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History of Ireland (800–1169)

The history of Ireland 800–1169 covers the period in the history of Ireland from the first Viking raids to the Norman invasion. The first two centuries of this period are characterised by Viking raids and the subsequent Norse settlements along the coast. Viking ports were established at Dublin, Wexford, Waterford, Cork and Limerick, which became the first large towns in Ireland.

Ireland consisted of many semi-independent territories (túatha), and attempts were made by various factions to gain political control over the whole of the island. For the first two centuries of this period, this was mainly a rivalry between putative High Kings of Ireland from the northern and southern branches of the Uí Néill. The one who came closest to being de facto king over the whole of Ireland, however, was Brian Boru, the first high king in this period not belonging to the Uí Néill.

Following Brian's death at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014, the political situation became more complex with rivalry for high kingship from several clans and dynasties. Brian's descendants failed to maintain a unified throne, and regional squabbling over territory led indirectly to the invasion of the Normans under Richard de Clare in 1169.

Historiography

 
Eoin MacNeill, one of the pioneers in modern studies of Irish medieval history

Due to the rich amount of written sources, the study of Irish history 800–1169 has, to a large extent, focused on gathering, interpretation and textual criticism of these. Only recently have other sources of historical knowledge received more attention, particularly archaeology. Since the modern excavations of Dublin started in 1961, followed by similar efforts in Wexford, Waterford and Limerick, great advances have been made in the understanding of the physical character of the towns established during this period.[1]

The first part of the period from 800 to 1014 is well-studied; the "Viking age" has attracted the interest of historians for quite some time. The period between 1014 and 1169 has received less attention. In the words of Sean Duffy, this period

has – historiographically speaking – fallen between two stools. Historians of early medieval Ireland, seeking to conclude their narratives on a high note, have traditionally done so after recounting the death of the famous high-king Brian Bórama (Boru) at the battle of Clontarf in 1014. On the other hand, historians of later medieval Ireland generally choose to begin proceedings with the English invasion of the 1160s. Eleventh- and early twelfth-century Ireland has, therefore, often assumed the character of a snappy epilogue or a lengthy prologue.[2][note 1]

In trying to interpret the history of early Ireland, one of the most frequently asked questions addressed by historians is how early it is possible to speak of an Irish nation encompassing the whole island of Ireland. Early poet-historians like Flann Mainistrech constructed a history of a monarchy of all Ireland going back to and beyond St Patrick. Only a hundred years after Mainistrech, Gerald of Wales described the Irish society in his Topographia Hibernica as utterly primitive and savage. At the beginning of modern scholarly interpretation of Irish history, Eoin MacNeill and G.H. Orpen came to opposite conclusions analyzing the same period. Orpen saw an anarchic country still in 'a tribal state'; he could see no nation, no wider community in Ireland than the tribe. MacNeill stressed the reality of the high-kingship of Ireland and the existence of many of those institutions of government which Orpen found wanting, and claimed that Irish law had a national character.[3]

Nature of the written sources

 
Folio 53 from the Book of Leinster

A large body of contemporary and near-contemporary material on early medieval Ireland has survived. From the titles of works mentioned in these sources, it is clear that a great deal of additional material has now been lost. The surviving materials usually exist in the form of much later copies, and it is only from comparison of the various texts that the original documents can be reconstructed.[4]

Extant Irish annals are ultimately derived from the now-lost Chronicle of Ireland which was probably being compiled in the midlands of Ireland by around 800. All include material derived from other sources, or added at a later date. The Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Innisfallen cover most of this period, but have a gap between 1132 and 1155. The Annals of Clonmacnoise survive only in an eccentric 17th-century English translation, and the Annals of Tigernach for this period are lost with Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh's abbreviated copy known as the Chronicon Scotorum supplying only part of the missing material. The Annals of the Four Masters are late, and include some material of doubtful origin. While the annals provide a considerable amount of information, they are generally terse, and most focus their attention on the doings of the Uí Néill and of churchmen.[5]

In addition to the annals, a large number of genealogies survive, along with geographical and legal texts, poetry, sagas and hagiography.

In the 12th century, propaganda text like Caithréim Chellacháin Chaisil and Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib were composed. Even though the historical accuracy of these accounts is dubious, the Cogad especially has had a great impact on the interpretation of Irish medieval history until recently.[6]

Political landscape c. 800

At the end of the 8th century, Ireland was homogeneously Gaelic in terms of society, culture and language. People lived in rural communities, and the only larger settlements were monastic towns of varying sizes. The monasteries played an important part in society, not just with regards to religious and cultural life, but also to economy and politics. Christianization had begun in the 5th century, and by the early 9th century the island was almost entirely Christian. However, the Martyrology of Tallaght (written sometime in the 8th or 9th century) hints that paganism had not yet been fully uprooted.

 
Peoples and subdivisions of early Ireland

Eoin MacNeill identified the "oldest certain fact in the political history of Ireland" as the existence in late prehistory of a pentarchy, probably consisting of the cóiceda or "fifths" of the Ulaid (Ulster), the Connachta (Connacht), the Laigin (Leinster), Mumu (Munster) and Mide (Meath), although some accounts discount Mide and split Mumu in two.[7] This is not an accurate description of the political landscape c. 800,[8][note 2] but when discussing the political subdivisions of Ireland at this time, it is still useful to refer to this system; if Laigin and Mide are combined as Leinster, it roughly corresponds with the modern four provinces of Ireland.

The Uí Néill, divided in two main branches known as "Northern Uí Néill" and "Southern Uí Néill", was the leading dynasty in Ireland.[9][note 3] The Northern Uí Néill controlled the north-western part of Ireland, and was divided into two leading branches, the Cenél Conaill in the west and Cenél nEógain, also known as the kingdom of Ailech. Cenél nEógain had become the more powerful of the two in 789,[9] and had expanded east and southwards, gaining control over the important monastic centre Armagh and the large sub-kingdom of Airgíalla. The traditional kingdom of Ulaid, dominated by Dál Fiatach and Dál nAraidi, was now more or less confined to the area east of the river Bann.

The central region of Mide had been dominated by what became known as the "southern Uí Néill" since the 7th century. Until the 8th century, the Síl nÁedo Sláine (also known as the kingdom of Brega) was pre-eminent, but from 728 the western dynasty of Clann Cholmáin was dominant.

In Laigin, Uí Dúnlainge was the dominant dynasty c. 800. They were closely associated with the large monastery of Kildare. Their main rival for dominance in Leinster, the Uí Cheinnselaig had not been able to claim the title king of Leinster since 728. The Uí Cheinnselaig now controlled a territory in the south-eastern part of Leinster, and had close links to the monastery of Ferns.

The kingdom of Osraige, occupying roughly the same area as the present County Kilkenny and western County Laois, was considered part of Munster until the late ninth century, when it received an independent status under king Cerball mac Dúnlainge. Munster was dominated by the Eóganachta, centred around Cashel and with Emly as ecclesiastical centre. The Dál gCais (not yet known under this name) had defeated the Corcu Modruad in 744 and taken control over the area in present County Clare from which they would later rise to dominance, but were not yet a significant power in Munster. The Eóganachta rivalled the Uí Néill in power and influence, and claimed suzerainty over the southern part of Ireland. This claim was in part anchored within the legendary ancient division of the island in Leath Cuinn and Leath Moga, "Conn's half" (north) and "Mug's half" (south).

During the 7th century the Uí Briúin had emerged in Connacht, and since the first half of the 8th century been the dominant dynasty. Uí Briúin also influenced the kingdom of Breifne on the southern borders of the Northern Uí Néill.

First Viking age (795–902)

Early Viking raids

The first recorded Viking raid in Irish history occurred in AD 795 when Vikings, possibly from Norway[10] looted the island of Lambay.[note 4] This was followed by a raid on the coast of Brega in 798, and raids on the coast of Connacht in 807.[11] These early Viking raids were generally small in scale and quick.

These early raids interrupted the golden age of Christian Irish culture and marked the beginning of two hundred years of intermittent warfare, with waves of Viking raiders plundering monasteries and towns throughout Ireland. Most of the early raiders came from the fjords of western Norway. They are believed to have sailed first to Shetland, then south to Orkney. The Vikings would have then sailed down the Atlantic coast of Scotland, and then over to Ireland.[10] During these early raids the Vikings also travelled to the west coast of Ireland to the Skellig Islands located off the coast of County Kerry. The early raids on Ireland seem to have been aristocratic free enterprise, and named leaders appear in the Irish annals: Saxolb (Soxulfr) in 837, Turges (Þurgestr) in 845, Agonn (Hákon) in 847.[12]

Áed Oirdnide

Áed Oirdnide of the Cenél nEógain branch of the Northern Uí Néill became King of Tara in 797, after the death of his predecessor, father-in-law and political rival Donnchad Midi. (Duncan) This followed the classic Uí Néill political arrangement, where over-kingship alternated regularly between Cenél nEógain and Clann Cholmáin of the Southern Uí Néill. During his reign he campaigned in Mide, Leinster and Ulaid to assert his authority, though unlike Donnchad (Duncan) he did not campaign in Munster.

Thomas Charles-Edwards credits Áed for "the absence of any major Viking attacks on Ireland during his reign after 798".[13] The annals gives no reference, however, to Áed at any time being involved with warfare against Viking raiders.

Áed was connected to the monastic community at Armagh, and a supporter of the familia of Patrick. His rivals for supremacy within Uí Néill, the Clann Cholmáin and the Cenél Conaill, had on the other hand supported the familia of Columba. During Áed's reign the Columban familia, following several Viking raids against Iona, established a new monastery at Kells, a royal site in the possession of Armagh. Byrne states that "...the foundation [of Kells] marked the resolution of any remaining rivalry between the Columban and Patrician churches...".[14] That the community of Columba in 817 tried to have Áed excommunicated may show that not all rivalry was resolved after all.[15]

Rivalry between north and south

Is he Feidhlimidh in ri
dianid opair oenlaithi
eitrige Connacht cen cath
ocus Midhe do manrath
(Feidlimid is the king
For whom a single day's work is
To take the hostages of Connacht without battle
And to spoil Mide.)

Fedelmid mac Crimthainn from the Eóganacht Chaisil acceded to the kingship of Munster in 820, beginning a 130-year domination by this branch of Eóganachta.[16] Combining military campaigns with manipulation of ecclesiastical affairs, he embarked on a policy of aggressive expansion to counter the growth in power of the Uí Néill. Conchobar mac Donnchada (Duncan) succeeded Áed Oirdnide as Uí Néill overking in 819, and soon found himself challenged by Feidlimid, both by Feidlimid launching raids into Mide and Connacht and by him interfering (as would be the Uí Néill view) in the affairs of Armagh. Conchobar and Feidlimid met at Birr in 827 to discuss peace terms, and the very fact that "the king of Munster could force the high-king to a peace conference is indicative of Feidlimid's growing power".[16]

Conchobar was succeeded by Niall Caille in 833. With Niall, we for the first time see a reference in the annals of a Uí Néill leading an army against the Vikings; he defeated Viking raiders in Derry the same year.[17] He sought to further expand Uí Néill influence in the south; in 835 he led an army to Leinster and installed Bran mac Fáeláin as king of Leinster, and also invaded Mide.[18] This brought him into conflict with Feidlimid, however, and in 838 a conference (rígdál mór—"great royal meeting") between Niall and Feidlimid was held.[note 5] This meeting did not result in any lasting peace though; in 840 Feidlimid led an army into Mide and encamped at Tara, thereby challenging the Uí Néill also in the north. In 841, however, Feidlimid was routed in battle by Niall in Leinster. His successors in the south would not be able to challenge the north again to this extent until some 150 years later.

