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Bridei son of Beli

Bridei son of Beli ; died 692)[a] was king of Fortriu and of the Picts from 671 until 692. His reign marks the start of the period known to historians as the Verturian hegemony, a turning point in the history of Scotland, when the uniting of Pictish provinces under the over-kingship of the kings of Fortriu saw the development of a strong Pictish state and identity encompassing most of the peoples north of the Forth.

Bridei son of Beli
The battle scene from the Aberlemno 2 Pictish stone, which may show the Battle of Dun Nechtain; Picts on the left, Northumbrians on the right, the mounted Pictish figure perhaps representing King Bridei
King of the Picts and of Fortriu
Reign671–692
PredecessorDrest son of Donuel
SuccessorTaran son of Ainftech
Bornby 628
Died692
Burial
FatherBeli I of Alt Clut
MotherUnknown daughter of Edwin of Northumbria

Bridei was probably brought up at the court of the Anglian kingdom of Northumbria, whose expansion had established it as the dominant power in northern Britain over the mid 7th century. His father was Beli, king of the British kingdom of Alt Clut, and his mother probably a daughter of Edwin of Northumbria, though his grandfather may have been the earlier Pictish king Nechtan nepos Uerb.

Bridei's rise to power in Fortriu probably took place under the patronage of his kinsman King Ecgfrith of Northumbria, after Bridei's predecessor Drest son of Donuel was expelled from the kingship after leading a rebellion against Northumbrian domination in 671. Bridei established an expansionary policy however, and in a series of campaigns between 679 and 683 built a confederation of Pictish territories owing allegiance to him through alliance and conquest. This brought him into conflict with Ecgfrith, who led an army north into Pictish territory in 685, culminating in the Battle of Dun Nechtain, when Ecgfrith was killed and the Northumbrian army destroyed by Bridei's forces.

Bridei's victory at Dun Nechtain marked the end of Northumbrian overlordship over the Picts, the Gaels and many of the Britons; and saw him consolidate his extensive territorial control. The following period saw the conscious development of the idea of the Picts as a single people under a single ruler; this process continued under the later kingships of Bridei son of Der-Ilei and Naiton son of Der-Ilei, who were probably his grandchildren.

Background edit

Political background edit

 
Approximate language zones in southern Scotland, 7th–8th centuries

Before the Viking incursions that started in the late 8th century, the area of modern Scotland was divided between four main cultural and linguistic groupings: the Gaels of Dál Riata, the Britons, the Angles and the Picts,[1] though identities and political groupings were in a constant state of flux and could often change among and between them.[2] The Gaels occupied the west of modern Scotland north of the Firth of Clyde and were part of a Gaelic linguistic and cultural zone that included Ireland, from which it was separated only by the short sea crossing of the North Channel.[3] To the south a number of British kingdoms had developed in the aftermath of the withdrawal of the Roman Empire, including Alt Clut in the basin of the River Clyde, Rheged to the south around the Solway Firth, and the Gododdin to the east around Edinburgh.[4] In the south east Bernicia had been established as a Germanic-speaking Anglian kingdom based around Bamburgh in modern North East England in the mid 6th century, and by 638 had captured Edinburgh and gained much of the territory of the Goddodin around Lothian.[4] The Picts largely occupied the lands in the east of modern Scotland north of the Forth, and were originally a diverse group of peoples defined at least in part by never having been Romano-British.[5]

The territory of the Picts was divided into two parts by the Mounth – the chain of high mountains that runs almost to the North Sea near Dunottar – and the northern and southern parts of the Pictish territory were further divided into smaller territories referred to by the Northumbrian writer Bede as prouinciae, at least some of which are recorded as kingdoms.[6] Most significant of these was Fortriu, which was located north of the Mounth around the Moray Firth, encompassing the areas around Forres and Inverness, and whose primary centre of royal power probably lay at Burghead, which was three times larger than any other enclosed site in Early Medieval Scotland.[7]

Between 653 and 685 the Picts were under Anglian overlordship through a series of puppet kings,[8] as the expansionary kingdom of Northumbria came to dominate much of northern Britain.[9] The southern Pictish lands south of the Mounth may have formed an Anglo-Pictish province controlled from Fife,[10] whose ruling family may have included the Northumbrian noble Beornhæth.[11] A document written in Rome between 678 and 681 records the claim of the Northumbrian bishop Wilfrid to primacy over "all the northern part of Britain and of Ireland and the Isles which are inhabited by the races of Angles, Britons, Gaels and Picts".[12] In 681 the Northumbrian bishop Trumwine was appointed "Bishop of the Picts", though the location of his see at Abercorn, in Northumbrian territory south of the Forth, suggests that Northumbrian control of Pictish territory north of the Forth might still have been seen as insecure.[12]

Family background edit

 
Alt Clut on the River Clyde at Dumbarton, seat of Bridei's father Beli

Bridei is described in a verse attributed to the broadly contemporary Adomnán as "son of the king of Dumbarton", indicating that he was the son of Beli, king of the British kingdom of Alt Clut; making Bridei also the grandson of Beli's predecessor Neithon son of Guipno; and the brother or half-brother of Beli's successor Eugein.[13] The conflict between Bridei and Ecgfrith of Northumbria for Pictish supremacy is described in the poem Iniu feras Bruide cath ("Today Bridei Fights a Battle") as being over the legacy (forba) of Neithon, providing evidence that this Neithon son of Guipno, Bridei's grandfather, may have been the same person as the earlier Pictish king recorded as Nechtan grandson of Uerb,[14] and that the Alt Clut dynasty into which Bridei was born may have had Pictish origins.[15]

