 117–118, 130, 168, 194; Davey, PJ (2006a); Davey, PJ (2006b); Duffy (2006) pp. 53, 64; Hudson (2005) p. 202; Woolf (2004) p. 103; Woolf (2003) p. 173; Oram, RD (2000) p. 59; Anderson (1922) p. 134; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  112. ^ Byrne (2008) p. 164; Woolf (2004) p. 103; Woolf (2001); McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175 n. 52.
  113. ^ Pollock (2005) p. 15 n. 72; McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175 n. 52; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 37.
  114. ^ Anderson (1922) p. 137 n. 1, 225; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65.
  115. ^ Duffy (2002a) p. 60.
  116. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 5.
  117. ^ Duffy (2006) p. 64; Duffy (2002a) p. 60; Oram, RD (2000) p. 59; Duffy (1992) p. 115.
  118. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 59; Pollock (2005) p. 15 n. 72; Duffy (2002a) p. 60; Oram, RD (2000) p. 59; Duffy (1992) p. 115.
  119. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 59–60.
  120. ^ Pryce (2004).
  121. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (2000) p. 59.
  122. ^ Holland (2000) p. 131; Giles (1847) p. 443 bk. 5; Hardy (1840) p. 638 bk. 5 ch. 409.
  123. ^ Pollock (2005) p. 15 n. 72; Duffy (2002a) p. 60; Duffy (1992) p. 115.
  124. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. xv tab. 4, xvi tab. 5; xvii tab. 6; Williams, G (2007) pp. 131 ilus. 11, 141 ilus. 14; Sellar (2000) p. 192 tab. i.
  125. ^ Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61; Cotton MS Julius A VII (n.d.).
  126. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 60; McDonald, RA (2016) pp. 339, 342; Wadden (2014) pp. 31–32; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 75, 154; Russell; McClure; Rollason (2007) p. 35; Williams, G (2007) p. 130 n. 7; McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175; Sellar (2000) pp. 197–198; Oram, RD (1988) pp. 34, 79; Anderson (1922) p. 137; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  127. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (1988) p. 79.
  128. ^ Oram, R (2004) p. 119; Oram, RD (1993) p. 116; Oram, RD (1988) p. 79; Anderson (1922) p. 226 n. 2.
  129. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; Wadden (2014) pp. 31–32; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 154; McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175; Anderson (1922) p. 137; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  130. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 85; Oram, RD (1993) p. 116.
  131. ^ Oram, RD (1988) pp. 71–72, 79.
  132. ^ Barrow (2005) pp. 430–431 n. 28; Oram, RD (2000) p. 60; Oram, RD (1988) pp. 71, 99; Anderson (1908) p. 258; Stubbs (1869) p. 105; Stubbs (1867) p. 80; Riley (1853) p. 423.
  133. ^ Oram, RD (1993) p. 116; Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis (1843) p. 9 § 3; Document 1/4/29 (n.d.).
  134. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (2000) p. 60; Oram, RD (1993) p. 116; Oram, RD (1988) pp. 72, 99; Lawrie (1910) p. 115; Anderson (1908) p. 245; Howlett (1889) pp. 228–229.
  135. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. xiii tab. 2.
  136. ^ Oram, RD (1993) p. 116; Oram, RD (1988) p. 79.
  137. ^ Oram, RD (1993) p. 116; Oram, RD (1988) p. 80.
  138. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (2011) p. 49; Oram, RD (1993) p. 116; Duffy (1992) p. 110, 110 n. 81; Oram, RD (1988) pp. 10, 78, 80; Anderson (1922) p. 103; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 58–59.
  139. ^ Oram, RD (1988) p. 80.
  140. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) p. 157 fig. 2a, 163 fig. 8d, 187 fig. 14.
  141. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 163.
  142. ^ Tinmouth (2018) p. 47; Oram, RD (2000) p. 84 n. 98.
  143. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 88; Oram, R (2004) p. 118; Oram, RD (2000) pp. 71, 84 n. 98.
  144. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 88–89; Oram, R (2004) pp. 114–118.
  145. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 88–89; Oram, R (2004) pp. 118–119.
  146. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 88; Oram, R (2004) p. 118; McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175 n. 55; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 45; Anderson (1922) p. 255 n. 1.
  147. ^ McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175 n. 55; McDonald, A (1995) p. 206; Anderson (1922) p. 255 n. 1; Vigfusson (1887) p. 210 ch. 110; Flateyjarbok (1862) p. 508 ch. 439; Anderson; Hjaltalin; Goudie (1873) p. 181 ch. 104.
  148. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 88–89.
  149. ^ Oram, R (2004) p. 119.
  150. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 88–89; Oram, R (2004) p. 119.
  151. ^ Oram, R (2004) pp. 118–119; Oram, RD (2004).
  152. ^ Jónsson (1916) p. 130 ch. 1; AM 47 Fol (n.d.).
  153. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. 60, 62; McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; Wadden (2014) pp. 31–32; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 75; Williams, G (2007) pp. 130 n. 7, 147; Beuermann (2002) p. 423; McDonald, RA (2000) p. 175, 175 n. 55; Sellar (2000) pp. 197–198; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 45; Anderson (1922) p. 137; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  154. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. 24, 62–63; McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 75, 118; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 45; Anderson (1922) p. 184; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 62–63.
  155. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 339; McDonald, RA (2007a) p. 71 n. 23; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 72, 75; Finlay (2004) p. 302; Anderson (1922) p. 139 n. 2; Jónsson (1903) pp. 391–392.
  156. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) p. 66.
  157. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) p. 66, 66 n. 7; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 72; Sellar (2000) pp. 196–198; Anderson (1922) p. 350 n. 2; Vigfusson (1887) pp. 82 ch. 56, 225; Anderson; Hjaltalin; Goudie (1873) pp. 69 ch. 45, 195 ch. 114
  158. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) p. 66 n. 7; Beuermann (2008); McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 72; Williams, G (2007) pp. 146–147, 147 n. 39; Sellar (2000) pp. 196–198; Anderson (1922) p. 350 n. 2; Vigfusson (1887) p. 225; Anderson; Hjaltalin; Goudie (1873) p. 195 ch. 114.
  159. ^ Williams, G (2007) pp. 147–148; Sellar (2000) p. 198.
  160. ^ Williams, G (2007) p. 130 n. 7.
  161. ^ Williams, G (2007) p. 130 n. 7; Anderson (1922) p. 139 n. 2; Vigfusson (1887) p. 82 ch. 56; Anderson; Hjaltalin; Goudie (1873) p. 69 ch. 45.
  162. ^ Oram, RD (1988) p. 100.