Intensified raiding and the first Viking settlements in Ireland

The Viking raids on Ireland resumed in 821, and intensified during the following decades. The Vikings were beginning to establish fortified encampments, longports, along the Irish coast and overwintering in Ireland instead of retreating to Scandinavia or British bases. The first known longports were at Linn Dúachaill (Annagassan) and Duiblinn (on the River Liffey, at or near present Dublin).[19][note 6] They were also moving further inland to attack, often using rivers such as the Shannon, and then retreating to their coastal bases. The raiding parties also increased in size, becoming regular armies—in 837 the annals report a fleet of sixty longships on the Liffey, carrying 1,500 men, and another one of a similar size sailing up the river Boyne, making their way into the inland territories and launching attacks on the lands of Brega in the south of County Meath.[20][21] In general, from 837 onward larger Viking forces hit larger targets – such as the greater monastic towns of Armagh, Glendalough, Kildare, Slane, Clonard, Clonmacnoise, and Lismore – while smaller targets such as local churches with less material to be plundered may have escaped the Vikings' attention.[21]

 
Modern replica of a Viking Knarr.

One of the first named Viking leaders was Thorgest (in Latin Turgesius). The Annals of the Four Masters connect him with attacks on Connacht, Mide and the church at Clonmacnoise in 844.[22] He was captured and drowned in Lough Owel by Máel Sechnaill mac Maíl Ruanaid, King of Mide.[23] However the existence of Thorgest is uncertain as he was recorded in books written over 200 years after his death in a period of strong anti-Viking sentiment. He was often depicted as a villain and his wife was said to be a witch that would perform pagan rituals on altars. It is highly likely that this was war propaganda as we have very little evidence of his existence from his own period, and it is unlikely those close to him would record this themselves.

In 848 a Norse army was defeated at Sciath Nechtain by Ólchobar mac Cináeda of Munster and Lorcán mac Cellaig of Leinster. For the first time the leader of the Vikings is described as royalty from Lochlann.[24] Máel Sechnaill, now High King, defeated another army at Forrach the same year.[25] These victories form the background of an embassy sent to the Frankish emperor Charles the Bald, reported in the Annales Bertiniani.[26]

In 853 Olaf, identified as a "son of the king of Lochlann",[27] came to Ireland. Lochlann has been understood as (a district of) present Norway; it is now considered more plausible that it refers to a Scandinavian colony in the Western Isles of Scotland.[28][note 7] Olaf assumed leadership of the Vikings in Ireland, probably in some way shared with his kinsman Ivar, first mentioned in the Irish Annals in 857. Olaf and Ivar remained active in Ireland and around the Irish Sea for the next two decades. The descendants of Ivar, the Uí Ímair, would be an important political factor for the next two centuries.

Shifting alliances and struggle for power

A significant new trait from the middle of the 9th century was that the Norse now also entered alliances with various Irish rulers. Cerball mac Dúnlainge had become king of Osraige in 842. Cerball had defeated Viking raiders in 846 and 847, but from 858 he is allied with Olaf and Ivar against Máel Sechnaill, campaigning in Leinster and Munster, and in 859 also raiding Máel Sechnaill's heartlands in Mide, though Cerball had to submit to Máel Sechnaill later the same year. These alliances were by no means permanent. In 860 Cerball was allied with Máel Sechnaill in a campaign against Áed Findliath of the Northern Uí Néill, while Olaf and Ivar has allied themselves with Áed. In 870, however, Cerball and Áed appeared as allies in Leinster.

Máel Sechnaill had more success as high king than his predecessors Niall Caille and Conchobar Donnchada (Duncan) in dealing with the south, and forced Munster into submission in 858 and as noted above, Osraige in 859. He also asserted control over Ulaid, Leinster and Connacht, and was in his obituary in the Annals of Ulster described as ri h-Erenn uile, king of all Ireland. The last years of his reign he had however experienced serious opposition from his Uí Néill kinsmen of Ailech and Brega, allied with the Norse of Dublin. Byrne notes: "Máel Sechnaill's unprecedented success in achieving the high-kingship of all Ireland was marred by the chronic complaint of Irish politics: having united the Ulaid, Munster, Osraige, Connacht and Leinster, he was attacked at the end of his reign by a combination of Uí Néill kings."[29]

Áed Findliath was king of Ailech and the leading king within the Northern Uí Néill. After the death of Máel Sechnaill he is counted in the regal lists as high king, following the established scheme where this alternated between Cenél nEógain in the north and Clann Cholmáin of Mide. His kingship was disputed though, and he did not come close to being an actual king over Ireland. He could count some successes against the Norse, however, most notably burning all the Norse longports in the north in 866.[30] Áed seems to have used the opportunity while Olaf was involved in warfare in Pictland, presumably bringing a large contingent of the Norse forces in Ireland with him. The Vikings never managed to establish permanent settlements in the north. Ó Corráin observes: "Ironically, [Áed Findliath's] success may have held back the economic development of the north and ultimately prevented the growth of port towns like those on the east and south coasts, on which the Leinster and Munster kings subsequently depended for much of their wealth."[31]

The last report of Olaf is when he and Ivar returned to Dublin in 871 from Alba.[32] Ivar died in 873. In his obituary, the Annals of Ulster call Ivar "king of the Norsemen of all Ireland and Britain".[33] With their disappearance, there were frequent changes of leadership among the Norse in Ireland and a great deal of internecine conflict is reported for the following decades.[34] In 902 Máel Finnia mac Flannacain of Brega and Cerball mac Muirecáin of Leinster joined forces against Dublin, and "The heathens were driven from Ireland, i.e. from the fortress of Áth Cliath [Dublin]".[note 8]

A group of Vikings led by Hingamund who were forced out of Ireland were given permission by the Saxons to settle in Wirral, in the north west of England. "The Three Fragments" refers to a distinct group of settlers living among these Vikings as "Irishmen": "Then the King, who was on the point of death, and the Queen sent messengers to the Irishmen who were among the pagans, for there were many Irish among the pagans, to say to the Irishmen, life and health to you from the King of the Saxons, who is in disease, and from his Queen, who has all authority over the Saxons, and they are certain that you are true and trusty friends to them. Therefore, you should take their side; for they did not bestow any greater honour to a Saxon warrior or cleric than to each warrior and cleric who came to them from Ireland, because this inimical race of pagans is equally hostile to you also." Further evidence of an Irish presence in Wirral comes from the name of the village of Irby in Wirral, which means "farmstead of the Irishmen", and St Bridget's Church, West Kirby which is known to have been founded by "Christian Vikings from Ireland".[35][36]

Failed Conquest

The Vikings were able to exploit internal divisions in order to invade England and France. As Ireland was one of the most politically fractured countries at the time, it was a prime target for Viking conquest. Furthermore, Irish Kings often made alliances with foreign invaders in an attempt to weaken their domestic rivals. The Vikings were able to defeat the centralized Kingdoms of Europe, since the small ruling class was easily removed. However, Ireland was composed of more than 150 different Kingdoms ruling over small territories. This decentralized system of governance made it almost impossible to gain control of a territory, since defeated Kings were easily replaced.

Impact on cultural activity and formation of Irish scholarly diaspora

Historians debate the consequences that the initial phases of Viking settlement had on scholarship and literary output.[37] Scholarly activity, for which the Irish are famous in the early Medieval period, consisted of the writing of poetry, the production of Christian devotional texts, the development of the science of computus, and the compilation of elaborate law tracts.[38] Patronage for scholars and scholarship came largely from Irish kings who regarded the presence of court scholars as part and parcel of the trappings of kingship, but also as a means of bolstering their own image through praise poetry that such scholars composed and performed. With the advent of the Vikings, patronage ties have been argued to have been loosened, thereby affecting directly the livelihood of Irish scholars. In addition, some kings would have turned their attention to more pressing (but also more profitable) pursuits, such as engaging in warfare or alliances with Vikings or other Irish kings, as well as tapping the economic benefits that Viking trade would have brought. While this was happening in Ireland, we observe a more pronounced presence of Irish scholars in Frankish Europe, and especially in circles associated with the Carolingian court. Commonly known as peregrini, Irish scholars such as John Scottus Eriugena and Sedulius Scottus became among the most prominent and influential in ninth-century continental Europe, studying and teaching a range of subjects, from theology to political philosophy. It is tempting to link their presence on the Continent as well as the presence of scores of other Irish learned people with the impact of the Vikings on Ireland, which may have driven such people to seek employment elsewhere. If one accepts this version of events, then the Vikings can be said to have inadvertently been one of the principal catalysts for the spread of Irish culture abroad and the subsequent foundation of Irish centres on the Continent which remained influential for centuries to come.[39]

Second Viking age (914–980)

After having been forced to leave Dublin in 902, the descendants of Ivar, now described generically in the annals as the Uí Ímair,[note 9] remained active around the Irish sea; reports tell of their activities in Pictland, Strathclyde, Northumbria and Mann. In 914 a new Viking fleet appeared in Waterford Harbour, and soon the Uí Ímair followed, again taking control over Viking activities in Ireland. Ragnall arrived with a fleet in Waterford, while Sitric landed at Cenn Fuait (possibly near Leixlip) in Leinster. Niall Glúndub had followed Flann Sinna as Uí Néill overking in 916, and he marched into Munster against Ragnall, but no decisive engagement followed. The men of Leinster under Augaire mac Ailella attacked Sithric but suffered a heavy defeat in the Battle of Confey or Cenn Fuait (917). This victory allowed Sithric to re-establish Norse control over Dublin. Ragnall left Ireland again in 918, and became king of York.[note 10] With Sithric in Dublin and Ragnall in York, a Dublin-York axis developed which would have influence on both England and Ireland for the next half-century.[40]

 
Map showing the major Norse settlements in Ireland in the 10th Century

A new and more intensive period of Viking settlement in Ireland began in 914. Between 914 and 922 the Norse established Waterford, Cork, Dublin, Wexford and Limerick.[note 11] Significant excavations in Dublin and Waterford in the 20th century have unearthed much of the Viking heritage of those cities. A large amount of Viking burial stones, called the Rathdown Slabs, have been found in multiple locations across South Dublin.[41]

The Vikings founded many other coastal towns, and after several generations of coexistence and intermarriage a group of mixed Irish and Norse ethnic background arose (often called Norse-Gaels or Hiberno-Norse). Norse influence shows in the Norse-derived names of many contemporary Irish kings (e.g. Magnus, Lochlann or Sitric), and in DNA evidence in some residents of these coastal cities to this day. A genetics paper in 2006 by Dr Brian McEvoy found that most men with Irish-Viking surnames carried typically Irish genes. This suggests that Viking settlements may have had a Scandinavian elite but with most of the inhabitants being indigenous Irish.[42]

Niall Glúndub marched on Dublin in September 919, but Sihtric met his forces at the battle of Islandbridge or Áth Cliath and inflicted on him a decisive defeat, with Niall and numerous other Irish leaders among the casualties. Dublin was secured for the Norse, and in 920 Sitric left for York and following Ragnall's death succeeded him as ruler there in 921. Their kinsman Gofraid assumed control of Dublin. Gofraid was active as a Viking raider and slaver, but there were signs during his reign that the Norse were not just mere Vikings any more. During a raid at Armagh in 921 Gofraid "...spared the prayerhouses... ...and the sick from destruction",[43] considerations never taken by the raiders of the previous century. Another was the intense campaigns led by Dublin in eastern Ulster from 921 to 927, which appear to have aimed at conquest in order to create a Scandinavian kingdom like the one on the eastern side of the Irish sea.[44]

Dublin's ambitions in Ulster were halted by a series of defeats inflicted upon the Norse by Muirchertach mac Néill, the son of Niall Glúndub. According to Benjamin Hudson, "Muirchertach was one of the most successful generals of his day and was described as the 'Hector of the Irish'".[45] In the annals, it is (Duncan) Donnchad Donn from Clann Cholmáin who is titled "high king" after Niall however, and Muirchertach did not succeed his father as king of Ailech either until 938. Apart from his victories over the Norse, Muirchertach led campaigns forcing other provincial kingdoms into submission, most notably taking the king of Munster Cellachán Caisil captive in 941. The same year he led a fleet to the Hebrides, collecting tribute there.[45][note 12]

When Sihtric died in 927 Gofraid left for York, trying to assume kingship there. He was driven out by Athelstan, and returned to Dublin half a year later. The Vikings of Limerick had taken Dublin in his absence. Gofraid retook the city, but the struggle between Limerick continued well after Gofraid's death in 934. He was succeeded by his son, Amlaíb, who inflicted a decisive defeat on Limerick in 937. The same year Amlaíb went to Northumbria and allied himself with Constantine II of Scotland and Owen I of Strathclyde. Athelstan defeated this coalition at Brunanburh (937), but after Athelstan's death in 939 Amlaíb became king of York. He was joined by a kinsman with the same name, Amlaíb son of Sihtric, known as Amlaíb Cuarán.