Nennius' Historia Brittonum tells us that Bridei was King Ecgfrith's fratruelis or maternal first cousin, suggesting Bridei's mother was probably a daughter of King Edwin of Deira,[16] and half-sister of the Northumbrian princess Eanflæd.[14] The marriage of Bridei's parents would have marked an accommodation between Edwin and Neithon,[14] extending Northumbrian influence into the lands of the Picts and of the Britons of the Clyde.[17]

Life and reign edit

Early life edit

Bridei must have been born no later than 628, as the death of his father Beli of Alt Clut is recorded in the Annales Cambriae as taking place in 627.[18] Bridei was probably brought up within the Northumbrian court,[8] having possibly been taken there as a hostage by the Northumbrian king Oswiu after the killing of the Dal Riatan king Domnall Brecc by Bridei's half-brother Eugein of Alt Clut in 643.[19]

Rise to power edit

Bridei's accession to the Pictish kingship seems to have been due at least in part to the influence of the Northumbrian kings Oswiu and Ecgfrith.[17] Bridei was passed over several times for the succession to both the Pictish and Alt Clut kingships, probably as the fall of his grandfather Edwin of Northumbria in 633 diminished Bridei's political connectedness, but the marriage of his aunt Eanflæd to the newly crowned King of Bernicia Oswiu in 642 would have seen him once again become well-connected to the centres of Northumbrian power.[20]

Bridei became king after the expulsion in 671 of his predecessor Drest son of Donuel from his kingdom, which was probably centred around the northern Pictish district of Fortriu.[21] This event is normally connected to the "Pictish rebellion" that culminated in the Battle of Two Rivers, suggesting Drest was leading an attempt to overthrow Northumbrian overlordship in the early years of Ecgfrith's reign, after the death of Ecgfrith's powerful predecessor Oswiu.[22] Stephen of Ripon records in his Life of St Wilfrid how the "bestial peoples of the Picts despised their subjection to the Saxons with a fierce disdain and threatened to throw off from themselves the yoke of servitude", before describing a Northumbrian victory so comprehensive it was "filling two rivers with corpses so that, amazing to say, the killers pursued the crowd of those fleeing, walking over the rivers dry foot".[17] Stephen also records that Drest had "gathered together innumerable nations (gentes) from every nook and corner in the north",[23] suggesting that the Pictish forces were not otherwise politically united.[24]

The expulsion of Drest and his replacement by Bridei was probably engineered by the combined power of Ecgfrith and Pictish supporters of Bridei.[17] Bridei would have seen himself as a subject of Ecgfrith in 671, and may have been initially subject to an overlord from a southern Pictish territory such as Beornhaeth, a possibility supported by the description in the Annals of Inisfallen of the later Battle of Dun Nechtain between Bridei and Ecgfrith as "a great battle between Picts".[10]

Expansion edit

 
 
Dunbeath (679)
 
Dunnottar (680)
 
Orkney (682)
 
Dundurn (683)
 
Dunadd (683)
class=notpageimage|
Elite sites probably attacked by Bridei between 679 and 685, alongside Burghead, the primary power centre of Bridei's own kingdom of Fortriu

Bridei seems have been actively intervening in the politics of Dál Riata in the early years of his reign.[25] He may have been involved in the killing of Domangart mac Domnaill the king of Dál Riata in 673,[26] and may also have entered into a three-way alliance with his nephew Dumnagual of Alt Clut and Finguine Fota of the Cenél Comgaill, king of Cowal and the grandfather of the later king of Fortriu Bridei son of Der-Ilei.[27] The Annals of Ulster record that in 676 many Picts were drowned in Loch Awe, also suggesting an aggressive regime under Bridei attacking northern Dál Riata.[12]

In the 680s Bridei seems to have turned his attention away from Argyll, with a campaign that started less than a year after the Northumbrian king Ecgfrith was weakened by his defeat by Æthelred of Mercia at the Battle of the Trent in 679.[28] A series of conflicts recorded in Irish annals as taking place in northern Britain from 679 are likely to represent Bridei expanding his power-base.[29] The Annals of Ulster describe a siege of Dunnottar in 680.[30] Bridei attacked first Dunbeath in Caithness and then Orkney in 682,[31] a campaign so violent that the Annals of Ulster said that the Orkney Islands were "destroyed" by Bridei ("Orcades deletae sunt la Bruide").[12] With opposition removed from the north,[31] sieges of Dundurn in Strathearn and Dunadd in mid Argyll are reported the following year.[32] As with the earlier siege of Dunnottar, Bridei, though not explicitly named, was probably the assailant.[30]