  163. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; Beuermann (2014) p. 93, 93 n. 45; Wadden (2014) pp. 32–33; Downham (2013) p. 172, 172 n. 86; Flanagan (2010) p. 195, 195 n. 123; Duffy (2007) p. 4; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 68, 71, 75, 171, 185; Oram, RD (2000) p. 109 n. 24; Watt (2000) p. 24; McDonald, RA (1997) pp. 215–216; Duffy (1993) p. 58; Duffy (1992) p. 127 n. 166; Flanagan (1989) p. 103; Power (1986) p. 130; Flanagan (1977) p. 59; Anderson, AO (1922) pp. 296–297; Munch; Goss (1874) pp. 76–77; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) p. 247.
  164. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; McDonald, RA (1997) pp. 215–216.
  165. ^ Oram, RD (1988) p. 79; Anderson (1922) p. 137 n. 2.
  166. ^ Duffy (1993) pp. 30, 107; Oram, RD (1988) p. 79; Anderson (1922) p. 137; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  167. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) pp. 157 fig. 2i, 188 fig. 15, 192 tab. 5.
  168. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) p. 198.
  169. ^ McDonald, RA (2012) pp. 168–169, 182 n. 175; Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) pp. 165, 197.
  170. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) p. 155.
  171. ^ McDonald, RA (2012) p. 182 n. 175; Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) p. 178.
  172. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson 2009 pp. 157 fig. 2i, 188 fig. 15, 192 tab. 5, 192–193, 197 tab. 8; Power (2005) p. 37 n. 37.
  173. ^ Jump up to: a b McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 65–66.
  174. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 194; Hudson (2005) p. 202.
  175. ^ Jump up to: a b McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 194.
  176. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 194; Davey, PJ (2006a); Davey, PJ (2006b); Hudson (2005) p. 202; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 218; McIntire (1943) p. 1.
  177. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. viii, 24; McDonald, RA (2016) p. 342; Beuermann (2014) p. 85; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 184; Lowe (1988) p. 33; Anderson (1922) p. 184; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 62–63.
  178. ^ Woolf (2003) pp. 171, 180.
  179. ^ Davey, PJ (2008) p. 1 n. 3; Davey, PJ (2006a); Davey, PJ (2006c).
  180. ^ Lowe (1988) p. 33.
  181. ^ Beuermann (2012) pp. 4–5; Davey, PJ (2008) p. 1 n. 3; Davey, PJ (2006a); Davey, PJ (2006c).
  182. ^ Woolf (2003) pp. 171–172.
  183. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 50; Power (2005) p. 25.
  184. ^ Power (2005) p. 25.
  185. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 50; Power (2005) p. 14.
  186. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 202; Woolf (2003).
  187. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 173; Beuermann (2002) pp. 426–427 n. 40; Watt (1994) pp. 110–111; Oliver (1861) p. 7.
  188. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 173.
  189. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 173; Watt (1994) pp. 110–111; Anderson (1922) p. 95 n. 1; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 114–115.
  190. ^ Jump up to: a b McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 199–200; Broderick (2002) pp. 165–166.
  191. ^ Flanagan (2010) p. 161; Green, J (2007) p. 48; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 194; Woolf (2003) p. 173; Beuermann (2002) p. 427 n. 41; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 217; McDonald, A (1995) p. 204; Watt (1994) p. 111; Duffy (1993) p. 57; Lowe (1988) p. 33; Anderson (1922) pp. 183–184; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 62–63; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) p. 229.
  192. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 66; Hudson (2005) p. 202.
  193. ^ Beuermann (2002) p. 427 n. 41; Oliver (1861) pp. 8–12.
  194. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 343.
  195. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 192; McDonald, RA (1997) p. 218.
  196. ^ Green, J (2007) p. 48.
  197. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) pp. 337–338.
  198. ^ Tinmouth (2018) pp. 49, 54.
  199. ^ Tinmouth (2018) p. 56; Crawford, DKE (2016) p. 107; McDonald, RA (2016) pp. 342–343; Beuermann (2014) p. 85; Oram, RD (2011) p. 103; Flanagan (2010) p. 161; Davey, PJ (2008) p. 1; Davey, PJ (2006c); McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 66, 66. n. 45; Hudson (2005) p. 202; Bridgland (2004) p. 86; Woolf (2003) p. 173; Beuermann (2002) p. 427, 427 n. 42; McDonald, RA (1997) pp. 207–208; Watt (1994) p. 111; Lowe (1988) pp. 33–34, 42; McIntire (1943) p. 2; Brownbill (1919) pp. 708–709 § 1; Oliver (1861) pp. 1–3; Beck (1844) p. 123; Document 1/13/1 (n.d.).
  200. ^ Davey, PJ (2008) p. 1.
  201. ^ Tinmouth (2018) p. 55.
  202. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 174; Beuermann (2002) p. 426; Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 347; Brownbill (1919) pp. 708–709 § 1; Oliver (1861) pp. 1–3; Beck (1844) p. 123; Document 1/13/1 (n.d.).
  203. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 174; Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 347.
  204. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 202; Woolf (2003) pp. 173, 180.
  205. ^ Anderson (1908) pp. 223; Howlett (1884) p. 73; Cotton MS Vespasian B VI (n.d.).
  206. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 345; Oram, RD (2011) p. 103; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 188, 194, 198; Woolf (2003) p. 173; Beuermann (2002) pp. 426–427, 426 n. 36, 427 n. 43; Raine (1894) pp. 58–59; McIntire (1943) pp. 3–4; Anderson (1908) p. 224 n. 1; Munch; Goss (1874b) pp. 269–271; Brownbill (1919) p. 709 § 2; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) pp. 218–219; Oliver (1861) pp. 4–6; Beck (1844) p. 123.
  207. ^ Jump up to: a b Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174.
  208. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 103–104; McDonald, A (2004); Oram, R (2004) p. 183; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174; Watt (1994) p. 115; Anderson (1922) p. 97 n. 1; Anderson (1908) pp. 223–224; Howlett (1884) p. 73.
  209. ^ Oram, R (2004) p. 183; Woolf (2003) p. 173; Watt (1994) p. 107; Raine (1886) p. 372; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) pp. 189–190; Diplomatarium Norvegicum (n.d.) vol. 19 § 21.
  210. ^ Thomas (2014) pp. 258–259; Oram, RD (2011) p. 103; Oram, R (2004) p. 183; Woolf (2003) p. 173; Watt (1994) p. 107; Raine (1886) p. 372; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) pp. 189–190; Diplomatarium Norvegicum (n.d.) vol. 19 § 21.
  211. ^ Thomas (2014) p. 259; Hudson (2005) p. 182; Oram, R (2004) p. 183.
