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Battle of Clontarf

Battle of Clontarf
Part of the Viking Invasions of Ireland

Battle of Clontarf, oil on canvas painting by Hugh Frazer, 1826
Date23 April 1014[1]
Location53°21′54″N 06°11′51″W / 53.36500°N 6.19750°W / 53.36500; -6.19750
Result

Irish victory

  • Viking power in Ireland broken
  • Death of Brian Boru
Belligerents
Forces of the High King of Ireland Kingdom of Dublin
Kingdom of Leinster
Earldom of Orkney
Kingdom of the Isles
Commanders and leaders
Brian Boru 
Murchad mac Briain 
Sigtrygg Silkbeard
Malachy MacMurrough 
Sigurd the Stout 
Brodir 
Strength
5,000 men ~7,000 men
Casualties and losses
4,000 dead ~6,000 dead
class=notpageimage|
Location within Dublin
Battle of Clontarf (island of Ireland)

The Battle of Clontarf (Irish: Cath Chluain Tarbh) took place on 23 April 1014 at Clontarf, near Dublin, on the east coast of Ireland. It pitted an army led by Brian Boru, High King of Ireland, against a Norse-Irish alliance comprising the forces of Sigtrygg Silkbeard, King of Dublin; Máel Mórda mac Murchada, King of Leinster; and a Viking army from abroad led by Sigurd of Orkney and Brodir of Mann. It lasted from sunrise to sunset, and ended in a rout of the Viking and Leinster armies.

It is estimated that between 7,000 and 10,000 men were killed in the battle, including most of the leaders. Although Brian's forces were victorious, Brian himself was killed, as were his son Murchad and his grandson Toirdelbach. Leinster king Máel Mórda and Viking leaders Sigurd and Brodir were also slain. After the battle, the power of the Vikings and the Kingdom of Dublin was largely broken.

The battle was an important event in Irish history and is recorded in both Irish and Norse chronicles. In Ireland, the battle came to be seen as an event that freed the Irish from foreign domination, and Brian was hailed as a national hero. This view was especially popular during English rule in Ireland. Although the battle has come to be viewed in a more critical light, it still has a hold on the popular imagination.[2]

Background

 
Map of the larger Irish kingdoms in 1014

The Vikings (or Norsemen) began carrying out raids on Gaelic Ireland in the late eighth century, and over the following few decades they founded a number of settlements along the coast. Vikings first established themselves in Dublin in 838 when they built a fortified area, or longphort, there.[3] During the tenth century, Viking Dublin developed into the Kingdom of Dublin—a thriving town and a large area of the surrounding countryside, whose rulers controlled extensive territories in the Irish Sea and, at one time, York.[4] Over time, many Vikings were assimilated into Gaelic society and became the Norse-Gaels. Dublin was closely involved in the affairs of the Kingdom of the Isles, which included the Isle of Man and the Hebrides, and when the Dublin king Amlaíb Cuarán was defeated by Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill at the Battle of Tara in 980, he was supported by the men of the Isles.[5][6] Amlaíb's son, Sigtrygg Silkbeard, who was King of Dublin from 990, allied himself with his uncle Máel Mórda mac Murchada, King of Leinster. They met Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill and Brian Boru at the Battle of Glenmama in 999, where they were defeated.[7]

From the time of the seventh century and the reign of Domnall mac Áedo, the kingship of Tara was a title which was strongly associated with the high kingship of Ireland and was held by members of the Uí Néill dynasty, who controlled the northern half of Ireland.[8] In the tenth century, the Dál gCais, until then a small kingdom in what is now County Clare, began to expand. By the time of his death in 951, Cennétig mac Lorcáin had become King of Thomond. His son, Mathgamain mac Cennétig, was King of Munster when he died in 976.[9] Mathgamain's brother, Brian Boru, quickly asserted his claim to the kingship of Munster, then invaded Leinster and gained its submission.[10] In 998 he attacked the Uí Néill stronghold of Meath. Máel Sechnaill responded by attacking Munster in 999, and over the following years the two kings struggled for supremacy in Ireland. In 997, Brian and Máel Sechnaill met in Clonfert and reached an agreement where they recognised each other's reign over their respective halves of the country—Máel Sechnaill in the north and Brian in the south. Brian received the hostages of Leinster and Dublin from Máel Seachnaill, and surrendered the hostages of Connacht to him.[10] The peace was short-lived. After they had jointly defeated the Vikings at Glenmama, Brian resumed his attacks on Máel Seachnaill.[11] He marched on Tara in 1000 with the combined armies of Munster, Osraige, Leinster, and Dublin, but after an advance party consisting of the latter two groups was destroyed by Máel Sechnaill, Brian Boru withdrew from the area without giving battle.[12] In 1002 he marched with the same army to Athlone, and took the hostages of Connacht and Meath. He was now the undisputed High King of Ireland.[13]

