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Amlaíb Cuarán

Amlaíb mac Sitric (d. 980; Old Norse: Óláfr Sigtryggsson [ˈoːˌlɑːvz̠ ˈsiɡˌtryɡːsˌson]), commonly called Amlaíb Cuarán (O.N.: Óláfr kváran [ˈkwɑːrɑn]), was a 10th-century Norse-Gael who was King of Northumbria and Dublin. His byname, cuarán, is usually translated as "sandal". His name appears in a variety of anglicized forms, including Olaf Cuaran, Anlaf Sihtricson and Olaf Sihtricson, particularly in relation to his short-lived rule in York.[1] He was the last of the Uí Ímair to play a major part in the politics of the British Isles.

Olaf
A coin minted at York in the early 940s, the obverse (left) face shows a triquetra and the legend ANLAF CVNVNCC (King Anlaf, the Old English form of Amlaíb /Óláfr), the reverse (right) face shows a banner, perhaps the Raven banner and the name of the moneyer, as FARMAN MONETA[rius]
King of Jórvík
Reign941 – 944
PredecessorOlaf Guthfrithson
SuccessorEdmund I
Reign949 – 952 (second time)
PredecessorEric Bloodaxe
SuccessorEric Bloodaxe
King of Dublin
Reign945 – 947
PredecessorBlácaire mac Gofrith
SuccessorBlácaire mac Gofrith
Reign952 – 980 (second time)
PredecessorGofraid mac Sitriuc
SuccessorGlúniairn
Died980
Iona, Scotland
Burial
SpousesDúnlaith
Gormflaith
IssueGlúniairn
Sigtrygg Silkbeard
Gytha
Máel Muire
Harald
DynastyUí Ímair
FatherSitric Cáech
MotherUnknown

Amlaíb was twice, perhaps three times, ruler of Northumbria and twice ruler of Dublin and its dependencies. His reign over these territories spanned some forty years. He was a renowned warrior and a ruthless pillager of churches, but ended his days in retirement at Iona Abbey. Born when the Uí Ímair ruled over large areas of the British Isles, by his death the kingdom of Dublin was a minor power in Irish politics. At the same time, Dublin became a major centre of trade in Atlantic Europe and mastery over the city and its wealth became the supreme prize for ambitious Irish kings.

In death Amlaíb was the prototype for the Middle English romance character Havelok the Dane. In life he was a patron of Irish poets and Scandinavian skalds who wrote verses praising their paymaster. Amlaíb was married at least twice, and had many children who married into Irish and Scandinavian royal families. His descendants were kings in the Isle of Man and the Hebrides until the 13th century.

Background edit

The earliest records of attacks by Vikings in Britain or Ireland are at the end of the eighth century. The monastery on Lindisfarne, in the kingdom of Northumbria, was sacked on 8 June 793, and the monastery of Iona in the kingdom of the Picts was attacked in 795 and 802. In Ireland Rathlin Island, off the north-east coast, was the target in 795, and so too was St Patrick's Island on the east coast in 798. Portland in the kingdom of Wessex in south-west Britain was attacked during the reign of King Beorhtric of Wessex (ruled from 786 to 802).[2]

These raids continued in a sporadic fashion throughout the first quarter of the ninth century. During the second quarter of the century the frequency and size of raids increased and the first permanent Viking settlements (called longphorts in Ireland) appeared.[3]

Origins edit

The Ímar from whom the Uí Ímair were descended is generally presumed to be that Ímar (English pronunciation Ivar): "king of the Northmen of all Britain and Ireland", whose death is reported by the Annals of Ulster in 873. Whether this Ímar is to be identified with Ivar the Boneless, the leader of the Great Heathen Army, is rather less certain, although at the same time not unlikely.[4]

Amlaíb Cuarán was probably a great-grandson of Ímar. There is no contemporary evidence setting out the descent from Ímar to his grandsons, but it may be that the grandsons of Ímar recorded between 896 and 934—Amlaíb Cuarán's father Sitriuc (d. 927), Ragnall (d. 921), Gofraid (d. 934), Ímar (d. 904) and Amlaíb (d. 896)—were brothers rather than cousins.[5] Amlaíb's father Sitriuc first appears in the record in 917 when he seized Dublin, a settlement which had probably been under the control of an Irish king since the expulsion of the previous Viking rulers in 902.[6]

Sitriuc ruled Northumbria until his death in 927. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records his marriage to King Æthelstan's sister at Tamworth on 30 January 926. According to some late sources, such as the chronicler John of Wallingford, Amlaíb was the son of Sitriuc and this West Saxon princess.[7] Sitriuc's other sons included Gofraid (died 951), king of Dublin, Aralt (died 940), ruler of Limerick, and, less certainly, Sichfrith and Auisle, listed among those killed at the battle of Brunanburh in 937 by the Annals of Clonmacnoise.[8] A daughter of Sitriuc named Gytha is said in the Heimskringla to have married Norwegian pirate king Olaf Tryggvason, but she was probably a daughter of Amlaíb Cuarán.[9]

Following Sitriuc's death, Amlaíb may have become king in York for a short time,[10] but if he did it came to an end when Æthelstan took over the kingdom of Northumbria and defeated Sitriuc's brother Gofraid. According to William of Malmesbury, Amlaíb fled to Ireland while his uncle Gofraid made a second unsuccessful attempt to gain control of York.[11] In 937 an attack on Æthelstan's kingdom by Gofraid's son Amlaíb, assisted by Constantín mac Áeda, the king of Alba, and Owen, the king of Strathclyde, ended in defeat at the battle of Brunanburh.[12] William of Malmesbury wrote that Amlaíb was present at Brunanburh and spied out the English camp the night before the battle disguised as a skald.[13]

King Æthelstan died in 939 and his successor, his half-brother Edmund, was unable to keep control of York. Amlaíb mac Gofrith, ruling in Dublin, crossed to Britain where he was accepted as king of the Northumbrians. He died in 941, shortly after sacking the church of Saint Baldred at Tyninghame, struck dead by the saint's power according to the Historia de Sancto Cuthberto.[14] This traditional view of Amlaíb mac Gofrith's later career has recently been disputed by Kevin Halloran.[15] The basic argument presented is that Amlaíb mac Gofrith did not rule in York and the suggestion that only one Amlaíb, Amlaíb Cuarán, was king there may explain some of the apparent anomalies in the numismatic record.