  212. ^ Oram, R (2004) p. 183; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174.
  213. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 103; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 188; Oram, R (2004) p. 183; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174.
  214. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 103–104; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 188; McDonald, A (2004); Woolf (2004) pp. 103–104; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174.
  215. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 188–189; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174.
  216. ^ Beuermann (2014) p. 93 n. 43.
  217. ^ Watt (2003) p. 399 map 20.1; Woolf (2003) p. 177; Barrell (2002) p. xxiv map 3.
  218. ^ Watt (1994) p. 115, 115 n. 5; Anderson (1922) pp. 95–98 n. 1; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 114–115,
  219. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 189; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174; Beuermann (2002) p. 428, 428 n. 47; Watt (1994) p. 116, 116 n. 5; McIntire (1943) p. 5; Anderson (1908) p. 224 n. 1; Raine (1894) pp. 59–60; Munch; Goss (1874b) pp. 272–273; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) pp. 219–220; Brownbill (1919) pp. 709–710 § 3; Oliver (1861) pp. 49–51; Beck (1844) p. 169; Document 1/13/3 (n.d.).
  220. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 189; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174; Beuermann (2002) p. 428, 428 n. 47; Watt (1994) p. 116, 116 n. 5.
  221. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 189; Woolf (2003) pp. 173–174.
  222. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 174; Beuermann (2002) p. 428, 428 n. 47; Watt (1994) pp. 116–117; Howlett (1889) p. 167.
  223. ^ Watt (1994) pp. 116–117; Giles (1849) p. 506; Coxe (1841) p. 250.
  224. ^ Beuermann (2014) p. 93 n. 43; Woolf (2003) p. 174; Watt (1994) pp. 116–117; Anderson (1922) pp. 95–96 n. 1; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 114–115.
  225. ^ Beuermann (2012) pp. 4–5; Bridgland (2004) p. 86; Beuermann (2002) pp. 425–426.
  226. ^ Beuermann (2002) pp. 425–428.
  227. ^ Beuermann (2002) p. 428.
  228. ^ Beuermann (2002) pp. 428–429.
  229. ^ MacDonald (2013) p. 37.
  230. ^ Jónsson (1916) p. 201 ch. 16; AM 47 Fol (n.d.).
  231. ^ McDonald, RA (2012) p. 182 n. 175; Power (2005) p. 23; Beuermann (2002).
  232. ^ Power (2005) p. 23.
  233. ^ Ekrem; Mortensen; Fisher (2006) p. 163; Helle (2003) p. 376.
  234. ^ Jump up to: a b Ekrem; Mortensen; Fisher (2006) p. 167; Rekdal (2003–2004) p. 257; Helle (2003) p. 377; Orfield (2002) p. 135.
  235. ^ Ekrem; Mortensen; Fisher (2006) p. 167 n. 57; Power (2005) p. 25; Rekdal (2003–2004) p. 257; Woolf (2003) p. 174; Watt (2000) pp. 11–12; Haddan; Stubbs (1873) pp. 229–230; Diplomatarium Norvegicum (n.d.) vol. 8 § 1.
  236. ^ Helle (2003) p. 377.
  237. ^ Beuermann (2002) p. 432.
  238. ^ Ekrem; Mortensen; Fisher (2006) p. 165; Helle (2003) p. 377.
  239. ^ Davey, PJ (2006a); Davey, PJ (2006c).
  240. ^ Jump up to: a b Broderick (2003).
  241. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) pp. 74–75.
  242. ^ Insley; Wilson (2006).
  243. ^ O'Grady (2008) pp. 203, 599 tab 4.8; Insley; Wilson (2006); Broderick (2003).
  244. ^ O'Grady (2008) pp. 201–203, 597 tab. 4.8; Broderick (2003).
  245. ^ O'Grady (2008) pp. 56–61, 201–203, 597 tab. 4.8, 599 tab 4.8; Insley; Wilson (2006); Broderick (2003).
  246. ^ O'Grady (2008) p. 194.
  247. ^ Wolf (2014) pp. 80, 101; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 192, 221.
  248. ^ Williams, DGE (1997) p. 262.
  249. ^ Wolf (2014) pp. 80–81; Macniven (2013) p. 83; Macniven (2006) pp. 177–178, 236, 251, 267, 269; Davey, P (2002) p. 91; Williams, DGE (1997) pp. 54, 89.
  250. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) pp. 342–343; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 66, 186, 187–188; Power (2005) p. 25; Beuermann (2002) pp. 425–426; McDonald, RA (1997) pp. 208, 218.
  251. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 203.
  252. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 336; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 219; Hudson (2005) p. 203.
  253. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 336.
  254. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) p. 74; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 167–168.
  255. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 168; Anderson (1922) pp. 100–101; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 54–55.
  256. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 168; Anderson (1922) p. 101; Munch; Goss (1874) pp. 56–57.
  257. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) p. 74; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 168; Anderson (1922) p. 134; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  258. ^ Crawford, BE (2014) p. 74; Abrams (2007) p. 182; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 168; Anderson (1922) p. 226; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65.
  259. ^ Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 78–79; Cotton MS Julius A VII (n.d.).
  260. ^ Jump up to: a b McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 202.
  261. ^ McLeod (2002) p. 28 n. 11; Sellar (2000) pp. 191, 192 tab. i; Sellar (1997–1998).
  262. ^ Sellar (2000) p. 189; The Annals of Ulster (2012) § 989.4; Clancy (2008) p. 26; The Annals of Ulster (2008) § 989.4.
  263. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 165–166; Brownbill (1919) pp. 708–709 § 1; Oliver (1861) pp. 1–3; Beck (1844) p. 123; Document 1/13/1 (n.d.).
  264. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 165–166.
  265. ^ Beuermann (2008); McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 66.
  266. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) pp. 340–341; Anderson (1908) pp. 155–156; Migne (1890) p. 621.
  267. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 340; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 215, 216–217.
  268. ^ Flateyjarbok (1862) p. 508 ch. 439; GKS 1005 Fol (n.d.).
  269. ^ Woolf (2004); p. 103; Woolf (2001).
  270. ^ Jump up to: a b Raven (2005) p. 55; Woolf (2004) p. 103; Macphail (1914) pp. 6–8.
  271. ^ McDonald, RA (1997) p. 47 n. 22.
  272. ^ Oram, R (2004) pp. 114–118.
  273. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) p. 156 fig. 1g.
  274. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 202; Woolf (2003) p. 180; Woolf (2001).
  275. ^ Hudson (2005) pp. 129, 138.
  276. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 172.
  277. ^ Hudson (2005) p. 202; Woolf (2003) p. 180.
  278. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (2011) pp. 103–104, 113.