Revolt of Dublin and Leinster

Brian consolidated his hold on Ireland by eventually obtaining the submission of the northern territories of Cenél nEógain, Cenél Conaill, and Ulaid, following a series of circuits of the northern part of the island. He completed the task when, following "a great hosting...by land and sea" into the Uí Néill territory of Cenél Conaill in 1011, the King was brought south to Dál gCais territory to submit to Brian Boru in person at his royal site of Cenn Corad.[14] It was not long, however, before fighting was renewed. Flaithbertach Ua Néill, King of the Cenél nEógain, resented the rise of Brian Boru. Had the old political order persisted, Flaithbertach would have been in line to succeed to the high-kingship. He attacked his Cenél Conaill neighbours in 1012 but, while doing so, Máel Seachnaill attacked the Cenél nEógain inauguration site of Tullahoge. Flaithbertach in turn raided Meath the following year and Máel Sechnaill was forced to back down.[15] Sigtrygg and Máel Mórda took advantage, and themselves raided Meath. Máel Sechnaill sent his army to raid the hinterland north of Dublin as far as Howth but he was defeated. He lost two hundred men including his son Flann. Sigtrygg then sent a fleet along the coast to attack the Munster town of Cork, but that was defeated, and Sigtrygg's nephew was killed.[16] A full-scale conflict was inevitable. Brian brought his army to Leinster in 1013, and camped outside Dublin from September until the end of the year.[17]

Sigtrygg went overseas in search of Viking support and enlisted the help of Sigurd Hlodvirsson, the Earl of Orkney and Brodir, a warrior of the Isle of Man. According to the Icelandic Njáls saga, Sigtrygg promised both men the kingship of Ireland if they defeated Brian.[17] In early 1014, Sveinn Forkbeard, King of Denmark, had invaded and become the first Norse king of England.

The Viking fleets of Orkney and Mann sailed into Dublin in Holy Week 1014.[17] Brian mustered the army of Munster, which was joined by Máel Sechnaill and two Connacht kings, Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin, King of Uí Fiachrach Aidhne, and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh, King of Uí Maine, and they marched on Dublin.[18][19]

Battle

 
1. Clondalkin and Kilmainham were plundered, Brian's son Donnchad (Donough) sacked Leinster (1014); 2. Brian's forces began war, camped near Kilmainham; 3. Finegall and Howth were plundered; 4. Vikings left Dublin to engage Brian; 5. Overseas Viking fleet arrived; 6. Battle of Clontarf; 7. Retreat of Vikings, some drowned in the sea, some forced through Dubgall's Bridge and were attacked again, a few returned to Dublin; 8. Brodar's possible route, killed Brian and was killed himself; 9. Brian's remains to Swords, then to Armagh.

No order of battle is given in the contemporary sources; the only leaders named are those who died in the battle. The nearest contemporary accounts are the Annals of Inisfallen and the Annals of Ulster. Among the fallen on Brian's side, they name the High King himself, his son Murchad, and his grandson Toirdelbach, as well as his nephew Conaing, Domnall mac Diarmata of Corcu Baiscind (County Clare), Mac Bethad mac Muiredaig of Ciarraige Luachra (County Kerry), Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin of Uí Fiachrach Aidhne, and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh of Uí Maine (both in south Connacht).[20] On the opposing side are named Máel Morda, Dubgall mac Amlaíb (brother of Sigtrygg), Gilla Ciaráin mac Glún Iairn (probably a nephew of Sigtrygg), Sigurd Hlodvirsson of Orkney, and Brodir, commander of the Viking fleet.[21] No notables from Meath are recorded among the slain; leading to the suggestion that, if present, Máel Sechnaill kept himself and his forces out of harm's way. But the Annals of Ulster say that Máel Sechnaill and Brian rode together to Dublin, and the Annals of the Four Masters go so far as to say that it was Máel Sechnaill who won the day, and completed the rout after the death of Brian.[22] On the other hand, Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib ("The War of the Irish with the Foreigners"), says that the men of Meath came to the muster with Brian, but "were not faithful to him".[23]

According to the Cogad, after his arrival at Dublin, Brian sent his forces north across the river to plunder the area known as Fine Gall, and they torched the country as far as Howth. Brian, now in his seventies, did not go with them but stayed behind to pray. The Dublin forces set out by land, and were joined at Clontarf at high tide by the Viking fleet that was in Dublin Bay.[24]

The front line of the Dublin-Leinster forces were the foreign Vikings, led by Brodir, Sigurd, and a man called Plait, described as "the bravest knight of all the foreigners".[25] Behind them were the men of Dublin, commanded by Dubgall mac Amlaíb and Gilla Ciaráin mac Glún Iairn. Behind them again came the Leinstermen, headed by Máel Mórda.[25] Sigtrygg remained in Dublin with enough men to defend it should the battle go against them. He watched the battle from the walls with his wife Sláine, the daughter of Brian.[26]