Together Dunnottar and Dundurn mark the northern and southern limits of the southern Pictish territory south of the Mounth, and their sieges indicate a period of sustained pressure by Bridei across the area.[30] The pattern of high-status sites attacked in Bridei's campaigns suggests they were the centres of independent provinces that resisted his rule, as he built a confederation of territories by alliance or conquest that owed allegiance and tribute to him as king.[33] Bridei's model of over-kingship seems closely modelled on the system of tribute employed by the Picts' own Northumbrian over-lords.[34]

Dun Nechtain and aftermath edit

Possible locations of the Battle of Dun Nechtain

Bridei's threat to the southern Pictish lands represented a challenge to Northumbrian hegemony,[35] but the immediate cause of Ecgfrith's attack on the Picts in 685 was said by Bede to be Bridei ceasing to pay the Northumbrians tribute,[36] possibly in response to the Northumbrian raid in 684 against Brega in Ireland, which was probably undertaken in response to an alliance between the Irish and the Britons.[37] Ecgfrith sought to re-assert his dominance through a military campaign, and Bede describes how – against the advice of churchmen including St Cuthbert – Ecgfrith "rashly led an army to lay waste the province of the Picts".[38]

Ecgfrith's incursion far into Pictish territory ended with the Battle of Dun Nechtain on the afternoon of Saturday 20 May 685,[14] when Ecgfrith himself was killed and his army annihilated by Bridei's after being lured by the Picts into what Bede described as "the narrow passes of inaccessible mountains".[39] The location of the battle is uncertain: since being identified in the early 19th century by the antiquarian George Chalmers on the basis of its placename[40] it has generally been associated with Dunnichen in Angus, a location supported by the presence of a carved battle scene on one of the nearby Aberlemno Sculptured Stones; but since 2006 Dunachton in Badenoch has been suggested as a much better match for Bede's description, while similarly supported by the site's toponymy.[41]

The immediate consequence of Bridei's victory at Dun Nechtain was the ending of Northumbrian overlordship over the lands of the Picts, of Dál Riata and of some British lands,[42] though it is possible that Fife and Manau did not fall under the control of Fortriu until the later defeat of the Northumbrian Berhtred by Bridei son of Der-Ilei in 698.[43] The Angles occupying Pictish lands either fled or were killed or enslaved,[44] and the Anglian Trumwine who claimed to be "Bishop of the Picts" with authority over the Pictish church from his see at Abercorn, retired to Whitby in Northumbria.[42] The ending of the tributary relationship between Gaelic, British and Pictish territories and Northumbria would have caused significant political disruption across all these northern polities.[44]

Bridei's success in leading multiple Pictish provinces against an outside enemy would have served to legitimise his kingship, consolidate his extensive territorial control and promote the sense of the territories under his rule as a single cohesive community.[45] The power vacuum left by the Northumbrian retreat in the southern Pictish lands gave Bridei and his successors the opportunity to install favoured leaders from existing southern dynasties in positions of power, and to move new groups of allies into territory abandoned by the Northumbrians.[46] Bridei's reign saw the Dal Riatan kindred the Cenel Comgaill rise in prominence, gaining territory in the area of modern Clackmannanshire in the wake of Northumbian withdrawal.[47] The marriage of Dargart mac Finguine of the Cenel Comgaill to Der-Ilei, mother of the later kings of Fortriu Bridei son of Der-Ilei and Naiton son of Der-Ilei and probably Bridei's daughter, saw the kindred connected directly into the Pictish Royal household.[48]

Bridei would have been at least 57 years old at the time of his victory at Dun Nechtain in 685.[18] His death in 692[49] is recorded by both the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach. He was buried on Iona, and mourned by Adomnán, the Abbot of Iona,[50] to whom is attributed a surviving lament for Bridei's death.[51]

Legacy edit

Bridei is the first king to be explicitly described in contemporary sources as rex Fortrenn, or king of Fortriu, and his reign marks the start of a period that would be a turning point in the history of modern-day Scotland.[14] Bridei's victory at the Battle of Dun Nechtain in 685, achieved by uniting various Pictish provinces under his leadership,[52] ended Northumbrian rule north of the Forth and extended the power of Fortriu southwards beyond the Mounth.[53] His reign marked the establishment of the pre-eminence of Fortriu as a Pictish province that saw it develop into the overkingdom of the Picts.[54] Known to historians as the 'Verturian Hegemony',[55] this led to the growth of a powerful Pictish state.[56]

The overlordship of the kings of Fortriu that started with the reign of Bridei also saw the encouragement by its rulers of the idea that the Picts were a single people under a single king.[57] Before Bridei's victory over Ecgfrith references in documents to the Picts used the plural term gentes, whereas afterwards they are referred to using the singular gens.[58] The Pictish king lists that began circulating from the mid 7th century consciously sought to legitimise the Fortriu dynasty's dominance by constructing the idea of a single Pictish over-king, projected backwards before the historical horizon to create the impression of a single office of ancient provenance.[59] It is likely that the Pictish origin myth known to Bede was composed around this time,[60] and it is probably the period from Bridei's reign that saw the development of the common language of the Pictish symbol stones as a means of reinforcing the status of key members of society.[61]

Bridei may have been the father or, less likely, the brother of Der-Ilei, the mother of the later Pictish kings Bridei son of Der-Ilei and Naiton son of Der-Ilei, and it is through her that they would have based their claim to the kingship of Fortriu after the overthrow by Bridei son of Der-Ilei of Bridei son of Beli's successor Taran son of Ainftech.[62] By the reign of these successors, it seems that the lands of the Picts initially brought under the control of Fortriu by Bridei son of Beli by military means were being perceived as a single nation under a single ruler.[63]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bridei's name is found as "Bridei", "Bredei", "Brude", "Bruide" and "Bruidhe"; his father's as "Beli", "Bili" and "Bile". "Son of" is sometimes represented by the Old Irish "mac", the Old Welsh "map", the Latin "filius" or the abbreviations "m." or "f." Although regnal numbers do not appear in any contemporary source, some 19th and 20th century sources refer to Bridei son of Beli as "Bridei III".