  279. ^ Beuermann (2014) p. 85; Wadden (2014) pp. 31–32; Oram, RD (2011) p. 113; McDonald, RA (1997) pp. 37, 54; Duffy (1993) p. 107; Anderson (1922) p. 137; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 60–61.
  280. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (2011) p. 113.
  281. ^ Oram, RD (2000) pp. 165–166; Scott (1997) p. 37; Anderson (1922) p. 97 n. 1; Anderson (1908) pp. 225–226; Howlett (1884) pp. 74–75.
  282. ^ Scott (1997) p. 37.
  283. ^ Jónsson (1916) p. 200 ch. 15; AM 47 Fol (n.d.).
  284. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) p. 176; Abrams (2007) p. 184; Woolf (2003) p. 180; Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 347.
  285. ^ Woolf (2003) p. 180; Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 347.
  286. ^ Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 329.
  287. ^ Rekdal (2003–2004) p. 268; Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 329.
  288. ^ Andersson; Gade (2012) p. 299 ch. 57; McDonald, RA (2012) p. 154; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 91–92, 92 n. 22; Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 348; Jónsson (1932) pp. 317–318; Vigfusson; Powell (1883) pp. 241–242; Unger (1867) p. 144; Gísl Magnkv 9II (n.d.).
  289. ^ Fleming; Woolf (1992) p. 348.
  290. ^ Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65; Cotton MS Julius A VII (n.d.).
  291. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 108.
  292. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 113; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 67; Duffy (2004).
  293. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) pp. 65, 74; Beuermann (2014) p. 85; Downham (2013) p. 171, 171 n. 84; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 67, 85, 92; Duffy (2006) p. 65; Beuermann (2002) p. 421; Duffy (2002b) p. 48; Sellar (2000) p. 191; Williams, DGE (1997) p. 259; Duffy (1993) pp. 41–42, 42 n. 59; Oram, RD (1988) pp. 80–81; Anderson (1922) p. 225; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 62–65.
  294. ^ Beuermann (2002) p. 423.
  295. ^ Beuermann (2002) p. 423 n. 26.
  296. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 74; McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 92.
  297. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 67; Duffy (1993) p. 42; Oram, RD (1988) p. 81; Anderson (1922) pp. 225–226; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65.
  298. ^ Clancy (2008) p. 36; Davey, P (2002) p. 95; Duffy (1993) p. 42; Oram, RD (1988) p. 81; Anderson (1922) pp. 225–226; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65.
  299. ^ Jump up to: a b Oram, RD (1988) p. 81.
  300. ^ Caldwell; Hall; Wilkinson (2009) pp. 161 fig. 6g, 185 fig. 12.
  301. ^ Strickland (2012) p. 113.
  302. ^ McDonald, RA (2019) p. 65; Crawford, BE (2014) p. 74; Downham (2013) p. 171; McDonald, RA (2012) p. 162; Oram, RD (2011) p. 113; Abrams (2007) p. 182; McDonald, RA (2007a) p. 66; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 67, 85; Duffy (2006) p. 65; Oram, RD (2000) pp. 69–70; Williams, DGE (1997) p. 259; Gade (1994) p. 199; Duffy (1993) p. 42; Oram, RD (1988) p. 81; Anderson (1922) p. 226; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–67.
  303. ^ Oram, RD (1988) pp. 81, 85–86; Powicke (1978) pp. 45–46.
  304. ^ Oram, RD (2011) p. 113; Beuermann (2002) pp. 421–422; Jennings (2001); Oram, RD (2000) p. 73; Williams, DGE (1997) p. 111; Power (1986) p. 131.
  305. ^ Williams, DGE (1997) p. 111; Anderson (1922) p. 226; Munch; Goss (1874a) pp. 64–65.
  306. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 86.
  307. ^ Oram, RD (2011) pp. 81–82, 113.
  308. ^ McDonald, RA (1997) p. 48.
  309. ^ McDonald, RA (2007b) p. 116; Woolf (2007) p. 165; Woolf (2005).
  310. ^ Beuermann (2012) p. 5; Beuermann (2010) p. 102; Williams, G (2007) p. 145; Woolf (2005); Brown, M (2004) p. 70; Rixson (2001) p. 85.
  311. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 336; Davey, PJ (2008) p. 22 n. 44; McDonald, RA (2007a) p. 49; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 82, 201.
  312. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 343; Beuermann (2014) p. 91; Power (2013) p. 66; McDonald, RA (2012) pp. 153, 155; McDonald, RA (2007b) pp. 70, 201; Power (2005) p. 28; Duffy (2004).
  313. ^ Ritchie (1997) p. 101; Power (2013) p. 65; McDonald, RA (2012) p. 156; Power (2005) p. 28.
  314. ^ Power (2013) p. 65; Power (2005) p. 28; Ritchie (1997) p. 101.
  315. ^ McDonald, RA (2012) p. 156; Power (2005) p. 28.
  316. ^ Power (2013) p. 66; McDonald, RA (2012) p. 156; Bridgland (2004) p. 89; Power (2005) p. 28; McDonald, RA (1997) pp. 62, 246; Ritchie (1997) pp. 100–101.
  317. ^ McDonald, RA (2016) p. 343; McDonald, RA (2012) pp. 155–156.

References[]

Primary sources[]

Secondary sources[]

  • Abrams, L (2007). "Conversion and the Church in the Hebrides in the Viking Age". In Smith, BB; Taylor, S; Williams, G (eds.). West Over Sea: Studies in Scandinavian Sea-Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 169–193. ISBN 978-90-04-15893-1. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Barrell, ADM (2002) [1995]. The Papacy, Scotland and Northern England, 1342–1378. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44182-X.
  • Barrow, GWS (2005) [1965]. Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-2022-2.
  • Barrow, GWS (2006). "Skye From Somerled to A.D. 1500" (PDF). In Kruse, A; Ross, A (eds.). Barra and Skye: Two Hebridean Perspectives. Edinburgh: The Scottish Society for Northern Studies. pp. 140–154. ISBN 0-9535226-3-6.
  • Beuermann, I (2002). "Metropolitan Ambitions and Politics: Kells-Mellifont and Man & the Isles". Peritia. 16: 419–434. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.497. eISSN 2034–6506 Check |eissn= value (help). ISSN 0332-1592.
  • Beuermann, I (2008). "Review of RA McDonald, Manx Kingship in its Irish Sea Setting, 1187–1229: King Rǫgnvaldr and the Crovan Dynasty". H-Net Reviews. H-Albion. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  • Beuermann, I (2010). "'Norgesveldet?' South of Cape Wrath? Political Views Facts, and Questions". In Imsen, S (ed.). The Norwegian Domination and the Norse World c. 1100–c. 1400. Trondheim Studies in History. Trondheim: Tapir Academic Press. pp. 99–123. ISBN 978-82-519-2563-1.