York edit

Amlaíb Cuarán's career began in 941, following the death of his cousin Amlaíb mac Gofrith, when he became co-ruler of York, sharing power with his cousin Ragnall son of Gofraid. According to the Annals of Clonmacnoise, Amlaíb had been in Britain since 940, having left another son of Gofraid, Blácaire, as ruler of Dublin.[16]

Amlaíb and Ragnall ruled in York until 944. The dating of events in the period between the death of Æthelstan and the expulsion of Amlaíb and Ragnall is uncertain as the various versions of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle are in conflict. It appears that after Æthelstan's death, not only did Edmund lose control of Northumbria, but that the Five Burghs of the Mercian Danelaw also pledged themselves to Amlaíb mac Gofrith.[17] One of the Amlaíbs stormed Tamworth according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:

Here Olaf broke down Tamworth and a great slaughter fell on either side, and the Danes had the victory and led much war-booty away with them. Wulfrun was seized in the raid. Here King Edmund besieged King Olaf and Archbishop Wulfstan in Leicester, and he might have controlled them had they not escaped from the stronghold in the night.[18]

It is not clear when in the period between 940 and 943 these events took place, and as a result historians disagree as to whether they concern Amlaíb mac Gofrith or Amlaíb Cuarán.[19]

Edmund reconquered the Five Burghs in 942, an event celebrated in verse by the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. The Chronicle reports the baptism of Amlaíb, with King Edmund becoming his godfather.[20] This need not mean that Amlaíb was not already a Christian, nor would such a baptism have permanently committed him to Christianity, as such baptisms were often political acts. Alfred the Great, for example, had sponsored the confirmation of Christian Welsh king Anarawd ap Rhodri.[21] Amlaíb was expelled from the kingship of York in 944. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reports that "King Edmund conquered all Northumbria and caused to flee away two kings [or "royally-born men"], Olaf and Rægnald".[22] It is possible that rivalry between Amlaíb and Ragnall contributed to their fall.[23] Æthelweard's history reports that Amlaíb was deposed by a coup led by Wulfstan, Archbishop of York, and an unnamed Mercian ealdorman.[24]

Congalach and Ruaidrí edit

 
Scandinavian settlements in 10th century Ireland

After being driven out of Northumbria, Amlaíb returned to Ireland while Ragnall may have been killed at York.[25] The Uí Ímair in Ireland had also suffered in 944 as Dublin was sacked that year by the High King of Ireland Congalach Cnogba, whose power base lay in Brega, north of Dublin on the lower reaches of the River Boyne. The following year, perhaps as a result of the sack of Dublin, Amlaíb's cousin Blácaire was driven out and Amlaíb replaced him as ruler of Dublin. Amlaíb was allied with Congalach and may have gained power with his assistance.[26]

Congalach and Amlaíb fought against Ruaidrí ua Canannáin, a rival for the High Kingship who belonged to the Cenél Conaill, based in modern County Donegal. In 945 the two defeated part of Ruaidrí's army in Conaille Muirtheimne (modern County Louth) and the following year Amlaíb raided Kilcullen in the province of Leinster. In 947 Ruaidrí routed Congalach and Amlaíb at Slane. Losses among the Dublin men were heavy, with many drowning while fleeing the battle. This defeat appears to have lost Amlaíb his kingship, as the annals record that Blácaire, not Amlaíb, was the leader of the Dublin forces in the following year. Blácaire was killed in 948 by Congalach, and was succeeded by Amlaíb's brother Gofraid.[27]

York again edit

 
A second style of penny from York from Amlaíb's time, moneyer Æthelfrith, the obverse shows a bird, presumed to be a Raven, the reverse a cross.

The course of events in Northumbria while Amlaíb was in Ireland is uncertain. While Edmund certainly controlled Northumbria after Amlaíb was expelled and Ragnall killed, he may soon after have lost control of the north to a Scandinavian king named Eiríkr, usually identified with Eric Bloodaxe.[28] If Erik did rule in Northumbria before Edmund's death, it was only for a short time. Edmund was killed in 946, and succeeded by his brother Eadred. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Eadred "reduced all the land of Northumbria to his control; and the Scots granted him oaths that they would do all that he wanted".[29] The Northumbrian submission to Eadred led to a meeting with the notables of York led by Archbishop Wulfstan in 947, but the following year King Erik was back ruling Northumbria and Eadred laid waste to the southern parts of the kingdom— Ripon is mentioned as a particular target—to force the Northumbrians to expel Erik, which they did.[30]

The following year, 949, by which time Blacáire was dead and Amlaíb's brother ruling in Dublin, the Northumbrians invited Amlaíb to rule in York.[31] His return to England may have been with Eadred's agreement.[32] That year Máel Coluim mac Domnaill, the king of Alba, raided Northumbria as far south as the River Tees, capturing many slaves and much loot. Whether this invasion was directed against Amlaíb, or perhaps intended to support him by plundering only northern Northumbria which may have been outside his control, is uncertain. A second invasion from the north in 952, this time an alliance including Máel Coluim's Scots and also Britons and Saxons, was defeated. Again, whether this was aimed against Amlaíb, who was deposed in 952 and replaced by Erik, or was mounted against King Erik in support of Amlaíb, is unclear. Erik's reign was short and the Viking kingdom of York was definitively incorporated into the kingdom of the English on his death in 954. Amlaíb returned to Ireland, never again to rule in York.[33]

From Dublin to Iona edit

In 951, while Amlaíb was in Britain his brother Gofraid died in Dublin of disease.[34] Congalach's rival Ruaidrí was also dead, leaving Amlaíb's former ally as undisputed High King and thus a serious threat to Dublin and the south-eastern Irish kingdom of Leinster. This threat was perhaps what led to Congalach's death in an ambush at Dún Ailinne (modern County Kildare) or at Tech Guigenn in the region of the River Liffey while collecting tribute in Leinster in 956.[35] The main beneficiary was the brother of Amlaíb's new wife Dúnflaith, Domnall ua Néill, who became the next High King of Ireland. The marriage linked Amlaíb not only to the northern Uí Néill kindred of Cenél nEógain, but also to the southern Clann Cholmáin as he was now stepfather to Dúnflaith's young son Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill.[36]

In the early 960s Amlaíb Cuarán probably faced a challenge from the sons of his cousin Amlaíb mac Gofrith. In 960 the Annals of Ulster report that Cammán, son of Amlaíb mac Gofrith, was defeated at an unidentifiable place named Dub. Two years later one Sitriuc Cam—Cam means crooked or twisted and Cammán is simply the hypocoristic form of this byname, so that Sitriuc Cam and Cammán are presumed to be the same person—was defeated by the Dubliners led by Amlaíb Cuarán and the Leinstermen while raiding in Leinster. Amlaíb Cuarán was wounded in the battle but Sitriuc fled to his ships. Sitriuc and his brothers appear to have raided Munster after this, but disappear from the record soon afterwards and do not appear to have returned to Ireland.[37]

Amlaíb's activities in the early 960s seem largely to have been limited to occasional raids in Leinster. He attacked Kildare in 964, and it was a target again in 967 when Muiredach mac Faeláin, abbot of Kildare, a member of the Uí Dúnlainge kindred which ruled Leinster, was killed by Amlaíb and Cerball mac Lorcáin, a kinsman of Muiredach's. Another raid south in 964 ended in a heavy defeat for Amlaíb near Inistogue (modern County Kildare) at the hands of the Osraige.[38]