References edit

  1. ^ Foster 2014, p. 1.
  2. ^ Márkus 2017, pp. 85–86.
  3. ^ Márkus 2017, pp. 78–79.
  4. ^ a b Foster 2014, p. 5.
  5. ^ Márkus 2017, pp. 81, 83.
  6. ^ Márkus 2017, pp. 102–103.
  7. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 50–51.
  8. ^ a b Foster 2014, p. 40.
  9. ^ Noble & Evans 2022, p. 16.
  10. ^ a b Fraser 2009, p. 203.
  11. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 200–201.
  12. ^ a b c d Márkus 2017, p. 96.
  13. ^ MacQuarrie 1993, p. 9.
  14. ^ a b c d e Fraser 2009, p. 202.
  15. ^ Woolf 1998, p. 161.
  16. ^ Woolf 1998, pp. 161–162.
  17. ^ a b c d Márkus 2017, p. 95.
  18. ^ a b Fraser 2006, p. 25.
  19. ^ Fraser 2006, pp. 202–203.
  20. ^ Woolf 1998, p. 162.
  21. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 201.
  22. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 201–202.
  23. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 23.
  24. ^ Fraser 2006, pp. 23–24.
  25. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 207–208.
  26. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 206.
  27. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 243.
  28. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 213–214.
  29. ^ Noble & Evans 2022, pp. 17–18.
  30. ^ a b c Fraser 2009, p. 214.
  31. ^ a b Grigg 2015, p. 63.
  32. ^ Noble & Evans 2022, p. 17.
  33. ^ Grigg 2015, pp. 63–64.
  34. ^ Fraser 2006, pp. 31–32.
  35. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 215.
  36. ^ Foster 2014, p. 41.
  37. ^ Fraser 2006, pp. 45–47.
  38. ^ Márkus 2017, p. 98.
  39. ^ Márkus 2017, pp. 98–99.
  40. ^ Woolf 2006, p. 184.
  41. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 215–216.
  42. ^ a b Márkus 2017, p. 99.
  43. ^ Fraser 2009, pp. 254–256.
  44. ^ a b Grigg 2015, p. 64.
  45. ^ Grigg 2015, pp. 64–65.
  46. ^ Grigg 2015, p. 92.
  47. ^ Grigg 2015, p. 102.
  48. ^ Grigg 2015, pp. 101–102.
  49. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 383.
  50. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 242.
  51. ^ Clancy & Márkus1995, pp. 166–168.
  52. ^ Grigg 2015, p. 16.
  53. ^ Noble & Evans 2022, p. 18.
  54. ^ Noble & Evans 2022, pp. 16, 18.
  55. ^ Foster 2014, p. 150.
  56. ^ Márkus 2017, p. 102.
  57. ^ Foster 2014, p. 37.
  58. ^ Grigg 2015, p. 66.
  59. ^ Grigg 2015, pp. 103–104.
  60. ^ Fraser 2009, p. 227.
  61. ^ Foster 2014, p. 101.
  62. ^ Clancy 2004, p. 135.
  63. ^ Grigg 2015, pp. 66–67.

Bibliography edit

  • Anderson, Marjorie O. (1973). Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press.
  • Clancy, Thomas Owen (2004). "Philosopher-king: Nechtan mac Der Ilei". Scottish Historical Review. 83 (2): 125–149. doi:10.3366/shr.2004.83.2.125.
  • Clancy, Thomas Owen; Márkus, Gilbert (1995). Iona: The Earliest Poetry of a Celtic Monastery. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-0531-2.
  • Foster, Sally M. (2014). Picts, Scots and Gaels – Early Historic Scotland. Edinburgh: Birlinn. ISBN 9781780271910.
  • Fraser, James E. (2006). The Pictish Conquest – The Battle of Dunnichen 685 & the birth of Scotland. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 9780752439624.
  • Fraser, James E. (2009). From Caledonia to Pictland: Scotland to 795. New Edinburgh History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748612321.
  • Grigg, Julianna (2015). The Philosopher King and the Pictish Nation. Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN 9781846825637.
  • MacQuarrie, Alan (1993). "The Kings of Strathclyde". In Grant, A.; Stringer, K. (eds.). Medieval Scotland: Crown, Lordship and Community, Essays Presented to G.W.S. Barrow. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 1–19. ISBN 9780748611102.
  • Márkus, Gilbert (2017). Conceiving a Nation: Scotland to AD 900. New History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748678983.
  • Noble, Gordon; Evans, Nicholas (2022). The Picts: Scourge of Rome, Rulers of the North. Edinburgh: Birlinn. ISBN 9781780277783.
  • Woolf, Alex (1998). "Pictish matriliny reconsidered". The Innes Review. 49 (2): 147–167. doi:10.3366/inr.1998.49.2.147.
  • Woolf, Alex (2006). "Dun Nechtain, Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts". Scottish Historical Review. 85 (220): 182–201. doi:10.1353/shr.2007.0029.