At the front of Brian's forces were the Dál gCais, led by Brian's son Murchad, Murchad's fifteen-year-old son Toirdelbach, Brian's brother Cudulligh, and Domnall mac Diarmata of Corcu Baiscind. Behind them were the other forces of Munster, commanded by Mothla mac Domnaill mic Fáeláin, King of the Déisi Muman, and Magnus mac Amchada, King of Uí Liatháin. Next came the Connachta, led by Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh. Also alongside was Ó Fearghail lords of Annaly. To one side of them were Brian's Viking allies; Fergal ua Ruairc, with the Uí Briúin and the Conmhaícne was placed on the left flank. After the Connachta came Máel Sechnaill and the men of Meath, but (the Cogad says) he had made an agreement with the men of Dublin that if he would not attack them, they would not attack him.[27]

The battle opened with Plait taunting Domnall mac Eimín, a Scottish ally of Brian. The two men marched out into the middle of the field and fought, and both died, "with the sword of each through the heart of the other, and the hair of each in the clenched hand of the other."[27]

Then the battle proper got under way. It is described in the Cogad as remarkably loud and bloody. The men of Connacht fought the men of Dublin, and the fighting was so fierce that only 100 Connachtmen and twenty Dublinmen survived. The last casualties occurred at "Dubgall's Bridge", which Seán Duffy suggests was a bridge over the River Tolka, on the road back to Dublin.[28] Brian's son Murchad, at the head of the Dál gCais army, took on the foreign Vikings and, according to the Cogad, he himself killed 100 of the enemy—fifty with the sword in his right hand and fifty with the sword in his left.[29] The Vikings wore mail; the Irish did not. Yet the Irish gained the advantage, partly through the use of small spears, which they hurled at the enemy, and partly through numerical superiority.[30]

The battle, which had begun at first light, lasted all day. Eventually, the Dublin-Leinster forces broke, and some withdrew towards their ships, while others made for a nearby wood. However, the tide had come in again, cutting off the passage to the wood, but also carrying off the Viking ships. With no way out, they were killed in large numbers, many of them by drowning.[31] Samuel Haughton, in 1860, calculated that the tide at Clontarf would have been high at 5:30 am and again at 5:55 pm, which is consistent with the account in the Cogad.[32] It was at this point that Brian's grandson Toirdelbach was killed. He pursued the enemy into the sea, but was hit by a wave and thrown up against the weir, and drowned.[33] Murchad killed Sigurd, the earl of Orkney, but shortly afterwards he himself was killed.[33] Brian was in his tent praying when Brodir found him, and killed him. Brodir himself was then killed,[34] possibly by Ulf the Quarrelsome.

Aftermath

 
Viking re-enactors from all over the world at the Battle of Clontarf millennium commemoration in Saint Anne's Park, Dublin (lining up before charging at the opposition). 19 April 2014.

Brian's body was brought to Swords, north of Dublin. There it was met by the coarb of Patrick, the traditional head of the church in Ireland, who brought the body back with him to Armagh, where it was interred after twelve days of mourning. Along with Brian were the body of Murchad and the heads of Conaing, Brian's nephew, and Mothla, King of the Déisi Muman.[35] Máel Sechnaill was restored as High King of Ireland, and remained secure in his position until his death in 1022.[36]

Though the Annals imply that life was not much changed after the death of Brian Boru, it created a succession crisis, as Brian's son and heir Murchad had died as well. Brian had two remaining sons who could challenge for the kingship: Donnchad mac Briain, his son with Gormflaith and Tadc mac Briain, his son with Echrad. According to the annals, Donnchad rallied the forces of the Dál gCais at Clontarf and led them home to Cenn Corad.[37]

Within weeks the Dál gCais, under the new leadership of Donnchad, were battling their old masters in Munster, the Eóganacht Raithlind. Tadc initially joined his brother against the Eóganacht, but Donnchad ordered his killing in 1023.[37]

Sigtrygg remained King of Dublin until 1036, and was apparently secure enough to go on pilgrimage to Rome in 1028.[38] However, after Clontarf, Dublin had been reduced to a lesser power. In 1052, Diarmait mac Máel na mBó, King of Leinster, captured Dublin and Fine Gall, for the first time asserting Irish overlordship over the Norse of Ireland.[39]