Until the late 960s Domnall ua Néill, Congalach's successor as would-be High King, was occupied with enemies close to home, and in Connacht and Munster, and did not intervene in Leinster or the hinterlands of Dublin. Having defeated these, in 968 he marched south and plundered Leinster, killing several notables, and laid siege to Dublin for two months. While Domnall did not take the port, he carried off a great many cattle. Amlaíb, allied with the king of Leinster Murchad mac Finn, retaliated by attacking the abbey of Kells in 969. A pursuit by ua Néill's allies was defeated near Ardmulchan (County Meath).[39]

In 970 Domnall ua Néill and his allies attacked Amlaíb's new-found ally, Congalach's son Domnall, the king of Brega. Domnall mac Congalaig was married to a daughter of Amlaíb, perhaps at about this time. Churches in Brega, including Monasterboice and Dunleer, guarded by Amlaíb's soldiers, were a particular target of the raids. Domnall of Brega and Amlaíb fought against Domnall ua Néill's northern army at Kilmona in modern County Westmeath. Domnall's army, which included allies from Ulaid, was defeated, and Ardgal mac Matudáin, king of Ulaid, and Cináed mac Crongilla, king of Conaille Muirtheimne, were among those killed. The battle at Kilmona did not end the war in the midlands. Monasterboice and Dunleer were burned after the battle and fighting spread to the lands of Clann Cholmáin the following year when Domnall ua Néill's enemies there drove him out, only for him to return with an army and ravage both Mide and the lands around Dublin before marching south to attack Leinster. This campaign appears to have established Domnall ua Néill as effective overlord of the midlands and Leinster for some years.[40]

In 977, in unknown circumstances, Domnall ua Néill's sons Congalach and Muirchertach were killed and Amlaíb is given credit for their deaths by the annals. Domnall made no effort to avenge the deaths, retiring to the monastery at Armagh where he died in 980. The Dubliners campaigned against Leinster the late 970s. The overking of Leinster, Úgaire mac Túathail, was captured in 976. He was evidently ransomed or released as he was killed, along with Muiredach mac Riain of Uí Cheinnselaig of south Leinster, fighting against the Dubliners in 978 at Belan (County Kildare). Úgaire's successor Domnall Claen was little more fortunate, being captured by the Dubliners the following year.[41]

Following the death of High King Domnall ua Néill, Amlaíb's stepson Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill claimed the title. Amlaíb's former ally Domnall son of Congalach had died in 976, removing one potential rival, and as Amlaíb had killed two of Domnall ua Néill's sons he may have cleared the way for Máel Sechnaill to take power. If so, it was unlikely to be by design. Máel Sechnaill had become king of Mide and head of Clann Cholmáin in 975 and had inaugurated his reign with an attack on his stepfather when he burned "Thor's Wood" outside Dublin. In 980 Máel Sechnaill had the support of the Leinstermen when he faced Amlaíb's sons—Amlaíb himself was by now an old man—near the hill of Tara. The Dubliners too had allies as the Irish annals record the presence of warriors from the Isle of Man or the Hebrides. Amlaíb's son Ragnall (Rögnvaldr) was among the dead in the battle which followed, and although several kings fighting alongside Máel Sechnaill were killed, the result was clearly a crushing blow for Dublin. Máel Sechnaill occupied the city and imposed a heavy tribute on the citizens.[42]

In the aftermath of this defeat Amlaíb abdicated, or was removed from power. He was replaced by a son named Glúniairn (Járnkné), a son of Dúnlaith and thus Máel Sechnaill's half-brother. Amlaíb retired to the monastery on Iona where he died soon afterwards.[43]

Marriages and children edit

He was succeeded by his son Glúniairn (Járnkné, literally "Iron Knee"), son of his wife Dúnlaith, daughter of Muirchertach mac Néill. Among his wives was Gormflaith, daughter of Murchad mac Finn, King of Leinster, and future wife of Brian Boru. Gormflaith's son Sitric Silkbeard was king of Dublin after Glúniairn's death. Amlaíb's other children included Gytha, who married Olaf Tryggvason, Máel Muire, who married Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill, and Harald, possibly the grandfather of Godred Crovan.[44]

Cuarán edit

Amlaíb's byname, cuarán, is usually translated as "sandal" or "shoe". It derives from the Old Irish word cúar meaning bent or crooked. It is first applied to him in the report of the battle of Slane in 947 in the Annals of Ulster. The usual translation may be misleading. The epithet probably refers to a distinctive style of footwear. Benjamin Hudson points to the description of a cuarán in a twelfth-century satire, where it is made of leather folded seven times and has a pointed toe. In Aislinge Meic Con Glinne and Scél Baili Binnbérlaig, the cuarán is waterproof. In the first story Mac Con Glinne cleans his by dipping them in his bath; in the second, a cuarán serves as a vessel to drink from. That the cuarán was a piece of footwear specific to Dublin is suggested by statements in other stories that have cobblers in the town owing a cuarán in taxes.[45]

Icelandic sagas edit

Amlaíb Cuarán (Olaf Kvaran) is referred to at least twice in the Icelandic sagas, once in Njal's Saga and again in Saga of Gunnlaugr Serpent-Tongue.[46] It is from these references that Einar Hjörleifsson Kvaran and his siblings chose the name "Kvaran" as their own.