Congalach mac Máel Mithig, known as Cnogba, succeeded (Duncan) Donnchad Donn as Uí Néill overking in 944 (Muirchertag, who otherwise might have been the obvious successor, had been killed in 943). Congalach was king of Brega and a member of Síl nÁedo Sláine, and the first of this dynasty called "High King" since Cináed mac Írgalaig in the early 8th century. In 944 he sacked Dublin, now ruled by Blácaire mac Gofrith. When Amlaíb Cuaran returned to Ireland the next year, he became ruler of Dublin and acted as an ally of Congalach in the struggle against Ruaidrí ua Canannáin, a rival Uí Néill claimant for High Kingship from Cenél Conaill. This alliance did not last long after Ruaidrí's death in 950, however, and Congalach was killed in 956 in a battle against an alliance of Dublin and Leinster. He was succeeded by Domnall ua Néill, and in the following decades alliances shifted constantly between the different branches of Uí Néill, Leinster and Dublin.

In 980 Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill succeeded Domnall, and the same year he defeated the forces of Dublin at the battle of Tara. Following this victory Máel Sechnaill forced Dublin into submission, and his half-brother, Amlaíbs son Glúniairn, became ruler in Dublin.

Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill and Brian Boru (980–1022)

 
18th-century engraving of Brian Boru.

In Munster, the influence of the Dal gCais had grown under Cennétig mac Lorcáin, and his son Mathgamain was the first non-Eóganachta ruler to be named by the annals as king of Cashel (i.e. king of Munster) in historical times.[46] He was killed in 976, and succeeded by his brother Brian, later famously known as Brian Boru.

Brian quickly established himself as the most powerful ruler in Munster, defeating the Norse of Limerick in 977 and the Eóganachta the following year. Having gained control over Munster, he tried to extend his authority by raiding Osraige in 982 and 983, and also, according to the annals of Innisfallen, entering an alliance with the Norse of Waterford, with the intention of attacking Dublin.[46] There was such an attack, but Brian does not seem to have been involved – instead it was Domnall Claen of Leinster who was allied with Ivar of Waterford, and they were defeated by Glúniairn and Máel Sechnaill.

Máel Sechnaill obviously perceived Brian as a threat, and as early as 982 raided Munster and the territory of the Dal gCais. The next two decades saw more or less constant warfare between them, mostly with Leinster as their battleground. Even if Brian never defeated Máel Sechnaill in battle, Brian's and Munster's influence was growing at the expense of Máel Sechnaill and the Southern Uí Néill. In 997 Máel Sechnaill was forced to acknowledge Brian's authority over the south of Ireland, and they formally divided Ireland according to the traditional scheme of Leath Cuinn and Leath Moga. In the years that followed, the two of them acted as allies in accordance with this agreement. In 999 Brian quelled a revolt against him by the men of Leinster and Dublin at the battle of Glen Mama, and only restored Sigtrygg Silkbeard as ruler of Dublin after he had formally submitted to Brian by handing over hostages.[46]

In 1000, Brian turned against Máel Sechnaill, and by 1002 he had forced Máel Sechnaill to submit to him, and now claimed kingship over the whole of Ireland. In the following decade, there were several campaigns in the north to force the Ulaid and the Northern Uí Néill into submission as well. Even if faced with multiple rebellions, both in the north and in Leinster, by 1011 he had received submission from every major regional king in Ireland, and thus earned the recognition by historians as the first real king of Ireland.[47] During his visit to Armagh in 1005, he had his secretary add a note to the Book of Armagh where he is proclaimed as Imperator Scottorum (emperor of the Irish). According to Bart Jaski, "This can be regarded as a claim that he ruled both the Irish and the Norse in Ireland, and may even imply suzerainty over the Gaels of Scotland".[47] In his obituary in the Annals of Ulster he is styled as "over-king of the Irish of Ireland, and of the foreigners and of the Britons, the Augustus of the whole of north-west Europe".[48]

In 1012, Flaithbertach Ua Néill revolted against Brian, and the following year Máel Mórda of Leinster and Sigtrygg of Dublin did too. The latter led to the famous battle of Clontarf, where Brian was killed, even if his army was victorious over Máel Mórda, Sigtrygg and their allies. Sigurd Hlodvirsson, Earl of Orkney as well as forces from Man participated on the Dublin/ Leinster side, and this may, in conjunction with the propagandistic account of the battle given in the Cogad, have created the still popular myth that what took place at Clontarf Good Friday 1014 was a decisive battle where the Irish defeated Viking invaders and were liberated from oppression (Duncan) Donnchadh Ó Corráin was one of the first to publicly debunk this national myth, in his groundbreaking Ireland before the Normans from 1972:

The battle of Clontarf was not a struggle between the Irish and the Norse for the sovereignty of Ireland; neither was it a great national victory which broke the power of the Norse forever (long before Clontarf the Norse had become a minor political force in Irish affairs). In fact Clontarf was part of the internal struggle for sovereignty and was essentially the revolt of the Leinstermen against the dominance of Brian, a revolt in which their Norse allies played an important but secondary role.

— Donnchadh Ó Corráin[note 13]

Following Brian's death, Máel Sechnaill resumed as High King, supported by Flaithbertach ua Néill.[note 14] In Munster, internal strife almost immediately began between Brian's sons Donnchad and Tadc, and Dúngal Ua Donnchada of Eóganachta also claimed the kingship of the province. Though Donnchad (Duncan) eventually was victorious, the descendants of Brian would not be able to make a real claim to kingship over Ireland again until Toirdelbach Ua Briain. In Leinster, the defeat at Clontarf and death of Máel Mórda seriously weakened the Uí Dúnlainge, and opened the way for a new Uí Cheinnselaig dominance in the region. Despite the defeat at Clontarf, Sigtrygg remained ruler of Dublin until 1036.

High kings with opposition (1022 onwards)

Conchobur clannmin, fo-chen!
Áed, Gairbith, Diarmait durgen,
Donnchad, dá Níall cen snim snéid
rig na ré sea co roreid.
(Smooth-haired Conchobar, welcome!
Áed, Garbith, hardy Diarmait,
Donnchad, two Nialls without swift sorrow,
are evidently the kings of this era.)

— From Rédig dam, a Dé do nim, poem by Flann Mainistrech from 1056[49]

(Duncan) Donnchad mac Brian styled himself as 'King of Ireland' after the death of Máel Sechnaill, but failed to gain recognition as such. A glossing of Baile In Scáil lists Flaitbertach Ua Néill as high king, but he proved unable even to control the north of Ireland.[50] Neither was anyone else able to make a recognised claim for kingship over all of Ireland: according to Byrne, "what distinguished the great interregnum of 1022–72 from other periods in Irish history is that it was recognised as such by contemporary observers".[51]

Flann Mainistrech had written Ríg Themra tóebaige iar tain, a regnal poem on the Christian (Uí Néill) kings of Tara some time between 1014 and 1022. When he wrote in 1056 he evidently did not know any high king of Ireland, and instead lists a number of kings of the day: (Duncan) Conchobar, Áed, Garbith, Diarmait, Donnchad (Duncan) and two Nialls. According to Byrne, these are Conchobar Ua Maíl Schechnaill of Mide, Áed Ua Conchobair of Connacht, Garbíth Ua Cathassaig of Brega, Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó of Leinster, Donnchad (Duncan) Mac Briain of Munster, Niall mac Máel Sechnaill of Ailech and Niall mac Eochada of Ulaid.[49]

The term rí Érenn co fressarba ("High kings with opposition") was used from the 12th century. According to Byrne, "it could be argued that the 'high kings with opposition' met with opposition precisely because they tried to become kings of Ireland in a real sense. They were not less successful than their predecessors, but only seemed so in the light of the teaching of the schools".[52] Following a similar line of reasoning, Byrne suggests that the focus from historians on the decline of the Uí Néill in the 11th century may be a "tribute to the success of their own propaganda".[53] After Brian, the previous Uí Néill monopoly of high kingship as described in poems and chronicles was anyway broken for good. The Cenél nEógain suffered from internal factions, and this allowed the Ulaid, under Niall mac Eochada, to expand their influence. Niall and Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó became allies, and effectively controlled the whole east coast of Ireland. This alliance helped to make it possible for Diarmait to take direct control of Dublin in 1052. Unlike Máel Sechnaill in 980 or Brian in 999, he wasn't content with just looting the city and expelling the Hiberno-Norse ruler (Echmarcach mac Ragnaill); in an unprecedented move he assumed the kingship "of the foreigners" (ríge Gall) himself.[54]

Reform of the Irish Church

 
St. Malachy was an influential 12th-century reformist ecclesiastic in Ireland.

There were major reforms in the Irish church during the 12th century. These reforms have been generally interpreted as a reaction to previous secularisation, but could also be seen as a continuous development.[55] The reforms had consequences for, and were influenced by, relations within the church as well as secular politics.

Before the 11th century the church in Ireland was monastic, with bishops residing at monasteries and without a permanent diocesan structure. The circumstances surrounding the foundation of the diocese of Dublin early in the century are obscure, but at some point during the reign of Sithric Silkbeard Dúnán became Bishop of Dublin, thus establishing the first proper diocese in Ireland. His successor Gilla Pátraic was consecrated by Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury, and on that occasion Lanfranc sent letters to Toirdelbach Ua Briain and Gofraid urging reforms, in particular regarding the consecration of bishops and the abolition of simony. There is no evidence of Canterbury claiming primacy over the church in Ireland prior to this, and neither Lanfranc nor Anselm ever made direct primatial claims for Canterbury in relation to the Irish church.[56]

Toirdelbach appears to have responded favourably to this, and convened a synod in Dublin in 1080[57] – the outcome of this synod is not known. Toirdelbach may have seen cooperation with Canterbury as a way to reduce the influence from Armagh, traditionally dominated by Cenél nEógain, within the church in Ireland. Gilla Pátraic's successors Donngus Ua hAingliu and Samuel Ua hÁingliu were also consecrated in Canterbury, and so was the first bishop of Waterford, Máel Ísu Ua hAinmire in 1096. The written request for Máel Ísu's consecration, as preserved in Eadmer's Historia Novorum, is subscribed by bishops from Munster, Mide, Dublin and Leinster.[58] Gilla Espaic, the first bishop of Limerick, was however not consecrated in Canterbury, but probably by Cellach of Armagh.[note 15]

The first of the four main synods associated with the church reforms of the 12th century took place in Cashel in 1101, at the instigation of Muirchertach Ua Briain. How many who actually attended this synod is not known, but some of its decrees have been preserved. There is a decree on simony, on prohibition for laymen to become airchinnig (heads of ecclesiastical establishments) and finally a decree that defines what relationships are considered to be incestuous. None of these decrees are radical, but they are generally interpreted to be in line with the Gregorian reform.[59]

The second synod was the Synod of Rathbreasail. This synod, presided by Gilla Espaic[60] as papal legate and attended by fifty bishops, three hundred priests and over three thousand laymen, marked the transition of the Irish church from a monastic to a diocesan and parish-based church. It established two provinces, with archbishoprics at Armagh and Cashel, and prominence given to Armagh, making Cellach the primate of the church in Ireland. Each province consisted of twelve territorial dioceses. The see of Dublin was not included, as this was under primacy from Canterbury,[note 16] but a place was left open for it, in the sense that only eleven dioceses were declared under Cashel.