Historical debate

 
Illustration of the Battle of Clontarf, from a 1905 book

In modern times there has been a long-running debate among historians, which is now 250 years old, about Ireland's Viking age and the Battle of Clontarf. The standard view, and the "popular" view, is that the battle ended a war between the Irish and Vikings by which Brian Boru broke Viking power in Ireland. However revisionist historians see it as an Irish civil war in which Brian Boru's Munster and its allies defeated Leinster and Dublin, and that there were Vikings fighting on both sides.[40][41] In January 2018, researchers from the Universities of Coventry, Oxford and Sheffield, led by Coventry University theoretical physicist Professor Ralph Kenna, published a paper[42] in the journal Royal Society Open Science, that used network science to mathematically analyse a medieval text, Cogadh Gáedhel re Gallaibh (The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill, meaning invasions of Ireland by the Danes and other Norsemen), that listed over 1000 relationships between about 300 characters, and concluded that the standard and popular view was broadly correct, but that the picture was nevertheless more complex than "a fully 'clear-cut' Irish versus Viking conflict".[40][41] However one of the paper's co-authors,[42] PhD student Joseph Yose, added that "Our statistical analysis ... cannot decisively resolve the debate".[41]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kendrick, Sir Thomas D. (24 October 2018). A History of the Vikings. Routledge. p. 298. ISBN 978-1-136-24239-7.
  2. ^ Downham, Clare. "The Battle of Clontarf in Irish history and legend". History Ireland.
  3. ^ Forte, Angelo; Richard Oram; Frederik Pedersen (2005). Viking Empires. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 81. ISBN 0521829925. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  4. ^ Abrams, Lesley (1998). "The Conversion of the Scandinavians of Dublin". In Harper-Bill, Christopher (ed.). Anglo-Norman Studies XX: Proceedings of the Battle Conference in Dublin, 1997. Woodenbridge: Boydell. pp. 2–3. ISBN 0851155731. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  5. ^ Downham, Clare (March–April 2014). "Clontarf in the wider world". History Ireland. 22 (2): 23.
  6. ^ Etchingham, Colmán (2001). "North Wales, Ireland and the Isles: the Insular Viking zone". Peritia. 15: 145–87. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.434.
  7. ^ Mac Shamhráin, Ailbhe (2001). "The battle of Glenn Máma, Dublin and the high-kingship of Ireland". In Duffy, Seán (ed.). Medieval Dublin II. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 53–64. ISBN 1851826076.
  8. ^ Koch, John T. (2001). "Domnall mac Aedo maic Anmirech". In Koch, John T. (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. p. 605. ISBN 1851094407. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  9. ^ Ó Faoláin, Simon (2001). "Dál gCais". In Koch, John T. (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. pp. 554–55. ISBN 1851094407. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  10. ^ a b Lydon, James (1998). The Making of Ireland: From Ancient Times to the Present. London: Routledge. p. 32. ISBN 0415013488. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  11. ^ Duffy, Seán (2013). Brian Boru and the Battle of Clontarf. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. pp. 123–24. ISBN 9780717157785.
  12. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 129–33
  13. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 134–35.
  14. ^ McGettigan, Darren (2013). The Battle of Clontarf: Good Friday 1014. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 61–63. ISBN 9781846823848.
  15. ^ McGettigan (2013), p. 87
  16. ^ McGettigan (2013), p. 88
  17. ^ a b c McGettigan (2013), p. 89
  18. ^ McGettigan (2013), p. 91
  19. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 190–191
  20. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 179–180
  21. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 175, 181–184
  22. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 185, 191
  23. ^ Duffy (2013), p. 201
  24. ^ Duffy, Seán (March–April 2014). "What happened at the Battle of Clontarf?". History Ireland. 22 (2): 30.
  25. ^ a b Todd, James Henthorn, ed. (1867). Cogadh Gaedhel Re Gallaibh: The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill. London: Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer. pp. 164–165. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  26. ^ Duffy (2014), pp. 211–213
  27. ^ a b Cogadh Gaedhel Re Gallaibh, pp. 166–169
  28. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 209–210
  29. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 210–211
  30. ^ McGettigan (2013), pp. 101–102
  31. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 213–214
  32. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 215–217
  33. ^ a b Duffy (2013), p. 218
  34. ^ Duffy (2013), pp. 219–220
  35. ^ McGettigan (2013), pp. 109–110
  36. ^ McGettigan (2013), p. 111
  37. ^ a b Duffy, Seán (2013). Brian Boru and the Battle of Clontarf. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 249. ISBN 9780717157785.
  38. ^ McGettigan (2013), p. 118
  39. ^ Duffy (2013), p. 254
  40. ^ a b "Network science shines new light on Battle of Clontarf". RTE. 24 January 2018. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  41. ^ a b c Kevin O'Sullivan (24 January 2018). "Battle of Clontarf: It's a mathematical question". The Irish Times. Retrieved 24 January 2018. Centuries-old debate continues as social media analysis used to explore Viking-Irish strife ... The debate has carried on for the past 250 years.
  42. ^ a b Yose, Joseph; Kenna, Ralph; MacCarron, Máirín; MacCarron, Pádraig (2018). "Network analysis of the Viking Age in Ireland as portrayed in Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh". Royal Society Open Science. 5 (1): 171024. doi:10.1098/rsos.171024. PMC 5792891. PMID 29410814. This delivers a picture that lies between antipodal traditional and revisionist extremes; hostilities recorded in the text are mostly between Irish and Viking—but internal conflict forms a significant proportion of the negative interactions too.