  • Beuermann, I (2012). The Norwegian Attack on Iona in 1209–10: The Last Viking Raid?. Iona Research Conference, April 10th to 12th 2012. pp. 1–10. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  • Beuermann, I (2014). "No Soil for Saints: Why was There No Native Royal Martyr in Man and the Isles". In Sigurðsson, JV; Bolton, T (eds.). Celtic-Norse Relationships in the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages, 800–1200. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 81–95. ISBN 978-90-04-25512-8. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Bracken, D (2004). "Ua Briain, Muirchertach [Murtagh O'Brien] (c.1050–1119)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/20464. Retrieved 5 July 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Bridgland, N (2004). "The Medieval Church in Argyll". In Omand, D (ed.). The Argyll Book. Edinburgh: Birlinn. pp. 85–93. ISBN 1-84158-253-0.
  • Broderick, G (2002). "Kirk Malew". Placenames of the Isle of Man. 6. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag. pp. 27–190. doi:10.1515/9783110942668. ISBN 3-484-40138-9.
  • Broderick, G (2003). "Tynwald: A Manx Cult-Site and Institution of Pre-Scandinavian Origin?". Studeyrys Manninagh. ISSN 1478-1409. Archived from the original on 7 February 2009.
  • Brown, DJF (2015). "Power and Patronage across the North Channel: Hugh de Lacy, St Andrews and the Anglo-Scottish Crisis of 1209". Scottish Historical Review. 94 (1): 1–23. doi:10.3366/shr.2015.0237. eISSN 1750-0222. ISSN 0036-9241.
  • Brown, M (2004). The Wars of Scotland, 1214–1371. The New Edinburgh History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-1238-6.
  • Byrne, FJ (2008) [2005]. "Ireland and Her Neighbours, c.1014–c.1072". In Ó Cróinín, D (ed.). Prehistoric and Early Ireland. New History of Ireland. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 862–898. ISBN 978-0-19-821737-4.
  • Caldwell, DH; Hall, MA; Wilkinson, CM (2009). "The Lewis Hoard of Gaming Pieces: A Re-examination of Their Context, Meanings, Discovery and Manufacture". Medieval Archaeology. 53 (1): 155–203. doi:10.1179/007660909X12457506806243. eISSN 1745-817X. ISSN 0076-6097. S2CID 154568763.
  • Candon, A (1988). "Muirchertach Ua Briain, Politics and Naval Activity in the Irish Sea, 1075 to 1119". In Mac Niocaill, G; Wallace, PF (eds.). Keimelia: Studies in Medieval Archaeology and History in Memory of Tom Delaney. Galway: Galway University Press. pp. 397–416.
  • Candon, A (2006). "Power, Politics and Polygamy: Women and Marriage in Late Pre-Norman Ireland". In Bracken, D; Ó Riain-Raedel, D (eds.). Ireland and Europe in the Twelfth Century: Reform and Renewal. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 106–127. ISBN 978-1-85182-848-7.
  • Casey, D (2014). "Irish Involvement in the First and Second Crusades? A Reconsideration of the Eleventh- and Twelfth-Century Evidence". Crusades. 13 (1): 119–142. ISSN 1476-5276.
  • Clancy, TO (2008). "The Gall-Ghàidheil and Galloway" (PDF). The Journal of Scottish Name Studies. 2: 19–51. ISSN 2054-9385.
  • Cleasby, C; Vigfusson, G (1874). An Icelandic-English Dictionary, Based on the MS. Collections of the Late Richard Cleasby. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OL 14014061M.
  • Coira, MP (2012). By Poetic Authority: The Rhetoric of Panegyric in Gaelic Poetry of Scotland to c. 1700. Edinburgh: Dunedin Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-78046-003-1.
  • Crawford, BE (2014). "The Kingdom of Man and the Earldom of Orkney—Some Comparisons". In Sigurðsson, JV; Bolton, T (eds.). Celtic-Norse Relationships in the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages, 800–1200. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 65–80. ISBN 978-90-04-25512-8. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Crawford, DKE (2016). "St Patrick and St Maughold: Saints' Dedications in the Isle of Man". E-Keltoi. 8: 97–158. ISSN 1540-4889.
  • Davey, P (2002). "At the Crossroads of Power and Cultural Influence: Manx Archaeology in the High Middle Ages" (PDF). In Davey, P; Finlayson, D; Thomlinson, P (eds.). Mannin Revisited: Twelve Essays on Manx Culture and Environment. Edinburgh: The Scottish Society for Northern Studies. pp. 81–102. ISBN 0-9535226-2-8.
  • Davey, PJ (2006a). "Christianity in the Celtic Countries [3] Isle of Man". In Koch, JT (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. 2. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. pp. 418–420. ISBN 1-85109-445-8.
  • Davey, PJ (2006b). "Kingdom of Man and the Isles". In Koch, JT (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. 2. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. pp. 1057–1058. ISBN 1-85109-445-8.
  • Davey, PJ (2006c). "Sodor and Man, The Diocese of". In Koch, JT (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. 4. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. pp. 1618–1619. ISBN 1-85109-445-8.
  • Davey, PJ (2008). "Eleven Years of Archaeological Research at Rushen Abbey, 1998 to 2008" (PDF). Monastic Research Bulletin. 14.
  • Downham, C (2013). "Living on the Edge: Scandinavian Dublin in the Twelfth Century". No Horns on Their Helmets? Essays on the Insular Viking-Age. Celtic, Anglo-Saxon, and Scandinavian Studies. Aberdeen: Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies and The Centre for Celtic Studies, University of Aberdeen. pp. 157–178. ISBN 978-0-9557720-1-6. ISSN 2051-6509.
  • Doxey, GB (1996). "Norwegian Crusaders and the Balearic Islands". Scandinavian Studies. 68 (2): 139–160. eISSN 2163–8195 Check |eissn= value (help). ISSN 0036-5637. JSTOR 40919854.
  • Duffy, S (1992). "Irishmen and Islesmen in the Kingdoms of Dublin and Man, 1052–1171". Ériu. 43: 93–133. eISSN 2009-0056. ISSN 0332-0758. JSTOR 30007421.
  • Duffy, S (1993). Ireland and the Irish Sea Region, 1014–1318 (PhD thesis). Trinity College, Dublin. hdl:2262/77137.
  • Duffy, S (1997). Ireland in the Middle Ages. British History in Perspective. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Macmillan Press. doi:10.1007/978-1-349-25171-1. ISBN 978-1-349-25171-1.