Gilla, Cellach and Cellach's successor Máel Máedóc Ua Morgair, better known as St. Malachy, drove the reform process onwards. Malachy, in close cooperation with (Duncan) Donnchad Ua Cerbaill, king of Fernmag/Airgialla, established the first Irish Cistercian house at Mellifont in 1142, and also facilitated the first Augustinian community of the Arrouaisian observance. Malachy used these as agencies of monastic reform within the Irish church.[61] Malachy resigned as archbishop of Armagh in 1136, but was appointed native papal legate to Ireland by Innocent II in 1139.

 
Maps of dioceses in Ireland as defined by the synod of Kells. From Historical Atlas by William R. Shepherd.

No formal attempts on getting papal approval for the structure chosen at Rathbreasail are known before Malachy sought pallia for the two incumbent archbishops at Cashel and Armagh during his trip to the Continent in 1139/40. This first bid was unsuccessful, but Malachy was told to reapply after he had gained the agreement of all Ireland.[62] Before undertaking his second trip to the Continent in 1148, Malachy convened a synod at St Patrick's Island. The main challenge must have been to reach an accommodation with Dublin, and Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair, presently the most powerful king in Ireland, was eager to increase Connacht influence on the church. The solution reached was to extend the number of metropolitan sees from two to four, with Tuam and Dublin included alongside Cashel and Armagh. Malachy died on his way to meet the pope, but the message was transmitted by other means and papal approval was granted. Pope Eugene III appointed cardinal John Paparo as papal legate, and sent him to Ireland with pallia for the four archbishops.

Cardinal Paparo's first attempt to reach Ireland was stalled when king Stephen refused him safe conduct through England unless he pledged himself to do nothing in Ireland that would injure England's interests there. This was not acceptable for Paparo, who returned to Rome. It seems likely that this was an attempt by Stephen to prevent Paparo from bringing papal confirmation for an arrangement in Ireland that would finally extinguish Canterbury's claims in Ireland.[63] In 1151 he returned and this time reached Ireland, his journey being facilitated by David I of Scotland. The Synod of Kells-Mellifont was convened in 1152, with Paparo presiding as papal legate. The decrees from the synod are no longer extant, but some information is preserved through the Annals of the Four Masters[64] and Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn. The main result of the synod was the official papal sanctioning of the episcopal structure as created in 1111 and refined in 1148.

Norman invasion

 
Ireland in 1482

The Norman invasion of Ireland was a two-stage process, which began on 1 May 1169 when a force of individual Norman knights led by Raymond Fitzgerald landed near Bannow, County Wexford. This was at the request of Dermot MacMurrough (Diarmait Mac Murchada), the ousted King of Leinster who sought their help in regaining his kingdom.

Then on 18 October 1171, Henry II landed a much bigger force in Waterford to at least ensure his continuing control over the Norman force. In the process he took Dublin and had accepted the fealty of the Irish kings and bishops by 1172, so creating the "Lordship of Ireland", which formed part of his Angevin Empire.

Slavery in Ireland

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ See also McNeill, "Archaeology", "The 150 years before 1200 have been lost, between the assumptions that life was a continuation of the fifth through eighth-century world and that the incursion of English lords marked a fundamental change throughout Ireland."
  2. ^ Ó Cróinín also points out the irony of "at no time in the historical period did the political division represented by the word cóiced... ...have a tangible existence"
  3. ^ They may not have been as dominant in earlier history as medieval sources tend to claim, according to Ó Corráin, "The Vikings & Ireland" they :"paraded illustrious ancestors and their claim to precedence was expressed in an elaborate mythography that passed for history."
  4. ^ Ó Corráin, The Vikings & Ireland, p. 9. The annals name the site of this attack as Rechru, a name that could mean either modern Lambay Island or Rathlin.
  5. ^ Hudson, Niall Caille. According to Hudson, "Any agreement made there has not survived, although the report of the meeting from a Munster chronicle with a bias towards the southern prince claims that Niall submitted to Feidlimid, while a contemporary northern chronicle has no report of the proceedings."
  6. ^ The first report of Vikings spending the winter in Ireland is from Lough Neagh 840–41, the first overwintered in Dublin 841–42.
  7. ^ For a longer discussion on the location on Lochlann, see Ó Corráin, "The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland in the Ninth Century"
  8. ^ AU 902.2 Note that the untranslated text [1] reads: "Indarba n-gennti a h-Ere, .í. longport Atha Cliath o Mael Findia m. Flandacain co feraibh Bregh & o Cerball m. Muiricain co Laignibh...", that is "longport", not "fortress".
  9. ^ Grandsons or great grandsons of Ivar, no other patronym was given for these, which makes it difficult trace their lineage. Modern scholarly literature also refer to later descendants as "of the Uí Ímair". However, "a collective term for all the descendants of Ívarr is lacking in the medieval Irish chronicles"Downham, "Viking Kings...", p. 6.
  10. ^ The identity between the Ragnall of Waterford and Ragnall (Rögnvald) of York has been questioned, see Downham, Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland, p. 94.
  11. ^ The archaeology of the early viking age in Ireland "The second and more intensive period of settlement was characterised by the establishment of a series of towns. Waterford (914), Cork (c.915), Dublin (917), Wexford (c.921) and Limerick (922)."
  12. ^ Hudson, "Muirchertach mac Néill (d. 943)", Hudson also notes that "As a descendant of the kings of Dál Riata, being the great-grandson of the Scottish king Cináed mac Alpin, he may have considered that he had hereditary interests in the region."
  13. ^ Quoted from Duffy, "Ireland, c. 1000 – c. 1100", p. 288. After quoting Ó Corráin, Duffy states that:"...Few now, beyond the ranks of the purveyors of popular fiction, perpetuate the portrayal of Brian, eliminator of the viking scourge" – which may be an overly optimistic assertion from Duffy.
  14. ^ AU 1015.2: "Flaithbertach ua Néill went into Mide to assist Mael Sechnaill." This seem to contradict Byrne (p. 864): "..since 970 the Northern and Southern Uí Néill were... ...irreconcilable foes..."
  15. ^ Gilla received a letter from Anselm congratulating him on his elevation to the see of Limerick, and there was no suggestion that Anselm felt Canterbury had been slighted or ought to have been involved. Flanagan, p. 915.
  16. ^ The see of Waterford however, where the incumbent bishop Máel Ísu Ua hAinmire also had been consecrated in, and taken vows of obedience to, Canterbury, was moved to Lismore, and Máel Ísu chosen as the first archbishop of Cashel.

References

Footnotes
  1. ^ Wallace, The archaeology..., pp. 814–15.
  2. ^ Duffy, Ireland, c. 1000 – c. 1100, p. 285.
  3. ^ Ó Corráin, "Nationality and Kingship..."
  4. ^ Hughes, Early Christian Ireland, is a general survey of the subject.
  5. ^ Hughes, Early Christian Ireland, chapter 4, especially pp. 135–37.; Charles-Edwards, Early Christian Ireland, p. xix.; Ó Cróinín, "Ireland 400–800", passim.
  6. ^ Breatnach, "Historical tales"
  7. ^ Eoin MacNeill, Phases of Irish History, Dublin, 1920, pp. 98–132.
  8. ^ Ó Cróinín, Dáibhi (2005) Ireland, 400–800 pp. 187–88.
  9. ^ a b Ó Corráin, "The Vikings & Ireland", p. 2.
  10. ^ a b Woolf, Alex From Pictland to Alba, p. 47. Woolf "constructs a plausible narrative" based on an entry in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle where these early raiders can be identified as originating on the west-coast of Norway.
  11. ^ Byrne, F.J. The Viking age, pp. 609–10.
  12. ^ Ó Corráin, "The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland..."
  13. ^ T. M. Charles-Edwards, 'Áed Oirdnide mac Néill
  14. ^ Byrne, Francis John (2005), "Church and politics", p. 663.
  15. ^ T. M. Charles-Edwards, 'Áed Oirdnide mac Néill, AU 817.8
  16. ^ a b Bracken, "Feidlimid mac Crimthainn..."
  17. ^ AU 833.4
  18. ^ AU 835.1, 835.3
  19. ^ Ó Corráin, "The Vikings in Ireland", p. 19.
  20. ^ AU 873.3, Ó Corráin, "The Vikings in Ireland", p. 19.
  21. ^ a b worldhistory.org
  22. ^ AFM 843.13
  23. ^ AU 845.8
  24. ^ AU 848.5
  25. ^ AU 848.4
  26. ^ Ó Corráin, "Vikings & Ireland", p. 16.
  27. ^ AU 853.2, "Amhlaim m. righ Laithlinde..."
  28. ^ Hadley, Viking Raids and Conquest, p. 201.
  29. ^ Byrne, "The Viking Age", p. 617.
  30. ^ AU 866.8
  31. ^ Ó Corráin, "Vikings & Ireland", p. 20.
  32. ^ AU 871.2
  33. ^ 873.3 Imhar, rex Nordmannorum totius Hibernie & Brittanie, uitam finiuit.
  34. ^ Downham, Viking Kings, pp. 17–23, 137–45, 238–41, 246, 258–59.; Woolf, "Pictland to Alba", pp. 106–16.
  35. ^ Irish Migration to Merseyside
  36. ^ St Bridget's Church West Kirby
  37. ^ Flechner and Meeder (2016), The Irish in Early Medieval Europe, pp. 231–41.
  38. ^ Johnston (2013), Literacy and Identity in Early Medieval Ireland, pp. 27–58.
  39. ^ Flechner and Meeder (2016), The Irish in Early Medieval Europe, pp. 179–94, 231–41.
  40. ^ Ó Corráin, "The Vikings in Ireland", p. 22.
  41. ^ hÉailidhe, P. Ó (1 January 1957). "The Rathdown Slabs". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 87 (1): 75–88. JSTOR 25509271.
  42. ^ McEvoy&al., EJHG article
  43. ^ AU 921.8, commented by Woolf, From Pictland to Alba, p. 148.
  44. ^ Ó Corráin, "The Vikings in Ireland", pp. 22–23.
  45. ^ a b Hudson, "Muirchertach mac Néill (d. 943)"
  46. ^ a b c Duffy, Brian Bóruma
  47. ^ a b Jaski, Brian Boru
  48. ^ AU 1014.2, "ardrí Gaidhel Erenn & Gall & Bretan, August iartair tuaiscirt Eorpa uile"
  49. ^ a b Byrne, Ireland and her neighbours, pp. 866–67.
  50. ^ Byrne, Ireland and her neighbours, p. 865.
  51. ^ Byrne, Ireland and her neighbours, p. 869.
  52. ^ Byrne, Ireland and her neighbours, p. 870.
  53. ^ Byrne, Ireland and her neighbours, pp. 879–80.
  54. ^ Duffy, Irishmen and Islesmen, p. 94.
  55. ^ Hughes, The Irish Church, 800 – c. 1050, p. 655, note 70.
  56. ^ Flanagan, p. 913.
  57. ^ Holland, Church reforms
  58. ^ Flanagan, pp. 911–12
  59. ^ Holland, Cashel, synod of I (1101)
  60. ^ Holland, Gille (Gilbert) of Limerick
  61. ^ Flanagan, p. 923.
  62. ^ Holland, Church reform
  63. ^ Holland, Synod of Kells, p. 247.
  64. ^ AFM 1152.4
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  • Wallace, Patrick F. (2005), "The archaeology of ireland's Viking-age towns", in Ó Cróinín, Dáibhí (ed.), Prehistoric and Early Ireland, A New History of Ireland, vol. I, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 814–41, ISBN 978-0-19-922665-8
  • Woolf, Alex (2007), From Pictland to Alba, 789–1070, The New Edinburgh History of Scotland, vol. 2, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-1234-5