Notes edit

  1. ^ In Old English he was Anlaf. To Irish speakers he may also have been Amlaíb mac ua Ímair or Amlaíb ua Ímair but others shared these names. Likewise, his Norse nickname, "Olaf the Red" was applied to several Norse rulers in Ireland and the Isles.
  2. ^ Keynes, "Vikings in England", pp. 50–51; Ó Corráin, "Ireland, Wales, Man, and the Hebrides", pp. 83–85.
  3. ^ Keynes, "Vikings in England", pp. 51–52; Ó Corráin, "Ireland, Wales, Man, and the Hebrides", pp. 84–89.
  4. ^ Ó Cróinín, Early Medieval Ireland, pp. 250–254, discusses Ímar's career and the various arguments. See also Woolf, Pictland to Alba, chapter 2; Downham, Viking Kings, chapters 1–3, especially pp. 17–23 & 64 –67. Ó Corráin, "Vikings in Scotland and Ireland", passim, sets out the case against the identification.
  5. ^ Thus Downham, Viking Kings, p. 29, figure 6. Cyril Hart's contributions to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography make Ragnall, Sitriuc and Gofraid brothers; likewise Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 31, figure 1, makes these three brothers, sons of Guthred.
  6. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 27–35.
  7. ^ According to William of Malmesbury, who states that he did not know the princess's name, she was Æthelstan's full sister, daughter of Edward the Elder and his first wife Ecgwynn, John of Wallingford gives her name as Orgiue, perhaps Eadgifu; Hudson, Viking Pirates, pp. 28–29.
  8. ^ Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 31, figure 1, shows only Gofraid; Downham, Viking Kings, p. 29, figure 6 & pp. 245, 247, 254 & 269; Annals of Clonmacnoise, s.a. 931.
  9. ^ Hart, "Sihtric Cáech"; "Saga of Olaf Tryggvason", chapter 32, Heimskringla, pp. 171–173; Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 31, figure 1 & p. 84.
  10. ^ Thus Keynes, "Rulers of the English", p. 505.
  11. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, p. 100; Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 29; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 151. Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson", presumes Amlaíb to have been born in York, in which case he was a child at this time.
  12. ^ Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 168–173; Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 103–105; Hudson, Viking Pirates, page numbers to be supplied.
  13. ^ Hudson, Viking Pirates, pp. 30–31; Hudson states: "If there is any historical basis to this story, Olaf Cuaran is clearly confused with his cousin ...".
  14. ^ Hudson, "Óláf Guthfrithson"; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 174.
  15. ^ Halloran, Kevin (September 2013). "Anlaf Gufthrithson at York: A Non-existent Kingship?". Northern History. University of Leeds. 50 (2): 180–185. doi:10.1179/0078172X13Z.00000000042. S2CID 154514458.
  16. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 43, 241 & 248; Costambeys, "Ragnall Guthfrithson"; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Hudson, Viking Pirates, pp. 33–34; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 181; Annals of Clonmacnoise, s.a. 933.
  17. ^ Higham, "Five Boroughs"; Higham, Kingdom of Northumbria, p. 193; Miller, "Edmund"; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 174; but that either Amlaíb controlled the Mercian Danelaw is questioned by Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 108–109.
  18. ^ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, p. 111, Ms. D, s.a. 943.
  19. ^ The events are associated with Amlaíb mac Gofrith by Higham, Kingdom of Northumbria, p. 193; Miller, "Edmund"; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 174. Others, such as Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, p. 111, note 11; Downham, Viking Kings, p. 110; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson", associate them with Amlaíb Cuarán.
  20. ^ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 110–111, Ms. A, s.a. 942, Ms. D, s.a. 942 & 943.
  21. ^ Asser's Life of King Alfred the Great. Thus Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 34. Regarding the confirmation, Hudson describes it as "... a politically motivated act ... a recognised means of sealing an alliance with a dominant individual ...". Ragnall was baptised some time later according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
  22. ^ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 110–111, Ms. A, s.a. 944, Ms. E., s.a. 944.
  23. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 46 & 111–112; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 182.
  24. ^ Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 35; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 182, suggests that the unnamed Mercian leader was Æthelstan Half-King.
  25. ^ Costambeys, "Ragnall"; Downham, Viking Kings, p. 46; the killing of Ragnall is reported in the Annals of Clonmacnoise, s.a. 937.
  26. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 46, 241 & 248; Hudson, Viking Pirates, pp. 35–36.
  27. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 46–47 & 241; Hudson, Viking Pirates, pp 36–37; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, p. 186.
  28. ^ For a contrary view of Erik's identity see Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 115–120 and Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 187–188.
  29. ^ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 112–113, Mss A & D, s.a. 946, Ms. E, s.a. 948.
  30. ^ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 112–113, Ms D, s.a. 947 & 948.
  31. ^ Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 112–113, Ms E, s.a. 949.
  32. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 114–115.
  33. ^ Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 178–190; Hudson, Viking pirates, pp. 37–38; Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 153–155.
  34. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 47 & 254; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson".
  35. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 48 & 241; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson".
  36. ^ Hudson, "Domnall ua Néill"; Hudson, Viking Pirates, page numbers needed.
  37. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 48–49, 184–185, 242, 249, 263 & 269; check Hudson, Viking Pirates.
  38. ^ [Muiredach, see Byrne, "Church and politics", @673?] Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 50 & 242; Hudson, "Domnall ua Néill".
  39. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 50 & 242; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Hudson, "Domnall ua Néill".
  40. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 50–51 & 242; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Hudson, "Domnall ua Néill". Check Viking Pirates also.
  41. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, p. 51; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Annals of Tigernach, AT 976.3, 977.1, 978.2 & 979.2. Domnall Claen may have been a personal enemy of Amlaíb as he had killed Amlaíb's father-in-law Murchad mac Finn "deceitfully" in 972; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Annals of Ulster, AU 972.2.
  42. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 51–52 & 190; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Hudson, "Máel Sechnaill"; Hudson, Viking Pirates, page numbers needed.
  43. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 51–53; Hudson, "Óláf Sihtricson"; Hudson, Viking Pirates, page numbers needed. Only son by Dúnlaith?
  44. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, p. 29, figure 6; Hudson, Viking Pirates, p. 49, figure 2 & p. 83, figure 3; Etchingam, "Gwynedd and Ireland", p. 167, fig. 7.1.
  45. ^ Hudson, Viking Pirates, pp. 36–37.
  46. ^ GunnlaugsSaga Ormstungu/The Story of Gunnlaug Serpent-Tongue, Notes by P.G. Foote translated by R. Quirk, Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd. London, 1957, p. 18

References edit

  • Costambeys, Marios; Harrison, B. (2004). "Ragnall Guthfrithson (fl. 943–944)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23314. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Downham, Clare (2007), Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland: The Dynasty of Ívarr to A.D. 1014, Edinburgh: Dunedin, ISBN 978-1-903765-89-0, OCLC 163618313
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External links edit

Regnal titles
Preceded by
Olaf Guthfrithson
(also known as Amlaíb mac Gofrith)
King of Northumbria
941–944
With: Ragnall?
Succeeded by
Ragnall or English control
Preceded by King of Dublin
945–947
Succeeded by
Preceded by
English control?
King of Northumbria
949–952
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Dublin
952–980
Succeeded by