Further reading

  • Howard B. Clarke, Ruth Johnson, eds. The Vikings in Ireland and Beyond: Before and After the Battle of Clontarf. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2015.

External links

battle, clontarf, part, viking, invasions, ireland, canvas, painting, hugh, frazer, 1826date23, april, 1014, locationclontarf, dublin53, 36500, 19750, 36500, 19750resultirish, victory, viking, power, ireland, broken, death, brian, borubelligerentsforces, high,. Battle of ClontarfPart of the Viking Invasions of IrelandBattle of Clontarf oil on canvas painting by Hugh Frazer 1826Date23 April 1014 1 LocationClontarf Dublin53 21 54 N 06 11 51 W 53 36500 N 6 19750 W 53 36500 6 19750ResultIrish victory Viking power in Ireland broken Death of Brian BoruBelligerentsForces of the High King of IrelandKingdom of DublinKingdom of LeinsterEarldom of Orkney Kingdom of the IslesCommanders and leadersBrian Boru Murchad mac Briain Sigtrygg SilkbeardMalachy MacMurrough Sigurd the Stout Brodir Strength5 000 men 7 000 menCasualties and losses4 000 dead 6 000 deadclass notpageimage Location within DublinShow map of DublinBattle of Clontarf island of Ireland Show map of island of Ireland The Battle of Clontarf Irish Cath Chluain Tarbh took place on 23 April 1014 at Clontarf near Dublin on the east coast of Ireland It pitted an army led by Brian Boru High King of Ireland against a Norse Irish alliance comprising the forces of Sigtrygg Silkbeard King of Dublin Mael Morda mac Murchada King of Leinster and a Viking army from abroad led by Sigurd of Orkney and Brodir of Mann It lasted from sunrise to sunset and ended in a rout of the Viking and Leinster armies It is estimated that between 7 000 and 10 000 men were killed in the battle including most of the leaders Although Brian s forces were victorious Brian himself was killed as were his son Murchad and his grandson Toirdelbach Leinster king Mael Morda and Viking leaders Sigurd and Brodir were also slain After the battle the power of the Vikings and the Kingdom of Dublin was largely broken The battle was an important event in Irish history and is recorded in both Irish and Norse chronicles In Ireland the battle came to be seen as an event that freed the Irish from foreign domination and Brian was hailed as a national hero This view was especially popular during English rule in Ireland Although the battle has come to be viewed in a more critical light it still has a hold on the popular imagination 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Revolt of Dublin and Leinster 3 Battle 4 Aftermath 5 Historical debate 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground Edit Map of the larger Irish kingdoms in 1014 The Vikings or Norsemen began carrying out raids on Gaelic Ireland in the late eighth century and over the following few decades they founded a number of settlements along the coast Vikings first established themselves in Dublin in 838 when they built a fortified area or longphort there 3 During the tenth century Viking Dublin developed into the Kingdom of Dublin a thriving town and a large area of the surrounding countryside whose rulers controlled extensive territories in the Irish Sea and at one time York 4 Over time many Vikings were assimilated into Gaelic society and became the Norse Gaels Dublin was closely involved in the affairs of the Kingdom of the Isles which included the Isle of Man and the Hebrides and when the Dublin king Amlaib Cuaran was defeated by Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill at the Battle of Tara in 980 he was supported by the men of the Isles 5 6 Amlaib s son Sigtrygg Silkbeard who was King of Dublin from 990 allied himself with his uncle Mael Morda mac Murchada King of Leinster They met Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill and Brian Boru at the Battle of Glenmama in 999 where they were defeated 7 From the time of the seventh century and the reign of Domnall mac Aedo the kingship of Tara was a title which was strongly associated with the high kingship of Ireland and was held by members of the Ui Neill dynasty who controlled the northern half of Ireland 8 In the tenth century the Dal gCais until then a small kingdom in what is now County Clare began to expand By the time of his death in 951 Cennetig mac Lorcain had become King of Thomond His son Mathgamain mac Cennetig was King of Munster when he died in 976 9 Mathgamain s brother Brian Boru quickly asserted his claim to the kingship of Munster then invaded Leinster and gained its submission 10 In 998 he attacked the Ui Neill stronghold of Meath Mael Sechnaill responded by attacking Munster in 999 and over the following years the two kings struggled for supremacy in Ireland In 997 Brian and Mael Sechnaill met in Clonfert and reached an agreement where they recognised each other s reign over their respective halves of the country Mael Sechnaill in the north and Brian in the south Brian received the hostages of Leinster and Dublin from Mael Seachnaill and surrendered the hostages of Connacht to him 10 The peace was short lived After they had jointly defeated the Vikings at Glenmama Brian