External links

  • Treasures of early Irish art, 1500 B.C. to 1500 A.D., an exhibition catalogue from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on this period (section 4: pp. 144–86 )

history, ireland, 1169, history, ireland, 1169, covers, period, history, ireland, from, first, viking, raids, norman, invasion, first, centuries, this, period, characterised, viking, raids, subsequent, norse, settlements, along, coast, viking, ports, were, est. The history of Ireland 800 1169 covers the period in the history of Ireland from the first Viking raids to the Norman invasion The first two centuries of this period are characterised by Viking raids and the subsequent Norse settlements along the coast Viking ports were established at Dublin Wexford Waterford Cork and Limerick which became the first large towns in Ireland Ireland consisted of many semi independent territories tuatha and attempts were made by various factions to gain political control over the whole of the island For the first two centuries of this period this was mainly a rivalry between putative High Kings of Ireland from the northern and southern branches of the Ui Neill The one who came closest to being de facto king over the whole of Ireland however was Brian Boru the first high king in this period not belonging to the Ui Neill Following Brian s death at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014 the political situation became more complex with rivalry for high kingship from several clans and dynasties Brian s descendants failed to maintain a unified throne and regional squabbling over territory led indirectly to the invasion of the Normans under Richard de Clare in 1169 Contents 1 Historiography 2 Nature of the written sources 3 Political landscape c 800 4 First Viking age 795 902 4 1 Early Viking raids 4 2 Aed Oirdnide 4 3 Rivalry between north and south 4 4 Intensified raiding and the first Viking settlements in Ireland 4 5 Shifting alliances and struggle for power 4 6 Failed Conquest 4 7 Impact on cultural activity and formation of Irish scholarly diaspora 5 Second Viking age 914 980 6 Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill and Brian Boru 980 1022 7 High kings with opposition 1022 onwards 8 Reform of the Irish Church 9 Norman invasion 10 Slavery in Ireland 11 See also 12 Notes and references 12 1 Notes 12 2 References 13 External linksHistoriography Edit Eoin MacNeill one of the pioneers in modern studies of Irish medieval history Due to the rich amount of written sources the study of Irish history 800 1169 has to a large extent focused on gathering interpretation and textual criticism of these Only recently have other sources of historical knowledge received more attention particularly archaeology Since the modern excavations of Dublin started in 1961 followed by similar efforts in Wexford Waterford and Limerick great advances have been made in the understanding of the physical character of the towns established during this period 1 The first part of the period from 800 to 1014 is well studied the Viking age has attracted the interest of historians for quite some time The period between 1014 and 1169 has received less attention In the words of Sean Duffy this period has historiographically speaking fallen between two stools Historians of early medieval Ireland seeking to conclude their narratives on a high note have traditionally done so after recounting the death of the famous high king Brian Borama Boru at the battle of Clontarf in 1014 On the other hand historians of later medieval Ireland generally choose to begin proceedings with the English invasion of the 1160s Eleventh and early twelfth century Ireland has therefore often assumed the character of a snappy epilogue or a lengthy prologue 2 note 1 In trying to interpret the history of early Ireland one of the most frequently asked questions addressed by historians is how early it is possible to speak of an Irish nation encompassing the whole island of Ireland Early poet historians like Flann Mainistrech constructed a history of a monarchy of all Ireland going back to and beyond St Patrick Only a hundred years after Mainistrech Gerald of Wales described the Irish society in his Topographia Hibernica as utterly primitive and savage At the beginning of modern scholarly interpretation of Irish history Eoin MacNeill and G H Orpen came to opposite conclusions analyzing the same period Orpen saw an anarchic country still in a tribal state he could see no nation no wider community in Ireland than the tribe MacNeill stressed the reality of the high kingship of Ireland and the existence of many of those institutions of government which Orpen found wanting and claimed that Irish law had a national character 3 Nature of the written sources Edit Folio 53 from the Book of Leinster A large body of contemporary and near contemporary material on early medieval Ireland has survived From the titles of works mentioned in these sources it is clear that a great deal of additional material has now been lost The surviving materials usually exist in the form of much later copies and it is only from comparison of the various texts that the original documents can be reconstructed 4 Extant Irish annals are ultimately derived from the now lost Chronicle of Ireland which was probably being compiled in the midlands of Ireland by around 800 All include material derived from other sources or added at a later date The Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Innisfallen cover most of this period but have a gap between 1132 and 1155 The Annals of Clonmacnoise survive only in an eccentric 17th century English translation and the Annals of Tigernach for this period are lost with Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh s abbreviated copy known as the Chronicon Scotorum supplying only part of the missing material The Annals of the Four Masters are late and include some material of doubtful origin While the annals provide a considerable amount of information they are generally terse and most focus their attention on the doings of the Ui Neill and of churchmen 5 In addition to the annals a large number of genealogies survive along with geographical and legal texts poetry sagas and hagiography In the 12th century propaganda text like Caithreim Chellachain Chaisil and Cogad Gaedel re Gallaib were composed Even though the historical accuracy of these accounts is dubious the Cogad especially has had a great impact on the interpretation of Irish medieval history until recently 6 Political landscape c 800 EditFurther information Gaelic Ireland and Gaelic kingdoms of Ireland At the end of the 8th century Ireland was homogeneously Gaelic in terms of society culture and language People lived in rural communities and the only larger settlements were monastic towns of varying sizes The monasteries played an important part in society not just with regards to religious and cultural life but also to economy and politics Christianization had begun in the 5th century and by the early 9th century the island was almost entirely Christian However the Martyrology of Tallaght written sometime in the 8th or 9th century hints that paganism had not yet been fully uprooted Peoples and subdivisions of early Ireland Eoin MacNeill identified the oldest certain fact in the political history of Ireland as the existence in late prehistory of a pentarchy probably consisting of the coiceda or fifths of the Ulaid Ulster the Connachta Connacht the Laigin Leinster Mumu Munster and Mide Meath although some accounts discount Mide and split Mumu in two 7 This is not an accurate description of the political landscape c 800 8 note 2 but when discussing the political subdivisions of Ireland at this time it is still useful to refer to this system if Laigin and Mide are combined as Leinster it roughly corresponds with the modern four provinces of Ireland The Ui Neill divided in two main branches known as Northern Ui Neill and Southern Ui Neill was the leading dynasty in Ireland 9 note 3 The Northern Ui Neill controlled the north western part of Ireland and was divided into two leading branches the Cenel Conaill in the west and Cenel nEogain also known as the kingdom of Ailech Cenel nEogain had become the more powerful of the two in 789 9 and had expanded east and southwards gaining control over the important monastic centre Armagh and the large sub kingdom of Airgialla The traditional kingdom of Ulaid dominated by Dal Fiatach and Dal nAraidi was now more or less confined to the area east of the river Bann The central region of Mide had been dominated by what became known as the southern Ui Neill since the 7th century Until the 8th century the Sil nAedo Slaine also known as the kingdom of Brega was pre eminent but from 728 the western dynasty of Clann Cholmain was dominant In Laigin Ui Dunlainge was the dominant dynasty c 800 They were closely associated with the large monastery of Kildare Their main rival for dominance in Leinster the Ui Cheinnselaig had not been able to claim the title king of Leinster since 728 The Ui Cheinnselaig now controlled a territory in the south eastern part of Leinster and had close links to the monastery of Ferns The kingdom of Osraige occupying roughly the same area as the present County Kilkenny and western County Laois was considered part of Munster until the late ninth century when it received an independent status under king Cerball mac Dunlainge Munster was dominated by the Eoganachta centred around Cashel and with Emly as ecclesiastical centre The Dal gCais not yet known under this name had defeated the Corcu Modruad in 744 and taken control over the area in present County Clare from which they would later rise to dominance but were not yet a significant power in Munster The Eoganachta rivalled the Ui Neill in power and influence and claimed suzerainty over the southern part of Ireland This claim was in part anchored within the legendary ancient division of the island in Leath Cuinn and Leath Moga Conn s half north and Mug s half south During the 7th century the Ui Briuin had emerged in Connacht and since the first half of the 8th century been the dominant dynasty Ui Briuin also influenced the kingdom of Breifne on the southern borders of the Northern Ui Neill First Viking age 795 902 EditEarly Viking raids Edit See also Early Scandinavian Dublin Early Viking raids The first recorded Viking raid in Irish history occurred in AD 795 when Vikings possibly from Norway 10 looted the island of Lambay note 4 This was followed by a raid on the coast of Brega in 798 and raids on the coast of Connacht in 807 11 These early Viking raids were generally small in scale and quick These early raids interrupted the golden age of Christian Irish culture and marked the beginning of two hundred years of intermittent warfare with waves of Viking raiders plundering monasteries and towns throughout Ireland Most of the early raiders came from the fjords of western Norway They are believed to have sailed first to Shetland then south to Orkney The Vikings would have then sailed down the Atlantic coast of Scotland and then over to Ireland 10 During these early raids the Vikings also travelled to the west coast of Ireland to the Skellig Islands located off the coast of County Kerry The early raids on Ireland seem to have been aristocratic free enterprise and named leaders appear in the Irish annals Saxolb Soxulfr in 837 Turges THurgestr in 845 Agonn Hakon in 847 12 Aed Oirdnide Edit Aed Oirdnide of the Cenel nEogain branch of the Northern Ui Neill became King of Tara in 797 after the death of his predecessor father in law and political rival Donnchad Midi Duncan This followed the classic Ui Neill political arrangement where over kingship alternated regularly between Cenel nEogain and Clann Cholmain of the Southern Ui Neill During his reign he campaigned in Mide Leinster and Ulaid to assert his authority though unlike Donnchad Duncan he did not campaign in Munster Thomas Charles Edwards credits Aed for the absence of any major Viking attacks on Ireland during his reign after 798 13 The annals gives no reference however to Aed at any time being involved with warfare against Viking raiders Aed was connected to the monastic community at Armagh and a supporter of the familia of Patrick His rivals for supremacy within Ui Neill the Clann Cholmain and the Cenel Conaill had on the other hand supported the familia of Columba During Aed s reign the Columban familia following several Viking raids against Iona established a new monastery at Kells a royal site in the possession of Armagh Byrne states that the foundation of Kells marked the resolution of any remaining rivalry between the Columban and Patrician churches 14 That the community of Columba in 817 tried to have Aed excommunicated may show that not all rivalry was resolved after all 15 Rivalry between north and south Edit Is he Feidhlimidh in ridianid opair oenlaithieitrige Connacht cen cathocus Midhe do manrath Feidlimid is the kingFor whom a single day s work isTo take the hostages of Connacht without battleAnd to spoil Mide Annals of Ulster 840 4 Fedelmid mac Crimthainn from the Eoganacht Chaisil acceded to the kingship of Munster in 820 beginning a 130 year domination by this branch of Eoganachta 16 Combining military campaigns with manipulation of ecclesiastical affairs he embarked on a policy of aggressive expansion to counter the growth in power of the Ui Neill Conchobar mac Donnchada Duncan succeeded Aed Oirdnide as Ui Neill overking in 819 and soon found himself challenged by Feidlimid both by Feidlimid launching raids into Mide and Connacht and by him interfering as would be the Ui Neill view in the affairs of Armagh Conchobar and Feidlimid met at Birr in 827 to discuss peace terms and the very fact that the king of Munster could force the high king to a peace