External links edit

  • Annals of Tigernach
  • Annals of Ulster (translated)
  • Historia Brittonum (translated)
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the Picts
672–693
Succeeded by

bridei, beli, died, king, fortriu, picts, from, until, reign, marks, start, period, known, historians, verturian, hegemony, turning, point, history, scotland, when, uniting, pictish, provinces, under, over, kingship, kings, fortriu, development, strong, pictis. Bridei son of Beli died 692 a was king of Fortriu and of the Picts from 671 until 692 His reign marks the start of the period known to historians as the Verturian hegemony a turning point in the history of Scotland when the uniting of Pictish provinces under the over kingship of the kings of Fortriu saw the development of a strong Pictish state and identity encompassing most of the peoples north of the Forth Bridei son of BeliThe battle scene from the Aberlemno 2 Pictish stone which may show the Battle of Dun Nechtain Picts on the left Northumbrians on the right the mounted Pictish figure perhaps representing King BrideiKing of the Picts and of FortriuReign671 692PredecessorDrest son of DonuelSuccessorTaran son of AinftechBornby 628Died692BurialIona AbbeyFatherBeli I of Alt ClutMotherUnknown daughter of Edwin of Northumbria Bridei was probably brought up at the court of the Anglian kingdom of Northumbria whose expansion had established it as the dominant power in northern Britain over the mid 7th century His father was Beli king of the British kingdom of Alt Clut and his mother probably a daughter of Edwin of Northumbria though his grandfather may have been the earlier Pictish king Nechtan nepos Uerb Bridei s rise to power in Fortriu probably took place under the patronage of his kinsman King Ecgfrith of Northumbria after Bridei s predecessor Drest son of Donuel was expelled from the kingship after leading a rebellion against Northumbrian domination in 671 Bridei established an expansionary policy however and in a series of campaigns between 679 and 683 built a confederation of Pictish territories owing allegiance to him through alliance and conquest This brought him into conflict with Ecgfrith who led an army north into Pictish territory in 685 culminating in the Battle of Dun Nechtain when Ecgfrith was killed and the Northumbrian army destroyed by Bridei s forces Bridei s victory at Dun Nechtain marked the end of Northumbrian overlordship over the Picts the Gaels and many of the Britons and saw him consolidate his extensive territorial control The following period saw the conscious development of the idea of the Picts as a single people under a single ruler this process continued under the later kingships of Bridei son of Der Ilei and Naiton son of Der Ilei who were probably his grandchildren Contents 1 Background 1 1 Political background 1 2 Family background 2 Life and reign 2 1 Early life 2 2 Rise to power 2 3 Expansion 2 4 Dun Nechtain and aftermath 3 Legacy 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground editPolitical background edit nbsp Approximate language zones in southern Scotland 7th 8th centuries Before the Viking incursions that started in the late 8th century the area of modern Scotland was divided between four main cultural and linguistic groupings the Gaels of Dal Riata the Britons the Angles and the Picts 1 though identities and political groupings were in a constant state of flux and could often change among and between them 2 The Gaels occupied the west of modern Scotland north of the Firth of Clyde and were part of a Gaelic linguistic and cultural zone that included Ireland from which it was separated only by the short sea crossing of the North Channel 3 To the south a number of British kingdoms had developed in the aftermath of the withdrawal of the Roman Empire including Alt Clut in the basin of the River Clyde Rheged to the south around the Solway Firth and the Gododdin to the east around Edinburgh 4 In the south east Bernicia had been established as a Germanic speaking Anglian kingdom based around Bamburgh in modern North East England in the mid 6th century and by 638 had captured Edinburgh and gained much of the territory of the Goddodin around Lothian 4 The Picts largely occupied the lands in the east of modern Scotland north of the Forth and were originally a diverse group of peoples defined at least in part by never having been Romano British 5 The territory of the Picts was divided into two parts by the Mounth the chain of high mountains that runs almost to the North Sea near Dunottar and the northern and southern parts of the Pictish territory were further divided into smaller territories referred to by the Northumbrian writer Bede as prouinciae at least some of which are recorded as kingdoms 6 Most significant of these was Fortriu which was located north of the Mounth around the Moray Firth encompassing the areas around Forres and Inverness and whose primary centre of royal power probably lay at Burghead which was three times larger than any other enclosed site in Early Medieval Scotland 7 Between 653 and 685 the Picts were under Anglian overlordship through a series of puppet kings 8 as the expansionary kingdom of Northumbria came to dominate much of northern Britain 9 The southern Pictish lands south of the Mounth may have formed an Anglo Pictish province controlled from Fife 10 whose ruling family may have included the Northumbrian noble Beornhaeth 11 A document written in Rome