  • Duffy, S (2002a). "Emerging From the Mist: Ireland and Man in the Eleventh Century" (PDF). In Davey, P; Finlayson, D; Thomlinson, P (eds.). Mannin Revisited: Twelve Essays on Manx Culture and Environment. Edinburgh: The Scottish Society for Northern Studies. pp. 53–61. ISBN 0-9535226-2-8.
  • Duffy, S (2002b). "The Bruce Brothers and the Irish Sea World, 1306–29". In Duffy, S (ed.). Robert the Bruce's Irish Wars: The Invasions of Ireland 1306–1329. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. pp. 45–70. ISBN 0-7524-1974-9.
  • Duffy, S (2004). "Godred Crovan (d. 1095)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50613. Retrieved 5 July 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Duffy, S (2006). "The Royal Dynasties of Dublin and the Isles in the Eleventh Century". In Duffy, S (ed.). Medieval Dublin. 7. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 51–65. ISBN 1-85182-974-1.
  • Duffy, S (2007). "The Prehistory of the Galloglass". In Duffy, S (ed.). The World of the Galloglass: Kings, Warlords and Warriors in Ireland and Scotland, 1200–1600. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 1–23. ISBN 978-1-85182-946-0.
  • Dumville, DN (2018). "Origins of the Kingdom of the English". In Naismith, R; Woodman, DA (eds.). Writing, Kingship and Power in Anglo-Saxon England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 71–121. doi:10.1017/9781316676066.005. ISBN 978-1-107-16097-2.
  • Ege, U (2000). "The Fusion of Many Genres with Textual Parallels and Metaphorical Expressions in Havelok the Dane". Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi. 40 (3.4): 191–201. doi:10.1501/Dtcfder_0000000192. eISSN 2459-0150. hdl:20.500.12575/44387.
  • Ekrem, I; Mortensen, LB; Fisher, P, eds. (2006). Historia Norwegie. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press. doi:10.26530/OAPEN_342356. ISBN 87-635-0612-2.
  • Flanagan, MT (1977). "Hiberno-Papal Relations in the Late Twelfth Century". Archivium Hibernicum. 34: 55–70. doi:10.2307/25487421. ISSN 0044-8745. JSTOR 25487421.
  • Flanagan, MT (1989). Irish Society, Anglo-Norman Settlers, Angevin Kingship: Interactions in Ireland in the Late Twelfth Century. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822154-1.
  • Flanagan, MT (2010). The Transformation of the Irish Church in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries. Studies in Celtic History. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-597-4. ISSN 0261-9865.
  • Fleming, A; Woolf, A (1992). "Cille Donnain: A Late Norse Church in South Uist" (PDF). Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 122: 329–350. eISSN 2056-743X. ISSN 0081-1564.
  • Forte, A; Oram, RD; Pedersen, F (2005). Viking Empires. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82992-2.
  • Gade, KE (1994). "1236: Órækja Meiddr ok Heill Gerr" (PDF). In Tómasson, S (ed.). Samtíðarsögur: The Contemporary Sagas. Forprent. Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússona. pp. 194–207.
  • Green, J (2007). "King Henry I and Northern England". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 17: 35–55. doi:10.1017/S0080440107000527. eISSN 1474-0648. ISSN 0080-4401. JSTOR 25593870. S2CID 154315970.
  • Green, JA (2006). Henry I: King of England and Duke of Normandy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-59131-7.
  • Helle, K (2003). "The Norwegian Kingdom: Succession Disputes and Consolidation". In Helle, K (ed.). The Cambridge History of Scandinavia. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 369–391. ISBN 0-521-47299-7.
  • Hines, J (2014). "From *Anleifr to Havelok: The English and the Irish Sea". In Sigurðsson, JV; Bolton, T (eds.). Celtic-Norse Relationships in the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages, 800–1200. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 187–214. ISBN 978-90-04-25512-8. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Holland, M (2000). "Dublin and the Reform of the Irish Church in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries". Peritia. 14: 111–160. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.398. eISSN 2034–6506 Check |eissn= value (help). ISSN 0332-1592.
  • Hudson, BT (2005). Viking Pirates and Christian Princes: Dynasty, Religion, and Empire in the North Atlantic. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516237-0.
  • Insley, J; Wilson, D (2006). "Tynwald". Germanische Altertumskunde Online. De Gruyter. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  • Jennings, AP (2001). "Man, Kingdom of". In Lynch, M (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Scottish History. Oxford Companions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 405. ISBN 0-19-211696-7.
  • Jesch, J (2005). "Geography and Travel". In McTurk, R (ed.). A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature. Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. pp. 119–135. ISBN 0-631-23502-7.
  • Kleinman, S (2003). "The Legend of Havelok the Dane and the Historiography of East Anglia". Studies in Philology. 100 (3): 245–277. doi:10.1353/sip.2003.0012. hdl:10211.2/1624. S2CID 162192371.
  • Kostick, C (2003). "Ireland and the First Crusade". History Ireland. 11 (1): 12–13. ISSN 0791-8224. JSTOR 27724992.
  • Lambdin, RT (2000). "Havelok the Dane". In Lambdin, RT; Lambdin, LC (eds.). Encyclopedia of Medieval Literature. Milton Park, Abingdon: Routledge. pp. 245–255. ISBN 1-57958-054-8.
  • Levy, BJ (2004). "The Image of the Viking in Anglo-Norman Literature". In Adams, J; Holman, K (eds.). Scandinavia and Europe, 800–1350: Contact, Conflict, and Coexistence. Medieval Texts and Cultures of Northern Europe. 4. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers. pp. 269–288. doi:10.1484/M.TCNE-EB.3.4114. ISBN 2-503-51085-X.
  • Lowe, C (1988). Early Ecclesiastical Sites in the Northern Isles and Isle of Man: An Archaeological Field Survey (PhD thesis). 1. Durham University.
  • MacDonald, IG (2013). Clerics and Clansmen: The Diocese of Argyll between the Twelfth and Sixteenth Centuries. The Northern World Nw ; North Europe and the Baltic C. 400 - 1700 Ad ; Peoples, Economies and Cultures. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-18547-0. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Macniven, A (2006). The Norse in Islay: A Settlement Historical Case-Study for Medieval Scandinavian Activity in Western Maritime Scotland (PhD thesis). University of Edinburgh. hdl:1842/8973.
  • Macniven, A (2013). "'Borgs', Boats and the Beginnings of Islay's Medieval Parish Network" (PDF). Northern Studies. 45: 68–99. ISSN 0305-506X.
  • Macquarrie, A (1982). "Review of S Runciman, The First Crusade". Scottish Historical Review. 61 (2): 179–180. eISSN 1750-0222. ISSN 0036-9241. JSTOR 25529482.