conference is indicative of Feidlimid s growing power 16 Conchobar was succeeded by Niall Caille in 833 With Niall we for the first time see a reference in the annals of a Ui Neill leading an army against the Vikings he defeated Viking raiders in Derry the same year 17 He sought to further expand Ui Neill influence in the south in 835 he led an army to Leinster and installed Bran mac Faelain as king of Leinster and also invaded Mide 18 This brought him into conflict with Feidlimid however and in 838 a conference rigdal mor great royal meeting between Niall and Feidlimid was held note 5 This meeting did not result in any lasting peace though in 840 Feidlimid led an army into Mide and encamped at Tara thereby challenging the Ui Neill also in the north In 841 however Feidlimid was routed in battle by Niall in Leinster His successors in the south would not be able to challenge the north again to this extent until some 150 years later Intensified raiding and the first Viking settlements in Ireland Edit See also Early Scandinavian Dublin The first Norse settlements in Dublin The Viking raids on Ireland resumed in 821 and intensified during the following decades The Vikings were beginning to establish fortified encampments longports along the Irish coast and overwintering in Ireland instead of retreating to Scandinavia or British bases The first known longports were at Linn Duachaill Annagassan and Duiblinn on the River Liffey at or near present Dublin 19 note 6 They were also moving further inland to attack often using rivers such as the Shannon and then retreating to their coastal bases The raiding parties also increased in size becoming regular armies in 837 the annals report a fleet of sixty longships on the Liffey carrying 1 500 men and another one of a similar size sailing up the river Boyne making their way into the inland territories and launching attacks on the lands of Brega in the south of County Meath 20 21 In general from 837 onward larger Viking forces hit larger targets such as the greater monastic towns of Armagh Glendalough Kildare Slane Clonard Clonmacnoise and Lismore while smaller targets such as local churches with less material to be plundered may have escaped the Vikings attention 21 Modern replica of a Viking Knarr One of the first named Viking leaders was Thorgest in Latin Turgesius The Annals of the Four Masters connect him with attacks on Connacht Mide and the church at Clonmacnoise in 844 22 He was captured and drowned in Lough Owel by Mael Sechnaill mac Mail Ruanaid King of Mide 23 However the existence of Thorgest is uncertain as he was recorded in books written over 200 years after his death in a period of strong anti Viking sentiment He was often depicted as a villain and his wife was said to be a witch that would perform pagan rituals on altars It is highly likely that this was war propaganda as we have very little evidence of his existence from his own period and it is unlikely those close to him would record this themselves In 848 a Norse army was defeated at Sciath Nechtain by olchobar mac Cinaeda of Munster and Lorcan mac Cellaig of Leinster For the first time the leader of the Vikings is described as royalty from Lochlann 24 Mael Sechnaill now High King defeated another army at Forrach the same year 25 These victories form the background of an embassy sent to the Frankish emperor Charles the Bald reported in the Annales Bertiniani 26 In 853 Olaf identified as a son of the king of Lochlann 27 came to Ireland Lochlann has been understood as a district of present Norway it is now considered more plausible that it refers to a Scandinavian colony in the Western Isles of Scotland 28 note 7 Olaf assumed leadership of the Vikings in Ireland probably in some way shared with his kinsman Ivar first mentioned in the Irish Annals in 857 Olaf and Ivar remained active in Ireland and around the Irish Sea for the next two decades The descendants of Ivar the Ui Imair would be an important political factor for the next two centuries Shifting alliances and struggle for power Edit A significant new trait from the middle of the 9th century was that the Norse now also entered alliances with various Irish rulers Cerball mac Dunlainge had become king of Osraige in 842 Cerball had defeated Viking raiders in 846 and 847 but from 858 he is allied with Olaf and Ivar against Mael Sechnaill campaigning in Leinster and Munster and in 859 also raiding Mael Sechnaill s heartlands in Mide though Cerball had to submit to Mael Sechnaill later the same year These alliances were by no means permanent In 860 Cerball was allied with Mael Sechnaill in a campaign against Aed Findliath of the Northern Ui Neill while Olaf and Ivar has allied themselves with Aed In 870 however Cerball and Aed appeared as allies in Leinster Mael Sechnaill had more success as high king than his predecessors Niall Caille and Conchobar Donnchada Duncan in dealing with the south and forced Munster into submission in 858 and as noted above Osraige in 859 He also asserted control over Ulaid Leinster and Connacht and was in his obituary in the Annals of Ulster described as ri h Erenn uile king of all Ireland The last years of his reign he had however experienced serious opposition from his Ui Neill kinsmen of Ailech and Brega allied with the Norse of Dublin Byrne notes Mael Sechnaill s unprecedented success in achieving the high kingship of all Ireland was marred by the chronic complaint of Irish politics having united the Ulaid Munster Osraige Connacht and Leinster he was attacked at the end of his reign by a combination of Ui Neill kings 29 Aed Findliath was king of Ailech and the leading king within the Northern Ui Neill After the death of Mael Sechnaill he is counted in the regal lists as high king following the established scheme where this alternated between Cenel nEogain in the north and Clann Cholmain of Mide His kingship was disputed though and he did not come close to being an actual king over Ireland He could count some successes against the Norse however most notably burning all the Norse longports in the north in 866 30 Aed seems to have used the opportunity while Olaf was involved in warfare in Pictland presumably bringing a large contingent of the Norse forces in Ireland with him The Vikings never managed to establish permanent settlements in the north o Corrain observes Ironically Aed Findliath s success may have held back the economic development of the north and ultimately prevented the growth of port towns like those on the east and south coasts on which the Leinster and Munster kings subsequently depended for much of their wealth 31 The last report of Olaf is when he and Ivar returned to Dublin in 871 from Alba 32 Ivar died in 873 In his obituary the Annals of Ulster call Ivar king of the Norsemen of all Ireland and Britain 33 With their disappearance there were frequent changes of leadership among the Norse in Ireland and a great deal of internecine conflict is reported for the following decades 34 In 902 Mael Finnia mac Flannacain of Brega and Cerball mac Muirecain of Leinster joined forces against Dublin and The heathens were driven from Ireland i e from the fortress of Ath Cliath Dublin note 8 A group of Vikings led by Hingamund who were forced out of Ireland were given permission by the Saxons to settle in Wirral in the north west of England The Three Fragments refers to a distinct group of settlers living among these Vikings as Irishmen Then the King who was on the point of death and the Queen sent messengers to the Irishmen who were among the pagans for there were many Irish among the pagans to say to the Irishmen life and health to you from the King of the Saxons who is in disease and from his Queen who has all authority over the Saxons and they are certain that you are true and trusty friends to them Therefore you should take their side for they did not bestow any greater honour to a Saxon warrior or cleric than to each warrior and cleric who came to them from Ireland because this inimical race of pagans is equally hostile to you also Further evidence of an Irish presence in Wirral comes from the name of the village of Irby in Wirral which means farmstead of the Irishmen and St Bridget s Church West Kirby which is known to have been founded by Christian Vikings from Ireland 35 36 Failed Conquest Edit The Vikings were able to exploit internal divisions in order to invade England and France As Ireland was one of the most politically fractured countries at the time it was a prime target for Viking conquest Furthermore Irish Kings often made alliances with foreign invaders in an attempt to weaken their domestic rivals The Vikings were able to defeat the centralized Kingdoms of Europe since the small ruling class was easily removed However Ireland was composed of more than 150 different Kingdoms ruling over small territories This decentralized system of governance made it almost impossible to gain control of a territory since defeated Kings were easily replaced Impact on cultural activity and formation of Irish scholarly diaspora Edit Historians debate the consequences that the initial phases of Viking settlement had on scholarship and literary output 37 Scholarly activity for which the Irish are famous in the early Medieval period consisted of the writing of poetry the production of Christian devotional texts the development of the science of computus and the compilation of elaborate law tracts 38 Patronage for scholars and scholarship came largely from Irish kings who regarded the presence of court scholars as part and parcel of the trappings of kingship but also as a means of bolstering their own image through praise poetry that such scholars composed and performed With the advent of the Vikings patronage ties have been argued to have been loosened thereby affecting directly the livelihood of Irish scholars In addition some kings would have turned their attention to more pressing but also more profitable pursuits such as engaging in warfare or alliances with Vikings or other Irish kings as well as tapping the economic benefits that Viking trade would have brought While this was happening in Ireland we observe a more pronounced presence of Irish scholars in Frankish Europe and especially in circles associated with the Carolingian court Commonly known as peregrini Irish scholars such as John Scottus Eriugena and Sedulius Scottus became among the most prominent and influential in ninth century continental Europe studying and teaching a range of subjects from theology to political philosophy It is tempting to link their presence on the Continent as well as the presence of scores of other Irish learned people with the impact of the Vikings on Ireland which may have driven such people to seek employment elsewhere If one accepts this version of events then the Vikings can be said to have inadvertently been one of the principal catalysts for the spread of Irish culture abroad and the subsequent foundation of Irish centres on the Continent which remained influential for centuries to come 39 Second Viking age 914 980 EditSee also Norse Gaels After having been forced to leave Dublin in 902 the descendants of Ivar now described generically in the annals as the Ui Imair note 9 remained active around the Irish sea reports tell of their activities in Pictland Strathclyde Northumbria and Mann In 914 a new Viking fleet appeared in Waterford Harbour and soon the Ui Imair followed again taking control over Viking activities in Ireland Ragnall arrived with a fleet in Waterford while Sitric landed at Cenn Fuait possibly near Leixlip in Leinster Niall Glundub had followed Flann Sinna as Ui Neill overking in 916 and he marched into Munster against Ragnall but no decisive engagement followed The men of Leinster under Augaire mac Ailella attacked Sithric but suffered a heavy defeat in the Battle of Confey or Cenn Fuait 917 This victory allowed Sithric to re establish Norse control over Dublin Ragnall left Ireland again in 918 and became king of York note 10 With Sithric in Dublin and Ragnall in York a Dublin York axis developed which would have influence on both England and Ireland for the next half century 40 Map showing the major Norse settlements in Ireland in the 10th Century A new and more intensive period of Viking settlement in Ireland began in 914 Between 914 and 922 the Norse established Waterford Cork Dublin Wexford and Limerick note 11 Significant excavations in Dublin and Waterford in the 20th century have unearthed much of the Viking heritage of those cities A large amount of Viking burial stones called the Rathdown Slabs have been found in multiple locations across South Dublin 41 The Vikings founded many other coastal towns and after several generations of coexistence and intermarriage a group of mixed Irish and Norse ethnic background arose often called Norse Gaels or Hiberno Norse Norse influence shows in the Norse derived names of many contemporary Irish kings e g Magnus Lochlann or Sitric and in DNA evidence in some residents of these coastal cities to this day A genetics paper in 2006 by Dr Brian McEvoy found that most men with Irish Viking surnames carried typically Irish genes This suggests that Viking settlements may have had a Scandinavian elite but with most of the inhabitants being indigenous Irish 42 Niall Glundub marched on Dublin in September 919 but Sihtric met his forces at the battle of Islandbridge or Ath Cliath and inflicted on him a decisive defeat with Niall and numerous other Irish leaders among the casualties Dublin was secured for the Norse and in 920 Sitric left for York and following Ragnall s death succeeded him as ruler there in 921 Their kinsman Gofraid assumed control of Dublin Gofraid was active as a Viking raider and slaver but there were signs during his reign that the Norse were not just mere Vikings any more During a