between 678 and 681 records the claim of the Northumbrian bishop Wilfrid to primacy over all the northern part of Britain and of Ireland and the Isles which are inhabited by the races of Angles Britons Gaels and Picts 12 In 681 the Northumbrian bishop Trumwine was appointed Bishop of the Picts though the location of his see at Abercorn in Northumbrian territory south of the Forth suggests that Northumbrian control of Pictish territory north of the Forth might still have been seen as insecure 12 Family background edit nbsp Alt Clut on the River Clyde at Dumbarton seat of Bridei s father Beli Bridei is described in a verse attributed to the broadly contemporary Adomnan as son of the king of Dumbarton indicating that he was the son of Beli king of the British kingdom of Alt Clut making Bridei also the grandson of Beli s predecessor Neithon son of Guipno and the brother or half brother of Beli s successor Eugein 13 The conflict between Bridei and Ecgfrith of Northumbria for Pictish supremacy is described in the poem Iniu feras Bruide cath Today Bridei Fights a Battle as being over the legacy forba of Neithon providing evidence that this Neithon son of Guipno Bridei s grandfather may have been the same person as the earlier Pictish king recorded as Nechtan grandson of Uerb 14 and that the Alt Clut dynasty into which Bridei was born may have had Pictish origins 15 Nennius Historia Brittonum tells us that Bridei was King Ecgfrith s fratruelis or maternal first cousin suggesting Bridei s mother was probably a daughter of King Edwin of Deira 16 and half sister of the Northumbrian princess Eanflaed 14 The marriage of Bridei s parents would have marked an accommodation between Edwin and Neithon 14 extending Northumbrian influence into the lands of the Picts and of the Britons of the Clyde 17 Life and reign editEarly life edit Bridei must have been born no later than 628 as the death of his father Beli of Alt Clut is recorded in the Annales Cambriae as taking place in 627 18 Bridei was probably brought up within the Northumbrian court 8 having possibly been taken there as a hostage by the Northumbrian king Oswiu after the killing of the Dal Riatan king Domnall Brecc by Bridei s half brother Eugein of Alt Clut in 643 19 Rise to power edit Bridei s accession to the Pictish kingship seems to have been due at least in part to the influence of the Northumbrian kings Oswiu and Ecgfrith 17 Bridei was passed over several times for the succession to both the Pictish and Alt Clut kingships probably as the fall of his grandfather Edwin of Northumbria in 633 diminished Bridei s political connectedness but the marriage of his aunt Eanflaed to the newly crowned King of Bernicia Oswiu in 642 would have seen him once again become well connected to the centres of Northumbrian power 20 Bridei became king after the expulsion in 671 of his predecessor Drest son of Donuel from his kingdom which was probably centred around the northern Pictish district of Fortriu 21 This event is normally connected to the Pictish rebellion that culminated in the Battle of Two Rivers suggesting Drest was leading an attempt to overthrow Northumbrian overlordship in the early years of Ecgfrith s reign after the death of Ecgfrith s powerful predecessor Oswiu 22 Stephen of Ripon records in his Life of St Wilfrid how the bestial peoples of the Picts despised their subjection to the Saxons with a fierce disdain and threatened to throw off from themselves the yoke of servitude before describing a Northumbrian victory so comprehensive it was filling two rivers with corpses so that amazing to say the killers pursued the crowd of those fleeing walking over the rivers dry foot 17 Stephen also records that Drest had gathered together innumerable nations gentes from every nook and corner in the north 23 suggesting that the Pictish forces were not otherwise politically united 24 The expulsion of Drest and his replacement by Bridei was probably engineered by the combined power of Ecgfrith and Pictish supporters of Bridei 17 Bridei would have seen himself as a subject of Ecgfrith in 671 and may have been initially subject to an overlord from a southern Pictish territory such as Beornhaeth a possibility supported by the description in the Annals of Inisfallen of the later Battle of Dun Nechtain between Bridei and Ecgfrith as a great battle between Picts 10 Expansion edit nbsp nbsp Dunbeath 679 nbsp Dunnottar 680 nbsp Orkney 682 nbsp Dundurn 683 nbsp Dunadd 683 nbsp Burgheadclass notpageimage Elite sites probably attacked by Bridei between 679 and 685 alongside Burghead the primary power centre of Bridei s own kingdom of Fortriu Bridei seems have been actively intervening in the politics of Dal Riata in the early years of his reign 25 He may have been involved in the killing of Domangart mac Domnaill the king of Dal Riata in 673 26 and may also have entered into a three way alliance with his nephew Dumnagual of Alt Clut and Finguine Fota of the Cenel Comgaill king of Cowal and the grandfather of the later king of Fortriu Bridei son of Der Ilei 27 The Annals of Ulster record that in 676 many Picts were drowned in Loch Awe also suggesting an aggressive regime under Bridei attacking northern Dal Riata 12 In the 680s Bridei seems to have turned his attention away from Argyll with a campaign that started less than a year after the Northumbrian king Ecgfrith was weakened by his defeat by AEthelred of Mercia at the Battle of the Trent in 679 28 A series