resumed his attacks on Mael Seachnaill 11 He marched on Tara in 1000 with the combined armies of Munster Osraige Leinster and Dublin but after an advance party consisting of the latter two groups was destroyed by Mael Sechnaill Brian Boru withdrew from the area without giving battle 12 In 1002 he marched with the same army to Athlone and took the hostages of Connacht and Meath He was now the undisputed High King of Ireland 13 Revolt of Dublin and Leinster EditBrian consolidated his hold on Ireland by eventually obtaining the submission of the northern territories of Cenel nEogain Cenel Conaill and Ulaid following a series of circuits of the northern part of the island He completed the task when following a great hosting by land and sea into the Ui Neill territory of Cenel Conaill in 1011 the King was brought south to Dal gCais territory to submit to Brian Boru in person at his royal site of Cenn Corad 14 It was not long however before fighting was renewed Flaithbertach Ua Neill King of the Cenel nEogain resented the rise of Brian Boru Had the old political order persisted Flaithbertach would have been in line to succeed to the high kingship He attacked his Cenel Conaill neighbours in 1012 but while doing so Mael Seachnaill attacked the Cenel nEogain inauguration site of Tullahoge Flaithbertach in turn raided Meath the following year and Mael Sechnaill was forced to back down 15 Sigtrygg and Mael Morda took advantage and themselves raided Meath Mael Sechnaill sent his army to raid the hinterland north of Dublin as far as Howth but he was defeated He lost two hundred men including his son Flann Sigtrygg then sent a fleet along the coast to attack the Munster town of Cork but that was defeated and Sigtrygg s nephew was killed 16 A full scale conflict was inevitable Brian brought his army to Leinster in 1013 and camped outside Dublin from September until the end of the year 17 Sigtrygg went overseas in search of Viking support and enlisted the help of Sigurd Hlodvirsson the Earl of Orkney and Brodir a warrior of the Isle of Man According to the Icelandic Njals saga Sigtrygg promised both men the kingship of Ireland if they defeated Brian 17 In early 1014 Sveinn Forkbeard King of Denmark had invaded and become the first Norse king of England The Viking fleets of Orkney and Mann sailed into Dublin in Holy Week 1014 17 Brian mustered the army of Munster which was joined by Mael Sechnaill and two Connacht kings Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin King of Ui Fiachrach Aidhne and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh King of Ui Maine and they marched on Dublin 18 19 Battle Edit 1 Clondalkin and Kilmainham were plundered Brian s son Donnchad Donough sacked Leinster 1014 2 Brian s forces began war camped near Kilmainham 3 Finegall and Howth were plundered 4 Vikings left Dublin to engage Brian 5 Overseas Viking fleet arrived 6 Battle of Clontarf 7 Retreat of Vikings some drowned in the sea some forced through Dubgall s Bridge and were attacked again a few returned to Dublin 8 Brodar s possible route killed Brian and was killed himself 9 Brian s remains to Swords then to Armagh No order of battle is given in the contemporary sources the only leaders named are those who died in the battle The nearest contemporary accounts are the Annals of Inisfallen and the Annals of Ulster Among the fallen on Brian s side they name the High King himself his son Murchad and his grandson Toirdelbach as well as his nephew Conaing Domnall mac Diarmata of Corcu Baiscind County Clare Mac Bethad mac Muiredaig of Ciarraige Luachra County Kerry Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin of Ui Fiachrach Aidhne and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh of Ui Maine both in south Connacht 20 On the opposing side are named Mael Morda Dubgall mac Amlaib brother of Sigtrygg Gilla Ciarain mac Glun Iairn probably a nephew of Sigtrygg Sigurd Hlodvirsson of Orkney and Brodir commander of the Viking fleet 21 No notables from Meath are recorded among the slain leading to the suggestion that if present Mael Sechnaill kept himself and his forces out of harm s way But the Annals of Ulster say that Mael Sechnaill and Brian rode together to Dublin and the Annals of the Four Masters go so far as to say that it was Mael Sechnaill who won the day and completed the rout after the death of Brian 22 On the other hand Cogad Gaedel re Gallaib The War of the Irish with the Foreigners says that the men of Meath came to the muster with Brian but were not faithful to him 23 According to the Cogad after his arrival at Dublin Brian sent his forces north across the river to plunder the area known as Fine Gall and they torched the country as far as Howth Brian now in his seventies did not go with them but stayed behind to pray The Dublin forces set out by land and were joined at Clontarf at high tide by the Viking fleet that was in Dublin Bay 24 The front line of the Dublin Leinster forces were the foreign Vikings led by Brodir Sigurd and a man called Plait described as the bravest knight of all the foreigners 25 Behind them were the men of Dublin commanded