raid at Armagh in 921 Gofraid spared the prayerhouses and the sick from destruction 43 considerations never taken by the raiders of the previous century Another was the intense campaigns led by Dublin in eastern Ulster from 921 to 927 which appear to have aimed at conquest in order to create a Scandinavian kingdom like the one on the eastern side of the Irish sea 44 Dublin s ambitions in Ulster were halted by a series of defeats inflicted upon the Norse by Muirchertach mac Neill the son of Niall Glundub According to Benjamin Hudson Muirchertach was one of the most successful generals of his day and was described as the Hector of the Irish 45 In the annals it is Duncan Donnchad Donn from Clann Cholmain who is titled high king after Niall however and Muirchertach did not succeed his father as king of Ailech either until 938 Apart from his victories over the Norse Muirchertach led campaigns forcing other provincial kingdoms into submission most notably taking the king of Munster Cellachan Caisil captive in 941 The same year he led a fleet to the Hebrides collecting tribute there 45 note 12 When Sihtric died in 927 Gofraid left for York trying to assume kingship there He was driven out by Athelstan and returned to Dublin half a year later The Vikings of Limerick had taken Dublin in his absence Gofraid retook the city but the struggle between Limerick continued well after Gofraid s death in 934 He was succeeded by his son Amlaib who inflicted a decisive defeat on Limerick in 937 The same year Amlaib went to Northumbria and allied himself with Constantine II of Scotland and Owen I of Strathclyde Athelstan defeated this coalition at Brunanburh 937 but after Athelstan s death in 939 Amlaib became king of York He was joined by a kinsman with the same name Amlaib son of Sihtric known as Amlaib Cuaran Congalach mac Mael Mithig known as Cnogba succeeded Duncan Donnchad Donn as Ui Neill overking in 944 Muirchertag who otherwise might have been the obvious successor had been killed in 943 Congalach was king of Brega and a member of Sil nAedo Slaine and the first of this dynasty called High King since Cinaed mac Irgalaig in the early 8th century In 944 he sacked Dublin now ruled by Blacaire mac Gofrith When Amlaib Cuaran returned to Ireland the next year he became ruler of Dublin and acted as an ally of Congalach in the struggle against Ruaidri ua Canannain a rival Ui Neill claimant for High Kingship from Cenel Conaill This alliance did not last long after Ruaidri s death in 950 however and Congalach was killed in 956 in a battle against an alliance of Dublin and Leinster He was succeeded by Domnall ua Neill and in the following decades alliances shifted constantly between the different branches of Ui Neill Leinster and Dublin In 980 Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill succeeded Domnall and the same year he defeated the forces of Dublin at the battle of Tara Following this victory Mael Sechnaill forced Dublin into submission and his half brother Amlaibs son Gluniairn became ruler in Dublin Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill and Brian Boru 980 1022 Edit 18th century engraving of Brian Boru In Munster the influence of the Dal gCais had grown under Cennetig mac Lorcain and his son Mathgamain was the first non Eoganachta ruler to be named by the annals as king of Cashel i e king of Munster in historical times 46 He was killed in 976 and succeeded by his brother Brian later famously known as Brian Boru Brian quickly established himself as the most powerful ruler in Munster defeating the Norse of Limerick in 977 and the Eoganachta the following year Having gained control over Munster he tried to extend his authority by raiding Osraige in 982 and 983 and also according to the annals of Innisfallen entering an alliance with the Norse of Waterford with the intention of attacking Dublin 46 There was such an attack but Brian does not seem to have been involved instead it was Domnall Claen of Leinster who was allied with Ivar of Waterford and they were defeated by Gluniairn and Mael Sechnaill Mael Sechnaill obviously perceived Brian as a threat and as early as 982 raided Munster and the territory of the Dal gCais The next two decades saw more or less constant warfare between them mostly with Leinster as their battleground Even if Brian never defeated Mael Sechnaill in battle Brian s and Munster s influence was growing at the expense of Mael Sechnaill and the Southern Ui Neill In 997 Mael Sechnaill was forced to acknowledge Brian s authority over the south of Ireland and they formally divided Ireland according to the traditional scheme of Leath Cuinn and Leath Moga In the years that followed the two of them acted as allies in accordance with this agreement In 999 Brian quelled a revolt against him by the men of Leinster and Dublin at the battle of Glen Mama and only restored Sigtrygg Silkbeard as ruler of Dublin after he had formally submitted to Brian by handing over hostages 46 In 1000 Brian turned against Mael Sechnaill and by 1002 he had forced Mael Sechnaill to submit to him and now claimed kingship over the whole of Ireland In the following decade there were several campaigns in the north to force the Ulaid and the Northern Ui Neill into submission as well Even if faced with multiple rebellions both in the north and in Leinster by 1011 he had received submission from every major regional king in Ireland and thus earned the recognition by historians as the first real king of Ireland 47 During his visit to Armagh in 1005 he had his secretary add a note to the Book of Armagh where he is proclaimed as Imperator Scottorum emperor of the Irish According to Bart Jaski This can be regarded as a claim that he ruled both the Irish and the Norse in Ireland and may even imply suzerainty over the Gaels of Scotland 47 In his obituary in the Annals of Ulster he is styled as over king of the Irish of Ireland and of the foreigners and of the Britons the Augustus of the whole of north west Europe 48 In 1012 Flaithbertach Ua Neill revolted against Brian and the following year Mael Morda of Leinster and Sigtrygg of Dublin did too The latter led to the famous battle of Clontarf where Brian was killed even if his army was victorious over Mael Morda Sigtrygg and their allies Sigurd Hlodvirsson Earl of Orkney as well as forces from Man participated on the Dublin Leinster side and this may in conjunction with the propagandistic account of the battle given in the Cogad have created the still popular myth that what took place at Clontarf Good Friday 1014 was a decisive battle where the Irish defeated Viking invaders and were liberated from oppression Duncan Donnchadh o Corrain was one of the first to publicly debunk this national myth in his groundbreaking Ireland before the Normans from 1972 The battle of Clontarf was not a struggle between the Irish and the Norse for the sovereignty of Ireland neither was it a great national victory which broke the power of the Norse forever long before Clontarf the Norse had become a minor political force in Irish affairs In fact Clontarf was part of the internal struggle for sovereignty and was essentially the revolt of the Leinstermen against the dominance of Brian a revolt in which their Norse allies played an important but secondary role Donnchadh o Corrain note 13 Following Brian s death Mael Sechnaill resumed as High King supported by Flaithbertach ua Neill note 14 In Munster internal strife almost immediately began between Brian s sons Donnchad and Tadc and Dungal Ua Donnchada of Eoganachta also claimed the kingship of the province Though Donnchad Duncan eventually was victorious the descendants of Brian would not be able to make a real claim to kingship over Ireland again until Toirdelbach Ua Briain In Leinster the defeat at Clontarf and death of Mael Morda seriously weakened the Ui Dunlainge and opened the way for a new Ui Cheinnselaig dominance in the region Despite the defeat at Clontarf Sigtrygg remained ruler of Dublin until 1036 High kings with opposition 1022 onwards EditConchobur clannmin fo chen Aed Gairbith Diarmait durgen Donnchad da Niall cen snim sneidrig na re sea co roreid Smooth haired Conchobar welcome Aed Garbith hardy Diarmait Donnchad two Nialls without swift sorrow are evidently the kings of this era From Redig dam a De do nim poem by Flann Mainistrech from 1056 49 Duncan Donnchad mac Brian styled himself as King of Ireland after the death of Mael Sechnaill but failed to gain recognition as such A glossing of Baile In Scail lists Flaitbertach Ua Neill as high king but he proved unable even to control the north of Ireland 50 Neither was anyone else able to make a recognised claim for kingship over all of Ireland according to Byrne what distinguished the great interregnum of 1022 72 from other periods in Irish history is that it was recognised as such by contemporary observers 51 Flann Mainistrech had written Rig Themra toebaige iar tain a regnal poem on the Christian Ui Neill kings of Tara some time between 1014 and 1022 When he wrote in 1056 he evidently did not know any high king of Ireland and instead lists a number of kings of the day Duncan Conchobar Aed Garbith Diarmait Donnchad Duncan and two Nialls According to Byrne these are Conchobar Ua Mail Schechnaill of Mide Aed Ua Conchobair of Connacht Garbith Ua Cathassaig of Brega Diarmait mac Mail na mBo of Leinster Donnchad Duncan Mac Briain of Munster Niall mac Mael Sechnaill of Ailech and Niall mac Eochada of Ulaid 49 The term ri Erenn co fressarba High kings with opposition was used from the 12th century According to Byrne it could be argued that the high kings with opposition met with opposition precisely because they tried to become kings of Ireland in a real sense They were not less successful than their predecessors but only seemed so in the light of the teaching of the schools 52 Following a similar line of reasoning Byrne suggests that the focus from historians on the decline of the Ui Neill in the 11th century may be a tribute to the success of their own propaganda 53 After Brian the previous Ui Neill monopoly of high kingship as described in poems and chronicles was anyway broken for good The Cenel nEogain suffered from internal factions and this allowed the Ulaid under Niall mac Eochada to expand their influence Niall and Diarmait mac Mail na mBo became allies and effectively controlled the whole east coast of Ireland This alliance helped to make it possible for Diarmait to take direct control of Dublin in 1052 Unlike Mael Sechnaill in 980 or Brian in 999 he wasn t content with just looting the city and expelling the Hiberno Norse ruler Echmarcach mac Ragnaill in an unprecedented move he assumed the kingship of the foreigners rige Gall himself 54 Reform of the Irish Church Edit St Malachy was an influential 12th century reformist ecclesiastic in Ireland See also Synod of Rathbreasail and Synod of Kells Mellifont There were major reforms in the Irish church during the 12th century These reforms have been generally interpreted as a reaction to previous secularisation but could also be seen as a continuous development 55 The reforms had consequences for and were influenced by relations within the church as well as secular politics Before the 11th century the church in Ireland was monastic with bishops residing at monasteries and without a permanent diocesan structure The circumstances surrounding the foundation of the diocese of Dublin early in the century are obscure but at some point during the reign of Sithric Silkbeard Dunan became Bishop of Dublin thus establishing the first proper diocese in Ireland His successor Gilla Patraic was consecrated by Lanfranc Archbishop of Canterbury and on that occasion Lanfranc sent letters to Toirdelbach Ua Briain and Gofraid urging reforms in particular regarding the consecration of bishops and the abolition of simony There is no evidence of Canterbury claiming primacy over the church in Ireland prior to this and neither Lanfranc nor Anselm ever made direct primatial claims for Canterbury in relation to the Irish church 56 Toirdelbach appears to have responded favourably to this and convened a synod in Dublin in 1080 57 the outcome of this synod is not known Toirdelbach may have seen cooperation with Canterbury as a way to reduce the influence from Armagh traditionally dominated by Cenel nEogain within the church in Ireland Gilla Patraic s successors Donngus Ua hAingliu and Samuel Ua hAingliu were also consecrated in Canterbury and so was the first bishop of Waterford Mael Isu Ua hAinmire in 1096 The written request for Mael Isu s consecration as preserved in Eadmer s Historia Novorum is subscribed by bishops from Munster Mide Dublin and Leinster 58 Gilla Espaic the first bishop of Limerick was however not consecrated in Canterbury but probably by Cellach of Armagh note 15 The first of the four main synods associated with the church reforms of the 12th century took place in Cashel in 1101 at the instigation of Muirchertach Ua Briain How many who actually attended this synod is not known but some of its decrees have been preserved There is a decree on simony on prohibition for laymen to become airchinnig heads of ecclesiastical establishments and finally a decree that defines what relationships are considered to be incestuous None of these decrees are radical but they are generally interpreted to be in line with the Gregorian reform 59 The second synod was the Synod of Rathbreasail This synod presided by Gilla Espaic 60 as papal legate and attended by fifty bishops three hundred priests and over three thousand laymen marked the transition of the Irish church from a monastic to a diocesan and parish based church It established two provinces with archbishoprics at Armagh and Cashel and prominence given to Armagh making Cellach the primate of the church in Ireland Each province