amlaíb, cuarán, amlaíb, sitric, norse, Óláfr, sigtryggsson, ˈoːˌlɑːvz, ˈsiɡˌtryɡːsˌson, commonly, called, Óláfr, kváran, ˈkwɑːrɑn, 10th, century, norse, gael, king, northumbria, dublin, byname, cuarán, usually, translated, sandal, name, appears, variety, angli. Amlaib mac Sitric d 980 Old Norse olafr Sigtryggsson ˈoːˌlɑːvz ˈsiɡˌtryɡːsˌson commonly called Amlaib Cuaran O N olafr kvaran ˈkwɑːrɑn was a 10th century Norse Gael who was King of Northumbria and Dublin His byname cuaran is usually translated as sandal His name appears in a variety of anglicized forms including Olaf Cuaran Anlaf Sihtricson and Olaf Sihtricson particularly in relation to his short lived rule in York 1 He was the last of the Ui Imair to play a major part in the politics of the British Isles OlafA coin minted at York in the early 940s the obverse left face shows a triquetra and the legend ANLAF CVNVNCC King Anlaf the Old English form of Amlaib olafr the reverse right face shows a banner perhaps the Raven banner and the name of the moneyer as FARMAN MONETA rius King of JorvikReign941 944PredecessorOlaf GuthfrithsonSuccessorEdmund IReign949 952 second time PredecessorEric BloodaxeSuccessorEric BloodaxeKing of DublinReign945 947PredecessorBlacaire mac GofrithSuccessorBlacaire mac GofrithReign952 980 second time PredecessorGofraid mac SitriucSuccessorGluniairnDied980Iona ScotlandBurialIona AbbeySpousesDunlaithGormflaithIssueGluniairnSigtrygg SilkbeardGythaMael MuireHaraldDynastyUi ImairFatherSitric CaechMotherUnknownAmlaib was twice perhaps three times ruler of Northumbria and twice ruler of Dublin and its dependencies His reign over these territories spanned some forty years He was a renowned warrior and a ruthless pillager of churches but ended his days in retirement at Iona Abbey Born when the Ui Imair ruled over large areas of the British Isles by his death the kingdom of Dublin was a minor power in Irish politics At the same time Dublin became a major centre of trade in Atlantic Europe and mastery over the city and its wealth became the supreme prize for ambitious Irish kings In death Amlaib was the prototype for the Middle English romance character Havelok the Dane In life he was a patron of Irish poets and Scandinavian skalds who wrote verses praising their paymaster Amlaib was married at least twice and had many children who married into Irish and Scandinavian royal families His descendants were kings in the Isle of Man and the Hebrides until the 13th century Contents 1 Background 2 Origins 3 York 4 Congalach and Ruaidri 5 York again 6 From Dublin to Iona 7 Marriages and children 8 Cuaran 9 Icelandic sagas 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksBackground editFurther information Kingdom of Dublin and Viking Age The earliest records of attacks by Vikings in Britain or Ireland are at the end of the eighth century The monastery on Lindisfarne in the kingdom of Northumbria was sacked on 8 June 793 and the monastery of Iona in the kingdom of the Picts was attacked in 795 and 802 In Ireland Rathlin Island off the north east coast was the target in 795 and so too was St Patrick s Island on the east coast in 798 Portland in the kingdom of Wessex in south west Britain was attacked during the reign of King Beorhtric of Wessex ruled from 786 to 802 2 These raids continued in a sporadic fashion throughout the first quarter of the ninth century During the second quarter of the century the frequency and size of raids increased and the first permanent Viking settlements called longphorts in Ireland appeared 3 Origins editMain article Ui Imair The Imar from whom the Ui Imair were descended is generally presumed to be that Imar English pronunciation Ivar king of the Northmen of all Britain and Ireland whose death is reported by the Annals of Ulster in 873 Whether this Imar is to be identified with Ivar the Boneless the leader of the Great Heathen Army is rather less certain although at the same time not unlikely 4 Amlaib Cuaran was probably a great grandson of Imar There is no contemporary evidence setting out the descent from Imar to his grandsons but it may be that the grandsons of Imar recorded between 896 and 934 Amlaib Cuaran s father Sitriuc d 927 Ragnall d 921 Gofraid d 934 Imar d 904 and Amlaib d 896 were brothers rather than cousins 5 Amlaib s father Sitriuc first appears in the record in 917 when he seized Dublin a settlement which had probably been under the control of an Irish king since the expulsion of the previous Viking rulers in 902 6 Sitriuc ruled Northumbria until his death in 927 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle records his marriage to King AEthelstan s sister at Tamworth on 30 January 926 According to some late sources such as the chronicler John of Wallingford Amlaib was the son of Sitriuc and this West Saxon princess 7 Sitriuc s other sons included Gofraid died 951 king of Dublin Aralt died 940 ruler of Limerick and less certainly Sichfrith and Auisle listed among those killed at the battle of Brunanburh in 937 by the Annals of Clonmacnoise 8 A daughter of Sitriuc named Gytha is said in the Heimskringla to have married Norwegian pirate king Olaf Tryggvason but she was probably a daughter of Amlaib Cuaran 9 Following Sitriuc s death Amlaib may have become king in York for a short time 10 but if he did it came to an end when AEthelstan took over the kingdom of Northumbria and defeated Sitriuc s brother Gofraid According to William of Malmesbury Amlaib fled to Ireland while his uncle Gofraid made a second unsuccessful attempt to gain control of York 11 In 937 an attack on AEthelstan s kingdom by Gofraid s son Amlaib assisted by Constantin mac Aeda the king of Alba and Owen the king of Strathclyde ended in defeat at the battle of Brunanburh 12 William of Malmesbury wrote that Amlaib was present at Brunanburh and spied out the English camp the night before the battle disguised as a skald 13 King AEthelstan died in 939 and his successor his half brother Edmund was unable to keep control of York Amlaib mac Gofrith ruling in Dublin crossed to Britain where he was accepted as king of the Northumbrians He died in 941 shortly after sacking the church of Saint Baldred at Tyninghame struck dead by the saint s power according to the Historia de Sancto Cuthberto 14 This traditional view of Amlaib mac Gofrith s later career has recently been disputed by Kevin Halloran 15 The basic argument presented is that Amlaib mac Gofrith did not rule in York and the suggestion that only one Amlaib Amlaib Cuaran was king there may explain some of the apparent anomalies in the numismatic record York editAmlaib Cuaran s career began in 941 following the death of his cousin Amlaib mac Gofrith when he became co ruler of York sharing power with his cousin Ragnall son of Gofraid According to the Annals of Clonmacnoise Amlaib had been in Britain since 940 having left another son of Gofraid Blacaire as ruler of Dublin 16 Amlaib and Ragnall ruled in York until 944 The dating of events in the period between the death of AEthelstan and the expulsion of Amlaib and Ragnall is uncertain as the various versions of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle are in conflict It appears that after AEthelstan s death not only did Edmund lose control of Northumbria but that the Five Burghs of the Mercian Danelaw also pledged themselves to Amlaib mac Gofrith 17 One of the Amlaibs stormed Tamworth according to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle Here Olaf broke down Tamworth and a great