by Dubgall mac Amlaib and Gilla Ciarain mac Glun Iairn Behind them again came the Leinstermen headed by Mael Morda 25 Sigtrygg remained in Dublin with enough men to defend it should the battle go against them He watched the battle from the walls with his wife Slaine the daughter of Brian 26 At the front of Brian s forces were the Dal gCais led by Brian s son Murchad Murchad s fifteen year old son Toirdelbach Brian s brother Cudulligh and Domnall mac Diarmata of Corcu Baiscind Behind them were the other forces of Munster commanded by Mothla mac Domnaill mic Faelain King of the Deisi Muman and Magnus mac Amchada King of Ui Liathain Next came the Connachta led by Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh Also alongside was o Fearghail lords of Annaly To one side of them were Brian s Viking allies Fergal ua Ruairc with the Ui Briuin and the Conmhaicne was placed on the left flank After the Connachta came Mael Sechnaill and the men of Meath but the Cogad says he had made an agreement with the men of Dublin that if he would not attack them they would not attack him 27 The battle opened with Plait taunting Domnall mac Eimin a Scottish ally of Brian The two men marched out into the middle of the field and fought and both died with the sword of each through the heart of the other and the hair of each in the clenched hand of the other 27 Then the battle proper got under way It is described in the Cogad as remarkably loud and bloody The men of Connacht fought the men of Dublin and the fighting was so fierce that only 100 Connachtmen and twenty Dublinmen survived The last casualties occurred at Dubgall s Bridge which Sean Duffy suggests was a bridge over the River Tolka on the road back to Dublin 28 Brian s son Murchad at the head of the Dal gCais army took on the foreign Vikings and according to the Cogad he himself killed 100 of the enemy fifty with the sword in his right hand and fifty with the sword in his left 29 The Vikings wore mail the Irish did not Yet the Irish gained the advantage partly through the use of small spears which they hurled at the enemy and partly through numerical superiority 30 The battle which had begun at first light lasted all day Eventually the Dublin Leinster forces broke and some withdrew towards their ships while others made for a nearby wood However the tide had come in again cutting off the passage to the wood but also carrying off the Viking ships With no way out they were killed in large numbers many of them by drowning 31 Samuel Haughton in 1860 calculated that the tide at Clontarf would have been high at 5 30 am and again at 5 55 pm which is consistent with the account in the Cogad 32 It was at this point that Brian s grandson Toirdelbach was killed He pursued the enemy into the sea but was hit by a wave and thrown up against the weir and drowned 33 Murchad killed Sigurd the earl of Orkney but shortly afterwards he himself was killed 33 Brian was in his tent praying when Brodir found him and killed him Brodir himself was then killed 34 possibly by Ulf the Quarrelsome Aftermath Edit Viking re enactors from all over the world at the Battle of Clontarf millennium commemoration in Saint Anne s Park Dublin lining up before charging at the opposition 19 April 2014 Brian s body was brought to Swords north of Dublin There it was met by the coarb of Patrick the traditional head of the church in Ireland who brought the body back with him to Armagh where it was interred after twelve days of mourning Along with Brian were the body of Murchad and the heads of Conaing Brian s nephew and Mothla King of the Deisi Muman 35 Mael Sechnaill was restored as High King of Ireland and remained secure in his position until his death in 1022 36 Though the Annals imply that life was not much changed after the death of Brian Boru it created a succession crisis as Brian s son and heir Murchad had died as well Brian had two remaining sons who could challenge for the kingship Donnchad mac Briain his son with Gormflaith and Tadc mac Briain his son with Echrad According to the annals Donnchad rallied the forces of the Dal gCais at Clontarf and led them home to Cenn Corad 37 Within weeks the Dal gCais under the new leadership of Donnchad were battling their old masters in Munster the Eoganacht Raithlind Tadc initially joined his brother against the Eoganacht but Donnchad ordered his killing in 1023 37 Sigtrygg remained King of Dublin until 1036 and was apparently secure enough to go on pilgrimage to Rome in 1028 38 However after Clontarf Dublin had been reduced to a lesser power In 1052 Diarmait mac Mael na mBo King of Leinster captured Dublin and Fine Gall for the first time asserting Irish overlordship over the Norse of Ireland 39 Historical debate Edit Illustration of the Battle of Clontarf from a 1905 book In modern times there has been a long running debate among historians which is now 250 years old about Ireland s Viking age and the Battle of Clontarf The standard view and the popular view is that the battle ended a war between the Irish and Vikings by which Brian Boru broke Viking power in Ireland However revisionist historians see