of conflicts recorded in Irish annals as taking place in northern Britain from 679 are likely to represent Bridei expanding his power base 29 The Annals of Ulster describe a siege of Dunnottar in 680 30 Bridei attacked first Dunbeath in Caithness and then Orkney in 682 31 a campaign so violent that the Annals of Ulster said that the Orkney Islands were destroyed by Bridei Orcades deletae sunt la Bruide 12 With opposition removed from the north 31 sieges of Dundurn in Strathearn and Dunadd in mid Argyll are reported the following year 32 As with the earlier siege of Dunnottar Bridei though not explicitly named was probably the assailant 30 Together Dunnottar and Dundurn mark the northern and southern limits of the southern Pictish territory south of the Mounth and their sieges indicate a period of sustained pressure by Bridei across the area 30 The pattern of high status sites attacked in Bridei s campaigns suggests they were the centres of independent provinces that resisted his rule as he built a confederation of territories by alliance or conquest that owed allegiance and tribute to him as king 33 Bridei s model of over kingship seems closely modelled on the system of tribute employed by the Picts own Northumbrian over lords 34 Dun Nechtain and aftermath edit Possible locations of the Battle of Dun Nechtain nbsp Dunachton in Badenoch nbsp Dunnichen in Angus Bridei s threat to the southern Pictish lands represented a challenge to Northumbrian hegemony 35 but the immediate cause of Ecgfrith s attack on the Picts in 685 was said by Bede to be Bridei ceasing to pay the Northumbrians tribute 36 possibly in response to the Northumbrian raid in 684 against Brega in Ireland which was probably undertaken in response to an alliance between the Irish and the Britons 37 Ecgfrith sought to re assert his dominance through a military campaign and Bede describes how against the advice of churchmen including St Cuthbert Ecgfrith rashly led an army to lay waste the province of the Picts 38 Ecgfrith s incursion far into Pictish territory ended with the Battle of Dun Nechtain on the afternoon of Saturday 20 May 685 14 when Ecgfrith himself was killed and his army annihilated by Bridei s after being lured by the Picts into what Bede described as the narrow passes of inaccessible mountains 39 The location of the battle is uncertain since being identified in the early 19th century by the antiquarian George Chalmers on the basis of its placename 40 it has generally been associated with Dunnichen in Angus a location supported by the presence of a carved battle scene on one of the nearby Aberlemno Sculptured Stones but since 2006 Dunachton in Badenoch has been suggested as a much better match for Bede s description while similarly supported by the site s toponymy 41 The immediate consequence of Bridei s victory at Dun Nechtain was the ending of Northumbrian overlordship over the lands of the Picts of Dal Riata and of some British lands 42 though it is possible that Fife and Manau did not fall under the control of Fortriu until the later defeat of the Northumbrian Berhtred by Bridei son of Der Ilei in 698 43 The Angles occupying Pictish lands either fled or were killed or enslaved 44 and the Anglian Trumwine who claimed to be Bishop of the Picts with authority over the Pictish church from his see at Abercorn retired to Whitby in Northumbria 42 The ending of the tributary relationship between Gaelic British and Pictish territories and Northumbria would have caused significant political disruption across all these northern polities 44 Bridei s success in leading multiple Pictish provinces against an outside enemy would have served to legitimise his kingship consolidate his extensive territorial control and promote the sense of the territories under his rule as a single cohesive community 45 The power vacuum left by the Northumbrian retreat in the southern Pictish lands gave Bridei and his successors the opportunity to install favoured leaders from existing southern dynasties in positions of power and to move new groups of allies into territory abandoned by the Northumbrians 46 Bridei s reign saw the Dal Riatan kindred the Cenel Comgaill rise in prominence gaining territory in the area of modern Clackmannanshire in the wake of Northumbian withdrawal 47 The marriage of Dargart mac Finguine of the Cenel Comgaill to Der Ilei mother of the later kings of Fortriu Bridei son of Der Ilei and Naiton son of Der Ilei and probably Bridei s daughter saw the kindred connected directly into the Pictish Royal household 48 Bridei would have been at least 57 years old at the time of his victory at Dun Nechtain in 685 18 His death in 692 49 is recorded by both the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach He was buried on Iona and mourned by Adomnan the Abbot of Iona 50 to whom is attributed a surviving lament for Bridei s death 51 Legacy editBridei is the first king to be explicitly described in contemporary sources as rex Fortrenn or king of Fortriu and his reign marks the start of a period that would be a turning point in the history of modern day Scotland 14 Bridei s victory at the Battle of Dun Nechtain in 685 achieved by uniting various Pictish provinces under his leadership 52 ended Northumbrian rule north of the Forth and extended the power of Fortriu southwards beyond the Mounth 53 His reign marked the establishment of the pre eminence of Fortriu as a Pictish province that saw it develop into the