slaughter fell on either side and the Danes had the victory and led much war booty away with them Wulfrun was seized in the raid Here King Edmund besieged King Olaf and Archbishop Wulfstan in Leicester and he might have controlled them had they not escaped from the stronghold in the night 18 It is not clear when in the period between 940 and 943 these events took place and as a result historians disagree as to whether they concern Amlaib mac Gofrith or Amlaib Cuaran 19 Edmund reconquered the Five Burghs in 942 an event celebrated in verse by the Anglo Saxon Chronicle The Chronicle reports the baptism of Amlaib with King Edmund becoming his godfather 20 This need not mean that Amlaib was not already a Christian nor would such a baptism have permanently committed him to Christianity as such baptisms were often political acts Alfred the Great for example had sponsored the confirmation of Christian Welsh king Anarawd ap Rhodri 21 Amlaib was expelled from the kingship of York in 944 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle reports that King Edmund conquered all Northumbria and caused to flee away two kings or royally born men Olaf and Raegnald 22 It is possible that rivalry between Amlaib and Ragnall contributed to their fall 23 AEthelweard s history reports that Amlaib was deposed by a coup led by Wulfstan Archbishop of York and an unnamed Mercian ealdorman 24 Congalach and Ruaidri edit nbsp Scandinavian settlements in 10th century IrelandAfter being driven out of Northumbria Amlaib returned to Ireland while Ragnall may have been killed at York 25 The Ui Imair in Ireland had also suffered in 944 as Dublin was sacked that year by the High King of Ireland Congalach Cnogba whose power base lay in Brega north of Dublin on the lower reaches of the River Boyne The following year perhaps as a result of the sack of Dublin Amlaib s cousin Blacaire was driven out and Amlaib replaced him as ruler of Dublin Amlaib was allied with Congalach and may have gained power with his assistance 26 Congalach and Amlaib fought against Ruaidri ua Canannain a rival for the High Kingship who belonged to the Cenel Conaill based in modern County Donegal In 945 the two defeated part of Ruaidri s army in Conaille Muirtheimne modern County Louth and the following year Amlaib raided Kilcullen in the province of Leinster In 947 Ruaidri routed Congalach and Amlaib at Slane Losses among the Dublin men were heavy with many drowning while fleeing the battle This defeat appears to have lost Amlaib his kingship as the annals record that Blacaire not Amlaib was the leader of the Dublin forces in the following year Blacaire was killed in 948 by Congalach and was succeeded by Amlaib s brother Gofraid 27 York again edit nbsp A second style of penny from York from Amlaib s time moneyer AEthelfrith the obverse shows a bird presumed to be a Raven the reverse a cross The course of events in Northumbria while Amlaib was in Ireland is uncertain While Edmund certainly controlled Northumbria after Amlaib was expelled and Ragnall killed he may soon after have lost control of the north to a Scandinavian king named Eirikr usually identified with Eric Bloodaxe 28 If Erik did rule in Northumbria before Edmund s death it was only for a short time Edmund was killed in 946 and succeeded by his brother Eadred The Anglo Saxon Chronicle records that Eadred reduced all the land of Northumbria to his control and the Scots granted him oaths that they would do all that he wanted 29 The Northumbrian submission to Eadred led to a meeting with the notables of York led by Archbishop Wulfstan in 947 but the following year King Erik was back ruling Northumbria and Eadred laid waste to the southern parts of the kingdom Ripon is mentioned as a particular target to force the Northumbrians to expel Erik which they did 30 The following year 949 by which time Blacaire was dead and Amlaib s brother ruling in Dublin the Northumbrians invited Amlaib to rule in York 31 His return to England may have been with Eadred s agreement 32 That year Mael Coluim mac Domnaill the king of Alba raided Northumbria as far south as the River Tees capturing many slaves and much loot Whether this invasion was directed against Amlaib or perhaps intended to support him by plundering only northern Northumbria which may have been outside his control is uncertain A second invasion from the north in 952 this time an alliance including Mael Coluim s Scots and also Britons and Saxons was defeated Again whether this was aimed against Amlaib who was deposed in 952 and replaced by Erik or was mounted against King Erik in support of Amlaib is unclear Erik s reign was short and the Viking kingdom of York was definitively incorporated into the kingdom of the English on his death in 954 Amlaib returned to Ireland never again to rule in York 33 From Dublin to Iona editIn 951 while Amlaib was in Britain his brother Gofraid died in Dublin of disease 34 Congalach s rival Ruaidri was also dead leaving Amlaib s former ally as undisputed High King and thus a serious threat to Dublin and the south eastern Irish kingdom of Leinster This threat was perhaps what led to Congalach s death in an ambush at Dun Ailinne modern County Kildare or at Tech Guigenn in the region of the River Liffey while collecting tribute in Leinster in 956 35 The main beneficiary was the brother of Amlaib s new wife Dunflaith Domnall ua Neill who became the next High King of Ireland The marriage linked Amlaib not only to the northern Ui Neill kindred of Cenel nEogain but also to the southern Clann Cholmain as he was now stepfather to Dunflaith s young son Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill 36 In the early 960s Amlaib Cuaran probably faced a challenge from the sons of his cousin Amlaib mac Gofrith In 960 the Annals of Ulster report that Camman son of Amlaib mac Gofrith was defeated at an unidentifiable place named Dub Two years later one Sitriuc Cam Cam means crooked or twisted and Camman is simply the hypocoristic form of this byname so that Sitriuc Cam and Camman are presumed to be the same person was defeated by the Dubliners led by Amlaib Cuaran and the Leinstermen while raiding in Leinster Amlaib Cuaran was wounded in the battle but Sitriuc fled to his ships Sitriuc and his brothers appear to have raided Munster after this but disappear from the record soon afterwards and do not appear to have returned to Ireland 37 Amlaib s activities in the early 960s seem largely to have been limited to occasional raids in Leinster He attacked Kildare in 964 and it was a target again in 967 when Muiredach mac Faelain abbot of Kildare a member of the Ui Dunlainge kindred which ruled Leinster was killed by Amlaib and Cerball mac Lorcain a kinsman of Muiredach s Another raid south in 964 ended in a heavy defeat for Amlaib near Inistogue modern County Kildare at the hands of the Osraige 38 Until the late 960s Domnall ua Neill Congalach s successor as would be High King was occupied with enemies close to home and in Connacht and Munster and did not intervene in Leinster or the hinterlands of Dublin Having defeated these in 968 he marched south and plundered Leinster killing several notables and laid siege to Dublin for two months While Domnall did not take the port he carried off a great many cattle Amlaib allied with the king of Leinster Murchad mac Finn retaliated by attacking the abbey of Kells in 969 A pursuit by ua Neill s allies was defeated near Ardmulchan County Meath 39 In 970 Domnall ua Neill and his allies attacked