it as an Irish civil war in which Brian Boru s Munster and its allies defeated Leinster and Dublin and that there were Vikings fighting on both sides 40 41 In January 2018 researchers from the Universities of Coventry Oxford and Sheffield led by Coventry University theoretical physicist Professor Ralph Kenna published a paper 42 in the journal Royal Society Open Science that used network science to mathematically analyse a medieval text Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill meaning invasions of Ireland by the Danes and other Norsemen that listed over 1000 relationships between about 300 characters and concluded that the standard and popular view was broadly correct but that the picture was nevertheless more complex than a fully clear cut Irish versus Viking conflict 40 41 However one of the paper s co authors 42 PhD student Joseph Yose added that Our statistical analysis cannot decisively resolve the debate 41 See also EditBattle of Confey Battle of Tara Brjans saga Njal s saga which includes a section on the Battle of Clontarf References Edit Kendrick Sir Thomas D 24 October 2018 A History of the Vikings Routledge p 298 ISBN 978 1 136 24239 7 Downham Clare The Battle of Clontarf in Irish history and legend History Ireland Forte Angelo Richard Oram Frederik Pedersen 2005 Viking Empires Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 81 ISBN 0521829925 Retrieved 18 April 2014 Abrams Lesley 1998 The Conversion of the Scandinavians of Dublin In Harper Bill Christopher ed Anglo Norman Studies XX Proceedings of the Battle Conference in Dublin 1997 Woodenbridge Boydell pp 2 3 ISBN 0851155731 Retrieved 18 April 2014 Downham Clare March April 2014 Clontarf in the wider world History Ireland 22 2 23 Etchingham Colman 2001 North Wales Ireland and the Isles the Insular Viking zone Peritia 15 145 87 doi 10 1484 J Peri 3 434 Mac Shamhrain Ailbhe 2001 The battle of Glenn Mama Dublin and the high kingship of Ireland In Duffy Sean ed Medieval Dublin II Dublin Four Courts Press pp 53 64 ISBN 1851826076 Koch John T 2001 Domnall mac Aedo maic Anmirech In Koch John T ed Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 2 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO p 605 ISBN 1851094407 Retrieved 18 April 2014 o Faolain Simon 2001 Dal gCais In Koch John T ed Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 2 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO pp 554 55 ISBN 1851094407 Retrieved 18 April 2014 a b Lydon James 1998 The Making of Ireland From Ancient Times to the Present London Routledge p 32 ISBN 0415013488 Retrieved 18 April 2014 Duffy Sean 2013 Brian Boru and the Battle of Clontarf Dublin Gill amp Macmillan pp 123 24 ISBN 9780717157785 Duffy 2013 pp 129 33 Duffy 2013 pp 134 35 McGettigan Darren 2013 The Battle of Clontarf Good Friday 1014 Dublin Four Courts Press pp 61 63 ISBN 9781846823848 McGettigan 2013 p 87 McGettigan 2013 p 88 a b c McGettigan 2013 p 89 McGettigan 2013 p 91 Duffy 2013 pp 190 191 Duffy 2013 pp 179 180 Duffy 2013 pp 175 181 184 Duffy 2013 pp 185 191 Duffy 2013 p 201 Duffy Sean March April 2014 What happened at the Battle of Clontarf History Ireland 22 2 30 a b Todd James Henthorn ed 1867 Cogadh Gaedhel Re Gallaibh The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill London Longmans Green Reader and Dyer pp 164 165 Retrieved 18 April 2014 Duffy 2014 pp 211 213 a b Cogadh Gaedhel Re Gallaibh pp 166 169 Duffy 2013 pp 209 210 Duffy 2013 pp 210 211 McGettigan 2013 pp 101 102 Duffy 2013 pp 213 214 Duffy 2013 pp 215 217 a b Duffy 2013 p 218 Duffy 2013 pp 219 220 McGettigan 2013 pp 109 110 McGettigan 2013 p 111 a b Duffy Sean 2013 Brian Boru and the Battle of Clontarf Dublin Gill amp Macmillan p 249 ISBN 9780717157785 McGettigan 2013 p 118 Duffy 2013 p 254 a b Network science shines new light on Battle of Clontarf RTE 24 January 2018 Retrieved 24 January 2018 a b c Kevin O Sullivan 24 January 2018 Battle of Clontarf It s a mathematical question The Irish Times Retrieved 24 January 2018 Centuries old debate continues as social media analysis used to explore Viking Irish strife The debate has carried on for the past 250 years a b Yose Joseph Kenna Ralph MacCarron Mairin MacCarron Padraig 2018 Network analysis of the Viking Age in Ireland as portrayed in Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh Royal Society Open Science 5 1 171024 doi 10 1098 rsos 171024 PMC 5792891 PMID 29410814 This delivers a picture that lies between antipodal traditional and revisionist extremes hostilities recorded in the text are mostly between Irish and Viking but internal conflict forms a significant proportion of the negative interactions too Further reading EditHoward B Clarke Ruth Johnson eds The Vikings in Ireland and Beyond Before and After the Battle of Clontarf Dublin Four Courts Press 2015 External links EditBattle of Clontarf Digital Humanities site Trinity College Dublin Battle of Clontarf Commemorative website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Clontarf amp oldid 1159501273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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