  • Macquarrie, AD (1982). The Impact of the Crusading Movement in Scotland, 1095–c.1560 (PhD thesis). 1. University of Edinburgh. hdl:1842/6849.
  • McDonald, A (1995). "Scoto-Norse Kings and the Reformed Religious Orders: Patterns of Monastic Patronage in Twelfth-Century Galloway and Argyll". Albion. 27 (2): 187–219. doi:10.2307/4051525. ISSN 0095-1390. JSTOR 4051525.
  • McDonald, A (2004). "Wimund (fl. c.1130–c.1150)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50011. Retrieved 5 July 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • McDonald, RA (1997). The Kingdom of the Isles: Scotland's Western Seaboard, c. 1100–c. 1336. Scottish Historical Monographs. East Linton: Tuckwell Press. ISBN 978-1-898410-85-0.
  • McDonald, RA (2000). "Rebels Without a Cause? The Relations of Fergus of Galloway and Somerled of Argyll With the Scottish Kings, 1153–1164". In Cowan, E; McDonald, R (eds.). Alba: Celtic Scotland in the Middle Ages. East Linton: Tuckwell Press. pp. 166–186. ISBN 1-86232-151-5.
  • McDonald, RA (2007a). "Dealing Death From Man: Manx Sea Power in and around the Irish Sea, 1079–1265". In Duffy, S (ed.). The World of the Galloglass: Kings, Warlords and Warriors in Ireland and Scotland, 1200–1600. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 45–76. ISBN 978-1-85182-946-0.
  • McDonald, RA (2007b). Manx Kingship in its Irish Sea Setting, 1187–1229: King Rǫgnvaldr and the Crovan Dynasty. Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN 978-1-84682-047-2.
  • McDonald, RA (2012). "The Manx Sea Kings and the Western Oceans: The Late Norse Isle of Man in its North Atlantic Context, 1079–1265". In Hudson, B (ed.). Studies in the Medieval Atlantic. The New Middle Ages. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 143–184. doi:10.1057/9781137062390_6. ISBN 978-1-137-06239-0.
  • McDonald, RA (2016). "Sea Kings, Maritime Kingdoms and the Tides of Change: Man and the Isles and Medieval European Change, AD c1100–1265". In Barrett, JH; Gibbon, SJ (eds.). Maritime Societies of the Viking and Medieval World. The Society for Medieval Archaeology Monograph. Milton Park, Abingdon: Routledge. pp. 333–349. doi:10.4324/9781315630755. ISBN 978-1-315-63075-5. ISSN 0583-9106.
  • McDonald, RA (2019). Kings, Usurpers, and Concubines in the Chronicles of the Kings of Man and the Isles. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-22026-6. ISBN 978-3-030-22026-6.
  • McGuigan, N (2015). "Ælla and the Descendants of Ivar: Politics and Legend in the Viking Age". Northern History. 52 (1): 20–34. doi:10.1179/0078172X14Z.00000000075. eISSN 1745-8706. ISSN 0078-172X. S2CID 161252048.
  • McIntire, WT (1943). "A Note Upon the Connections of Furness Abbey With the Isle of Man". Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archæological Society. 43: 1–19. doi:10.5284/1032950.
  • McLeod, W (2002). "Rí Innsi Gall, Rí Fionnghall, Ceannas nan Gàidheal: Sovereignty and Rhetoric in the Late Medieval Hebrides". Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies. 43: 25–48. ISSN 1353-0089.
  • McRoberts, D (1969). "Scottish Pilgrims to the Holy Land". The Innes Review. 20 (1): 80–106. doi:10.3366/inr.1969.20.1.80. eISSN 1745-5219. ISSN 0020-157X.
  • Ní Mhaonaigh, M (1995). "Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib: Some Dating Considerations". Peritia. 9: 354–377. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.255. eISSN 2034-6506. ISSN 0332-1592.
  • Ní Mhaonaigh, M (2018). "Perception and Reality: Ireland c.980–1229". In Smith, B (ed.). The Cambridge History of Ireland. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 131–156. doi:10.1017/9781316275399.009. ISBN 978-1-107-11067-0.
  • O'Grady, J (2008). The Setting and Practice of Open-Air Judicial Assemblies in Medieval Scotland: A Multidisciplinary Study (PhD thesis). University of Glasgow.
  • Orfield, LB (2002) [1953]. The Growth of Scandinavian Law. Union, NJ: The Lawbook Exchange.
  • Oram, R (2004). David I: The King who Made Scotland. Tempus Scottish Monarchs. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-2825-X.
  • Oram, RD (1988). The Lordship of Galloway, c. 1000 to c. 1250 (PhD thesis). University of St Andrews. hdl:10023/2638.
  • Oram, RD (1993). "A Family Business? Colonisation and Settlement in Twelfth- and Thirteenth-Century Galloway". Scottish Historical Review. 72 (2): 111–145. doi:10.3366/shr.1993.72.2.111. eISSN 1750-0222. hdl:1893/6623. ISSN 0036-9241.
  • Oram, RD (2000). The Lordship of Galloway. Edinburgh: John Donald. ISBN 0-85976-541-5.
  • Oram, RD (2004). "Fergus, Lord of Galloway (d. 1161)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/49360. Retrieved 5 July 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Oram, RD (2011). Domination and Lordship: Scotland 1070–1230. The New Edinburgh History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-1496-7.[dead link]
  • Ó Corráin, D (2010) [1982]. "Foreign Connections and Domestic Politics: Killaloe and the Uí Briain in Twelfth-Century Hagiography". In Whitelock, D; McKitterick, R; Dumville, D (eds.). Ireland in Early Mediaeval Europe: Studies in Memory of Kathleen Hughes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 213–231. ISBN 978-0-521-23547-1.
  • Parker, E (2016). "Havelok and the Danes in England: History, Legend, and Romance". The Review of English Studies. 67 (280): 428–447. doi:10.1093/res/hgw034. eISSN 1471-6968. ISSN 0034-6551.
  • Parsons, ST (2019). "The Inhabitants of the British Isles on the First Crusade: Medieval Perceptions and the Invention of a Pan-Angevin Crusading Heritage". English Historical Review. 134 (567): 273–301. doi:10.1093/ehr/cez035. eISSN 1477-4534. ISSN 0013-8266.
  • Peterson, P (2012). Old Norse Nicknames (MA thesis). Háskóli Íslands. hdl:1946/12799.
  • Pollock, M (2005). "Rebels of the West, 1209–1216". Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies. 50: 1–30. ISSN 1353-0089.
  • Power, R (1986). "Magnus Barelegs' Expeditions to the West". Scottish Historical Review. 65 (2): 107–132. eISSN 1750-0222. ISSN 0036-9241. JSTOR 25530199.