Amlaib s new found ally Congalach s son Domnall the king of Brega Domnall mac Congalaig was married to a daughter of Amlaib perhaps at about this time Churches in Brega including Monasterboice and Dunleer guarded by Amlaib s soldiers were a particular target of the raids Domnall of Brega and Amlaib fought against Domnall ua Neill s northern army at Kilmona in modern County Westmeath Domnall s army which included allies from Ulaid was defeated and Ardgal mac Matudain king of Ulaid and Cinaed mac Crongilla king of Conaille Muirtheimne were among those killed The battle at Kilmona did not end the war in the midlands Monasterboice and Dunleer were burned after the battle and fighting spread to the lands of Clann Cholmain the following year when Domnall ua Neill s enemies there drove him out only for him to return with an army and ravage both Mide and the lands around Dublin before marching south to attack Leinster This campaign appears to have established Domnall ua Neill as effective overlord of the midlands and Leinster for some years 40 In 977 in unknown circumstances Domnall ua Neill s sons Congalach and Muirchertach were killed and Amlaib is given credit for their deaths by the annals Domnall made no effort to avenge the deaths retiring to the monastery at Armagh where he died in 980 The Dubliners campaigned against Leinster the late 970s The overking of Leinster Ugaire mac Tuathail was captured in 976 He was evidently ransomed or released as he was killed along with Muiredach mac Riain of Ui Cheinnselaig of south Leinster fighting against the Dubliners in 978 at Belan County Kildare Ugaire s successor Domnall Claen was little more fortunate being captured by the Dubliners the following year 41 Following the death of High King Domnall ua Neill Amlaib s stepson Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill claimed the title Amlaib s former ally Domnall son of Congalach had died in 976 removing one potential rival and as Amlaib had killed two of Domnall ua Neill s sons he may have cleared the way for Mael Sechnaill to take power If so it was unlikely to be by design Mael Sechnaill had become king of Mide and head of Clann Cholmain in 975 and had inaugurated his reign with an attack on his stepfather when he burned Thor s Wood outside Dublin In 980 Mael Sechnaill had the support of the Leinstermen when he faced Amlaib s sons Amlaib himself was by now an old man near the hill of Tara The Dubliners too had allies as the Irish annals record the presence of warriors from the Isle of Man or the Hebrides Amlaib s son Ragnall Rognvaldr was among the dead in the battle which followed and although several kings fighting alongside Mael Sechnaill were killed the result was clearly a crushing blow for Dublin Mael Sechnaill occupied the city and imposed a heavy tribute on the citizens 42 In the aftermath of this defeat Amlaib abdicated or was removed from power He was replaced by a son named Gluniairn Jarnkne a son of Dunlaith and thus Mael Sechnaill s half brother Amlaib retired to the monastery on Iona where he died soon afterwards 43 Marriages and children editHe was succeeded by his son Gluniairn Jarnkne literally Iron Knee son of his wife Dunlaith daughter of Muirchertach mac Neill Among his wives was Gormflaith daughter of Murchad mac Finn King of Leinster and future wife of Brian Boru Gormflaith s son Sitric Silkbeard was king of Dublin after Gluniairn s death Amlaib s other children included Gytha who married Olaf Tryggvason Mael Muire who married Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill and Harald possibly the grandfather of Godred Crovan 44 Cuaran editAmlaib s byname cuaran is usually translated as sandal or shoe It derives from the Old Irish word cuar meaning bent or crooked It is first applied to him in the report of the battle of Slane in 947 in the Annals of Ulster The usual translation may be misleading The epithet probably refers to a distinctive style of footwear Benjamin Hudson points to the description of a cuaran in a twelfth century satire where it is made of leather folded seven times and has a pointed toe In Aislinge Meic Con Glinne and Scel Baili Binnberlaig the cuaran is waterproof In the first story Mac Con Glinne cleans his by dipping them in his bath in the second a cuaran serves as a vessel to drink from That the cuaran was a piece of footwear specific to Dublin is suggested by statements in other stories that have cobblers in the town owing a cuaran in taxes 45 Icelandic sagas editAmlaib Cuaran Olaf Kvaran is referred to at least twice in the Icelandic sagas once in Njal s Saga and again in Saga of Gunnlaugr Serpent Tongue 46 It is from these references that Einar Hjorleifsson Kvaran and his siblings chose the name Kvaran as their own Notes edit In Old English he was Anlaf To Irish speakers he may also have been Amlaib mac ua Imair or Amlaib ua Imair but others shared these names Likewise his Norse nickname Olaf the Red was applied to several Norse rulers in Ireland and the Isles Keynes Vikings in England pp 50 51 o Corrain Ireland Wales Man and the Hebrides pp 83 85 Keynes Vikings in England pp 51 52 o Corrain Ireland Wales Man and the Hebrides pp 84 89 o Croinin Early Medieval Ireland pp 250 254 discusses Imar s career and the various arguments See also Woolf Pictland to Alba chapter 2 Downham Viking Kings chapters 1 3 especially pp 17 23 amp 64 67 o Corrain Vikings in Scotland and Ireland passim sets out the case against the identification Thus Downham Viking Kings p 29 figure 6 Cyril Hart s contributions to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography make Ragnall Sitriuc and Gofraid brothers likewise Hudson Viking Pirates p 31 figure 1 makes these three brothers sons of Guthred Downham Viking Kings pp 27 35 According to William of Malmesbury who states that he did not know the princess s name she was AEthelstan s full sister daughter of Edward the Elder and his first wife Ecgwynn John of Wallingford gives her name as Orgiue perhaps Eadgifu Hudson Viking Pirates pp 28 29 Hudson Viking Pirates p 31 figure 1 shows only Gofraid Downham Viking Kings p 29 figure 6 amp pp 245 247 254 amp 269 Annals of Clonmacnoise s a 931 Hart Sihtric Caech Saga of Olaf Tryggvason chapter 32 Heimskringla pp 171 173 Hudson Viking Pirates p 31 figure 1 amp p 84 Thus Keynes Rulers of the English p 505 Downham Viking Kings p 100 Hudson Viking Pirates p 29 Woolf Pictland to Alba p 151 Hudson olaf Sihtricson presumes Amlaib to have been born in York in which case he was a child at this time Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 168 173 Downham Viking Kings pp 103 105 Hudson Viking Pirates page numbers to be supplied Hudson Viking Pirates pp 30 31 Hudson states If there is any historical basis to this story Olaf Cuaran is clearly confused with his cousin Hudson olaf Guthfrithson Woolf Pictland to Alba p 174 Halloran Kevin September 2013 Anlaf Gufthrithson at York A Non existent Kingship Northern History University of Leeds 50 2 180 185 doi 10 1179 0078172X13Z 00000000042 S2CID 154514458 Downham Viking Kings pp 43 241 amp 248 Costambeys Ragnall Guthfrithson Hudson olaf Sihtricson Hudson Viking Pirates pp 33 34 Woolf Pictland to Alba p 181 Annals of Clonmacnoise s a 933 Higham Five Boroughs Higham Kingdom of Northumbria p 193 Miller Edmund Woolf Pictland to Alba p 174 but that either Amlaib controlled the Mercian Danelaw is questioned by Downham Viking Kings pp 108 109 Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle p 111 Ms D s a 943 The