overkingdom of the Picts 54 Known to historians as the Verturian Hegemony 55 this led to the growth of a powerful Pictish state 56 The overlordship of the kings of Fortriu that started with the reign of Bridei also saw the encouragement by its rulers of the idea that the Picts were a single people under a single king 57 Before Bridei s victory over Ecgfrith references in documents to the Picts used the plural term gentes whereas afterwards they are referred to using the singular gens 58 The Pictish king lists that began circulating from the mid 7th century consciously sought to legitimise the Fortriu dynasty s dominance by constructing the idea of a single Pictish over king projected backwards before the historical horizon to create the impression of a single office of ancient provenance 59 It is likely that the Pictish origin myth known to Bede was composed around this time 60 and it is probably the period from Bridei s reign that saw the development of the common language of the Pictish symbol stones as a means of reinforcing the status of key members of society 61 Bridei may have been the father or less likely the brother of Der Ilei the mother of the later Pictish kings Bridei son of Der Ilei and Naiton son of Der Ilei and it is through her that they would have based their claim to the kingship of Fortriu after the overthrow by Bridei son of Der Ilei of Bridei son of Beli s successor Taran son of Ainftech 62 By the reign of these successors it seems that the lands of the Picts initially brought under the control of Fortriu by Bridei son of Beli by military means were being perceived as a single nation under a single ruler 63 Notes edit Bridei s name is found as Bridei Bredei Brude Bruide and Bruidhe his father s as Beli Bili and Bile Son of is sometimes represented by the Old Irish mac the Old Welsh map the Latin filius or the abbreviations m or f Although regnal numbers do not appear in any contemporary source some 19th and 20th century sources refer to Bridei son of Beli as Bridei III References edit Foster 2014 p 1 Markus 2017 pp 85 86 Markus 2017 pp 78 79 a b Foster 2014 p 5 Markus 2017 pp 81 83 Markus 2017 pp 102 103 Fraser 2009 pp 50 51 a b Foster 2014 p 40 Noble amp Evans 2022 p 16 a b Fraser 2009 p 203 Fraser 2009 pp 200 201 a b c d Markus 2017 p 96 MacQuarrie 1993 p 9 a b c d e Fraser 2009 p 202 Woolf 1998 p 161 Woolf 1998 pp 161 162 a b c d Markus 2017 p 95 a b Fraser 2006 p 25 Fraser 2006 pp 202 203 Woolf 1998 p 162 Fraser 2009 p 201 Fraser 2009 pp 201 202 Fraser 2006 p 23 Fraser 2006 pp 23 24 Fraser 2009 pp 207 208 Fraser 2009 p 206 Fraser 2009 p 243 Fraser 2009 pp 213 214 Noble amp Evans 2022 pp 17 18 a b c Fraser 2009 p 214 a b Grigg 2015 p 63 Noble amp Evans 2022 p 17 Grigg 2015 pp 63 64 Fraser 2006 pp 31 32 Fraser 2009 p 215 Foster 2014 p 41 Fraser 2006 pp 45 47 Markus 2017 p 98 Markus 2017 pp 98 99 Woolf 2006 p 184 Fraser 2009 pp 215 216 a b Markus 2017 p 99 Fraser 2009 pp 254 256 a b Grigg 2015 p 64 Grigg 2015 pp 64 65 Grigg 2015 p 92 Grigg 2015 p 102 Grigg 2015 pp 101 102 Fraser 2009 p 383 Fraser 2009 p 242 Clancy amp Markus1995 pp 166 168 Grigg 2015 p 16 Noble amp Evans 2022 p 18 Noble amp Evans 2022 pp 16 18 Foster 2014 p 150 Markus 2017 p 102 Foster 2014 p 37 Grigg 2015 p 66 Grigg 2015 pp 103 104 Fraser 2009 p 227 Foster 2014 p 101 Clancy 2004 p 135 Grigg 2015 pp 66 67 Bibliography editAnderson Marjorie O 1973 Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland Edinburgh Scottish Academic Press Clancy Thomas Owen 2004 Philosopher king Nechtan mac Der Ilei Scottish Historical Review 83 2 125 149 doi 10 3366 shr 2004 83 2 125 Clancy Thomas Owen Markus Gilbert 1995 Iona The Earliest Poetry of a Celtic Monastery Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0531 2 Foster Sally M 2014 Picts Scots and Gaels Early Historic Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 9781780271910 Fraser James E 2006 The Pictish Conquest The Battle of Dunnichen 685 amp the birth of Scotland Stroud Tempus Publishing ISBN 9780752439624 Fraser James E 2009 From Caledonia to Pictland Scotland to 795 New Edinburgh History of Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748612321 Grigg Julianna 2015 The Philosopher King and the Pictish Nation Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 9781846825637 MacQuarrie Alan 1993 The Kings of Strathclyde In Grant A Stringer K eds Medieval Scotland Crown Lordship and Community Essays Presented to G W S Barrow Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 1 19 ISBN 9780748611102 Markus Gilbert 2017 Conceiving a Nation Scotland to AD 900 New History of Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748678983 Noble Gordon Evans Nicholas 2022 The Picts Scourge of Rome Rulers of the North Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 9781780277783 Woolf Alex 1998 Pictish matriliny reconsidered The Innes Review 49 2 147 167 doi 10 3366 inr 1998 49 2 147 Woolf Alex 2006 Dun Nechtain Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts Scottish Historical Review 85 220 182 201 doi 10 1353 shr 2007 0029 External links editAnnals of Tigernach Annals of Ulster translated Historia Brittonum translated Regnal titles Preceded byDrest son of Donuel King of the Picts672 693 Succeeded byTaran son of Ainftech Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bridei son of Beli amp oldid 1219703799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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