  • Power, R (2005). "Meeting in Norway: Norse-Gaelic Relations in the Kingdom of Man and the Isles, 1090–1270" (PDF). Saga-Book. 29: 5–66. ISSN 0305-9219.
  • Power, R (2013). The Story of Iona: An Illustrated History and Guide. London: Canterbury Press Norwich. ISBN 978-1-84825-556-2.
  • Pryce, H (2004). "Gruffudd ap Cynan (1054/5–1137)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11693. Retrieved 9 July 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Raven, JA (2005). Medieval Landscapes and Lordship in South Uist (PhD thesis). 1. University of Glasgow.
  • Rekdal, JE (2003–2004). "Vikings and Saints—Encounters Vestan um Haf". Peritia. 17–18: 256–275. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.536. eISSN 2034-6506. ISSN 0332-1592.
  • Riley-Smith, J (1999). "The Crusading Movement, 1096–1274". In Riley-Smith, J (ed.). The Oxford History of the Crusades. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 35–67. ISBN 0-19-285364-3.
  • Riley-Smith, J (2002) [1997]. The First Crusaders, 1095–1131. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-59005-1. OL 26333720M.
  • Ritchie, A (1997). Iona. London: B T Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-7855-1.
  • Rixson, D (2001). The Small Isles: Canna, Rum, Eigg and Muck. Edinburgh: Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-154-2. OL 3544460M.
  • Runciman, S (1999) [1951]. A History of the Crusades. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06161-X. OL 22624852M.
  • Russell, P; McClure, P; Rollason, D (2007). "Celtic Names". In Rollason, D; Rollason, L (eds.). The Durham Liber Vitae. 2. London: The British Library. pp. 35–42. ISBN 978-0-7123-4996-3.
  • Scott, JG (1997). "The Partition of a Kingdom: Strathclyde 1092–1153" (PDF). Transactions of the Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society. 72: 11–40. ISSN 0141-1292.
  • Sellar, WDH (1997–1998). "The Ancestry of the MacLeods Reconsidered". Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness. 60: 233–258 – via Associated Clan MacLeod Societies Genealogical Resource Centre.
  • Sellar, WDH (2000). "Hebridean Sea Kings: The Successors of Somerled, 1164–1316". In Cowan, EJ; McDonald, RA (eds.). Alba: Celtic Scotland in the Middle Ages. East Linton: Tuckwell Press. pp. 187–218. ISBN 1-86232-151-5.
  • Smith, BB; Taylor, S; Williams, G, eds. (2007). "General Index". West Over Sea: Studies in Scandinavian Sea-Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 555–581. ISBN 978-90-04-15893-1. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Sigurðsson, JV; Bolton, T, eds. (2014). "Index". Celtic-Norse Relationships in the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages, 800–1200. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 215–223. ISBN 978-90-04-25512-8. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Strickland, MJ (2012). "The Kings of Scots at War, c. 1093–1286". In Spiers, EM; Crang, JA; Strickland, MJ (eds.). A Military History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 94–132. ISBN 978-0-7486-3204-6.
  • Thomas, S (2010). "The Diocese of Sodor Between Niðaróss and Avignon-Rome, 1266–1472" (PDF). Northern Studies. 41: 22–40. ISSN 0305-506X.
  • Thomas, S (2014). "From Cathedral of the Isles to Obscurity – the Archaeology and History of Skeabost Island, Snizort" (PDF). Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 144: 245–264. eISSN 2056-743X. ISSN 0081-1564.
  • Tinmouth, C (2018). "Frontiers of Faith: The Impact of the Insular Frontier upon the Identity and Development of Furness Abbey". Midlands Historical Review. 2 (1S): 46–63. ISSN 2516-8568.
  • Wadden, P (2014). "Cath Ruis na Ríg for Bóinn: History and Literature in Twelfth-Century Ireland". Aiste. 4: 11–44.
  • Watt, DER (1994). "Bishops in the Isles Before 1203: Bibliography and Biographical Lists". The Innes Review. 45 (2): 99–119. doi:10.3366/inr.1994.45.2.99. eISSN 1745-5219. ISSN 0020-157X.
  • Watt, DER (2000). Medieval Church Councils in Scotland. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. ISBN 0-56708731-X.
  • Watt, DER (2003). "Scotland: Religion and Piety". In Rigby, SH (ed.). A Companion to Britain in the Later Middle Ages. Blackwell Companions to British History. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. pp. 396–410. ISBN 0-631-21785-1.
  • Williams, DGE (1997). Land Assessment and Military Organisation in the Norse Settlements in Scotland, c.900–1266 AD (PhD thesis). University of St Andrews. hdl:10023/7088.
  • Williams, G (2007). "'These People were High-Born and Thought Well of Themselves': The Family of Moddan of Dale". In Smith, BB; Taylor, S; Williams, G (eds.). West Over Sea: Studies in Scandinavian Sea-Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 129–152. ISBN 978-90-04-15893-1. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Wolf, MJ (2014). Exploring Legal Multiculturalism in the Irish Sea: Multiculturalism, Proto-Democracy, and State Formation on the Isle of Man From 900–1300 (MA thesis). Virginia Tech. hdl:10919/64186.
  • Woolf, A (2001). "Isles, Kingdom of the". In Lynch, M (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Scottish History. Oxford Companions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 346–347. ISBN 0-19-211696-7.
  • Woolf, A (2003). "The Diocese of the Sudreyar". In Imsen, S (ed.). Ecclesia Nidrosiensis, 1153–1537: Søkelys på Nidaroskirkens og Nidarosprovinsens Historie. Tapir Akademisk Forlag. pp. 171–181. ISBN 978-82-519-1873-2.
  • Woolf, A (2004). "The Age of Sea-Kings, 900–1300". In Omand, D (ed.). The Argyll Book. Edinburgh: Birlinn. pp. 94–109. ISBN 1-84158-253-0.
  • Woolf, A (2005). "The Origins and Ancestry of Somerled: Gofraid mac Fergusa and 'The Annals of the Four Masters'". Mediaeval Scandinavia. 15: 199–213.
  • Woolf, A (2007). "The Wood Beyond the World: Jämtland and the Norwegian Kings". In Smith, BB; Taylor, S; Williams, G (eds.). West Over Sea: Studies in Scandinavian Sea-Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300. The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures. Leiden: Brill. pp. 153–166. ISBN 978-90-04-15893-1. ISSN 1569-1462.
  • Zoëga, GT (1967) [1910]. A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OL 7162452M.

External links[]

Óláfr Guðrøðarson
 Died: 29 June 1153
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Domnall mac Taidc
King of the Isles
1112/1115–1153
Succeeded by
Guðrøðr Óláfsson
Retrieved from ""