events are associated with Amlaib mac Gofrith by Higham Kingdom of Northumbria p 193 Miller Edmund Woolf Pictland to Alba p 174 Others such as Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle p 111 note 11 Downham Viking Kings p 110 Hudson olaf Sihtricson associate them with Amlaib Cuaran Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle pp 110 111 Ms A s a 942 Ms D s a 942 amp 943 Asser s Life of King Alfred the Great Thus Hudson Viking Pirates p 34 Regarding the confirmation Hudson describes it as a politically motivated act a recognised means of sealing an alliance with a dominant individual Ragnall was baptised some time later according to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle pp 110 111 Ms A s a 944 Ms E s a 944 Downham Viking Kings pp 46 amp 111 112 Woolf Pictland to Alba p 182 Hudson Viking Pirates p 35 Woolf Pictland to Alba p 182 suggests that the unnamed Mercian leader was AEthelstan Half King Costambeys Ragnall Downham Viking Kings p 46 the killing of Ragnall is reported in the Annals of Clonmacnoise s a 937 Downham Viking Kings pp 46 241 amp 248 Hudson Viking Pirates pp 35 36 Downham Viking Kings pp 46 47 amp 241 Hudson Viking Pirates pp 36 37 Woolf Pictland to Alba p 186 For a contrary view of Erik s identity see Downham Viking Kings pp 115 120 and Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 187 188 Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle pp 112 113 Mss A amp D s a 946 Ms E s a 948 Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle pp 112 113 Ms D s a 947 amp 948 Swanton Anglo Saxon Chronicle pp 112 113 Ms E s a 949 Downham Viking Kings pp 114 115 Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 178 190 Hudson Viking pirates pp 37 38 Downham Viking Kings pp 153 155 Downham Viking Kings pp 47 amp 254 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Downham Viking Kings pp 48 amp 241 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Hudson Domnall ua Neill Hudson Viking Pirates page numbers needed Downham Viking Kings pp 48 49 184 185 242 249 263 amp 269 check Hudson Viking Pirates Muiredach see Byrne Church and politics 673 Downham Viking Kings pp 50 amp 242 Hudson Domnall ua Neill Downham Viking Kings pp 50 amp 242 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Hudson Domnall ua Neill Downham Viking Kings pp 50 51 amp 242 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Hudson Domnall ua Neill Check Viking Pirates also Downham Viking Kings p 51 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Annals of Tigernach AT 976 3 977 1 978 2 amp 979 2 Domnall Claen may have been a personal enemy of Amlaib as he had killed Amlaib s father in law Murchad mac Finn deceitfully in 972 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Annals of Ulster AU 972 2 Downham Viking Kings pp 51 52 amp 190 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Hudson Mael Sechnaill Hudson Viking Pirates page numbers needed Downham Viking Kings pp 51 53 Hudson olaf Sihtricson Hudson Viking Pirates page numbers needed Only son by Dunlaith Downham Viking Kings p 29 figure 6 Hudson Viking Pirates p 49 figure 2 amp p 83 figure 3 Etchingam Gwynedd and Ireland p 167 fig 7 1 Hudson Viking Pirates pp 36 37 GunnlaugsSaga Ormstungu The Story of Gunnlaug Serpent Tongue Notes by P G Foote translated by R Quirk Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd London 1957 p 18References editCostambeys Marios Harrison B 2004 Ragnall Guthfrithson fl 943 944 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23314 Subscription or UK public library membership required Downham Clare 2007 Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland The Dynasty of Ivarr to A D 1014 Edinburgh Dunedin ISBN 978 1 903765 89 0 OCLC 163618313 Etchingham Colman 2007 Viking age Gwynedd and Ireland political relations in Jankulak Karen Wooding Jonathan M eds Ireland and Wales in the Middle Ages Dublin Four Courts Press pp 149 167 ISBN 978 1 85182 748 0 OCLC 52919358 Hall R A 2001 A kingdom too far York in the early tenth century in Higham N J Hill D H eds Edward the Elder 899 924 London Routledge pp 188 199 ISBN 0 415 21497 1 OCLC 45313225 Hall R A 1999 York in Lapidge Michael ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell Publishing pp 497 499 ISBN 0 631 22492 0 OCLC 185380798 Higham N J 1999 Five Boroughs in Lapidge Michael ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell Publishing p 186 ISBN 0 631 22492 0 OCLC 185380798 Higham N J 1993 The Kingdom of Northumbria AD 350 1100 Stroud Sutton ISBN 0 86299 730 5 OCLC 25551623 Hudson Benjamin T Harrison B 2004 olaf Guthfrithson d 941 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20670 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hudson Benjamin T Harrison B 2004 olaf Sihtricson c 926 981 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25544 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hudson Benjamin T 2005 Viking Pirates and Christian Princes Dynasty Religion and Empire in the North Atlantic Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 516237 4 OCLC 55286670 Keynes Simon 1999 Rulers of the English c 450 1066 in Lapidge Michael ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell Publishing pp 500 516 ISBN 0 631 22492 0 OCLC 185380798 Keynes Simon 1997 The Vikings in England c 790 1016 in Sawyer Peter ed The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings Oxford Oxford University Press pp 48 82 ISBN 0 19 285434 8 OCLC 45338877 Keynes Simon 1999 Wulfstan I in Lapidge Michael ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell Publishing pp 492 493 ISBN 0 631 22492 0 OCLC 185380798 Miller Sean 1999 Edmund in Lapidge Michael ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell Publishing pp 159 160 ISBN 0 631 22492 0 OCLC 185380798 o Corrain Donnchadh 1997 Ireland Wales Man and the Hebrides in Sawyer Peter ed The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings Oxford Oxford University Press pp 83 109 ISBN 0 19 285434 8 OCLC 45338877 o Corrain Donnchadh 1998 The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland in the Ninth Century PDF Peritia 12 296 339 doi 10 1484 J Peri 3 334 o Croinin Daibhi 1996 Early Medieval Ireland 400 1200 Longman History of Ireland London Longman ISBN 0 582 01565 0 OCLC 185365556 Stenton Frank M 1971 Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280139 2 OCLC 185499725 Sturluson Snorri 1964 Hollander Lee M ed Heimskringla History of the Kings of Norway Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 73061 6 OCLC 123332200 Swanton Michael 1996 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 92129 5 OCLC 214956905 Woolf Alex 2007 From Pictland to Alba 789 1070 The New Edinburgh History of Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1234 5 OCLC 123113911External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Olaf Olaf 4 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon EnglandRegnal titlesPreceded byOlaf Guthfrithson also known as Amlaib mac Gofrith King of Northumbria941 944 With Ragnall Succeeded byRagnall or English controlPreceded byBlacaire mac Gofrith King of Dublin945 947 Succeeded byBlacaire mac GofrithPreceded byEnglish control King of Northumbria949 952 Succeeded byErik BloodaxePreceded byGofraid mac Sitriuc King of Dublin952 980 Succeeded byGluniairn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amlaib Cuaran amp oldid 1172272265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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