consisted of twelve territorial dioceses The see of Dublin was not included as this was under primacy from Canterbury note 16 but a place was left open for it in the sense that only eleven dioceses were declared under Cashel Gilla Cellach and Cellach s successor Mael Maedoc Ua Morgair better known as St Malachy drove the reform process onwards Malachy in close cooperation with Duncan Donnchad Ua Cerbaill king of Fernmag Airgialla established the first Irish Cistercian house at Mellifont in 1142 and also facilitated the first Augustinian community of the Arrouaisian observance Malachy used these as agencies of monastic reform within the Irish church 61 Malachy resigned as archbishop of Armagh in 1136 but was appointed native papal legate to Ireland by Innocent II in 1139 Maps of dioceses in Ireland as defined by the synod of Kells From Historical Atlas by William R Shepherd No formal attempts on getting papal approval for the structure chosen at Rathbreasail are known before Malachy sought pallia for the two incumbent archbishops at Cashel and Armagh during his trip to the Continent in 1139 40 This first bid was unsuccessful but Malachy was told to reapply after he had gained the agreement of all Ireland 62 Before undertaking his second trip to the Continent in 1148 Malachy convened a synod at St Patrick s Island The main challenge must have been to reach an accommodation with Dublin and Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair presently the most powerful king in Ireland was eager to increase Connacht influence on the church The solution reached was to extend the number of metropolitan sees from two to four with Tuam and Dublin included alongside Cashel and Armagh Malachy died on his way to meet the pope but the message was transmitted by other means and papal approval was granted Pope Eugene III appointed cardinal John Paparo as papal legate and sent him to Ireland with pallia for the four archbishops Cardinal Paparo s first attempt to reach Ireland was stalled when king Stephen refused him safe conduct through England unless he pledged himself to do nothing in Ireland that would injure England s interests there This was not acceptable for Paparo who returned to Rome It seems likely that this was an attempt by Stephen to prevent Paparo from bringing papal confirmation for an arrangement in Ireland that would finally extinguish Canterbury s claims in Ireland 63 In 1151 he returned and this time reached Ireland his journey being facilitated by David I of Scotland The Synod of Kells Mellifont was convened in 1152 with Paparo presiding as papal legate The decrees from the synod are no longer extant but some information is preserved through the Annals of the Four Masters 64 and Geoffrey Keating s Foras Feasa ar Eirinn The main result of the synod was the official papal sanctioning of the episcopal structure as created in 1111 and refined in 1148 Norman invasion EditFurther information History of Ireland 1169 1536 Ireland in 1482 The Norman invasion of Ireland was a two stage process which began on 1 May 1169 when a force of individual Norman knights led by Raymond Fitzgerald landed near Bannow County Wexford This was at the request of Dermot MacMurrough Diarmait Mac Murchada the ousted King of Leinster who sought their help in regaining his kingdom Then on 18 October 1171 Henry II landed a much bigger force in Waterford to at least ensure his continuing control over the Norman force In the process he took Dublin and had accepted the fealty of the Irish kings and bishops by 1172 so creating the Lordship of Ireland which formed part of his Angevin Empire Slavery in Ireland EditFurther information Slavery in medieval EuropeSee also EditEarly Scandinavian Dublin Great Ireland History of Ireland Scandinavian Scotland Papar O Donnell dynasty MacDunleavy dynasty Notes and references EditNotes Edit See also McNeill Archaeology The 150 years before 1200 have been lost between the assumptions that life was a continuation of the fifth through eighth century world and that the incursion of English lords marked a fundamental change throughout Ireland o Croinin also points out the irony of at no time in the historical period did the political division represented by the word coiced have a tangible existence They may not have been as dominant in earlier history as medieval sources tend to claim according to o Corrain The Vikings amp Ireland they paraded illustrious ancestors and their claim to precedence was expressed in an elaborate mythography that passed for history o Corrain The Vikings amp Ireland p 9 The annals name the site of this attack as Rechru a name that could mean either modern Lambay Island or Rathlin Hudson Niall Caille According to Hudson Any agreement made there has not survived although the report of the meeting from a Munster chronicle with a bias towards the southern prince claims that Niall submitted to Feidlimid while a contemporary northern chronicle has no report of the proceedings The first report of Vikings spending the winter in Ireland is from Lough Neagh 840 41 the first overwintered in Dublin 841 42 For a longer discussion on the location on Lochlann see o Corrain The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland in the Ninth Century AU 902 2 Note that the untranslated text 1 reads Indarba n gennti a h Ere i longport Atha Cliath o Mael Findia m Flandacain co feraibh Bregh amp o Cerball m Muiricain co Laignibh that is longport not fortress Grandsons or great grandsons of Ivar no other patronym was given for these which makes it difficult trace their lineage Modern scholarly literature also refer to later descendants as of the Ui Imair However a collective term for all the descendants of Ivarr is lacking in the medieval Irish chronicles Downham Viking Kings p 6 The identity between the Ragnall of Waterford and Ragnall Rognvald of York has been questioned see Downham Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland p 94 The archaeology of the early viking age in Ireland The second and more intensive period of settlement was characterised by the establishment of a series of towns Waterford 914 Cork c 915 Dublin 917 Wexford c 921 and Limerick 922 Hudson Muirchertach mac Neill d 943 Hudson also notes that As a descendant of the kings of Dal Riata being the great grandson of the Scottish king Cinaed mac Alpin he may have considered that he had hereditary interests in the region Quoted from Duffy Ireland c 1000 c 1100 p 288 After quoting o Corrain Duffy states that Few now beyond the ranks of the purveyors of popular fiction perpetuate the portrayal of Brian eliminator of the viking scourge which may be an overly optimistic assertion from Duffy AU 1015 2 Flaithbertach ua Neill went into Mide to assist Mael Sechnaill This seem to contradict Byrne p 864 since 970 the Northern and Southern Ui Neill were irreconcilable foes Gilla received a letter from Anselm congratulating him on his elevation to the see of Limerick and there was no suggestion that Anselm felt Canterbury had been slighted or ought to have been involved Flanagan p 915 The see of Waterford however where the incumbent bishop Mael Isu Ua hAinmire also had been consecrated in and taken vows of obedience to Canterbury was moved to Lismore and Mael Isu chosen as the first archbishop of Cashel References Edit Footnotes Wallace The archaeology pp 814 15 Duffy Ireland c 1000 c 1100 p 285 o Corrain Nationality and Kingship Hughes Early Christian Ireland is a general survey of the subject Hughes Early Christian Ireland chapter 4 especially pp 135 37 Charles Edwards Early Christian Ireland p xix o Croinin Ireland 400 800 passim Breatnach Historical tales Eoin MacNeill Phases of Irish History Dublin 1920 pp 98 132 o Croinin Daibhi 2005 Ireland 400 800 pp 187 88 a b o Corrain The Vikings amp Ireland p 2 a b Woolf Alex From Pictland to Alba p 47 Woolf constructs a plausible narrative based on an entry in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle where these early raiders can be identified as originating on the west coast of Norway Byrne F J The Viking age pp 609 10 o Corrain The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland T M Charles Edwards Aed Oirdnide mac Neill Byrne Francis John 2005 Church and politics p 663 T M Charles Edwards Aed Oirdnide mac Neill AU 817 8 a b Bracken Feidlimid mac Crimthainn AU 833 4 AU 835 1 835 3 o Corrain The Vikings in Ireland p 19 AU 873 3 o Corrain The Vikings in Ireland p 19 a b worldhistory org AFM 843 13 AU 845 8 AU 848 5 AU 848 4 o Corrain Vikings amp Ireland p 16 AU 853 2 Amhlaim m righ Laithlinde Hadley Viking Raids and Conquest p 201 Byrne The Viking Age p 617 AU 866 8 o Corrain Vikings amp Ireland p 20 AU 871 2 873 3 Imhar rex Nordmannorum totius Hibernie amp Brittanie uitam finiuit Downham Viking Kings pp 17 23 137 45 238 41 246 258 59 Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 106 16 Irish Migration to Merseyside St Bridget s Church West Kirby Flechner and Meeder 2016 The Irish in Early Medieval Europe pp 231 41 Johnston 2013 Literacy and Identity in Early Medieval Ireland pp 27 58 Flechner and Meeder 2016 The Irish in Early Medieval Europe pp 179 94 231 41 o Corrain The Vikings in Ireland p 22 hEailidhe P o 1 January 1957 The Rathdown Slabs The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 87 1 75 88 JSTOR 25509271 McEvoy amp al EJHG article AU 921 8 commented by Woolf From Pictland to Alba p 148 o Corrain The Vikings in Ireland pp 22 23 a b Hudson Muirchertach mac Neill d 943 a b c Duffy Brian Boruma a b Jaski Brian Boru AU 1014 2 ardri Gaidhel Erenn amp Gall amp Bretan August iartair tuaiscirt Eorpa uile a b Byrne Ireland and her neighbours pp 866 67 Byrne Ireland and her neighbours p 865 Byrne Ireland and her neighbours p 869 Byrne Ireland and her neighbours p 870 Byrne Ireland and her neighbours pp 879 80 Duffy Irishmen and Islesmen p 94 Hughes The Irish Church 800 c 1050 p 655 note 70 Flanagan p 913 Holland Church reforms Flanagan pp 911 12 Holland Cashel synod of I 1101 Holland Gille Gilbert of Limerick Flanagan p 923 Holland Church reform Holland Synod of Kells p 247 AFM 1152 4 BibliographyAnnals of Innisfallen CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2000 retrieved 19 March 2010 Annals of the Four Masters CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2002 retrieved 19 March 2010 Annals of Ulster AD 431 1201 CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2003 retrieved 19 March 2010 Chronicon Scotorum CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2003 retrieved 19 March 2010 Bracken Damian 2004 Feidlimid mac Crimthainn d 847 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press retrieved 25 October 2007 Breatnach Caoimhin 2005 Historical tales In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 221 22 Byrne Francis John 2005 Church and politics c 750 c 1100 in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 654 79 ISBN 978 0 19 922665 8 Byrne Francis John 2005 The Viking Age in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 609 34 ISBN 0 19 922665 2 Byrne Francis John 2005 Ireland and her neighbours c 1014 c 1072 in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 862 98 ISBN 0 19 922665 2 Charles Edwards T M 2004 Aed Oirdnide mac Neill d 819 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press retrieved 6 January 2009 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 Downham Clare 2009 Hiberno Norwegians and Anglo Danes Anachronistic Ethnicities in Viking Age England PDF Mediaeval Scandinavia 139 69 Retrieved 4 April 2010 Downham Clare 2017 Medieval Ireland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107651654 Duffy Sean 1992 Irishmen and Islesmen in the Kingdom of Dublin and Man 1052 1171 Eriu 43 43 93 133 JSTOR 30007421 Duffy Sean 2009 Ireland c 1000 c 1100 in Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Blackwell Publishing Ltd pp 285 302 ISBN 978 1 4051 0628 3 Duffy Sean 2004 Brian Boruma Brian Boru c 941 1014 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3377 Retrieved 24 February 2010 Subscription or UK public library membership required Flanagan Marie Therese 2005 High kings with opposition 1072 1166 in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 899 933 ISBN 0 19 922665 2 Flechner Roy Meeder Sven eds 2016 The Irish in Early Medieval Europe Identity Culture and Religion London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781137430595 Hadley Dawn 2009 Viking Raids and Conquest in Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Blackwell Publishing Ltd pp 195 211 ISBN 978 1 4051 0628 3 Holland Martin 2005 Cashel synod of I 1101 In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 65 66 Holland Martin 2005 Cashel synod of II 1172 In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 66 67 Holland Martin 2005 Church reform Twelfth century In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 83 86 Holland Martin 2005 Gille Gilbert of Limerick In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 198 99 Holland Martin 2005 Kells synod of In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 247 49 Hudson Benjamin T 2004 Niall mac Aeda Niall Caille d 846 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20076 Retrieved 25 October 2007 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hudson Benjamin T 2004 Muirchertach mac Neill d 943 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19502 Retrieved 25 October 2007 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hughes Kathleen 2005 The Irish Church 800 c 1050 in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 635 79 ISBN 0 19 922665 2 Hughes Kathleen 1972 Early Christian Ireland Introduction to the sources London and Ithaca NY pp 99 159 Johnston Elva 2013 Literacy and Identity in Early Medieval Ireland Woodbridge The Boydell Press ISBN 9781843838555 McEvoy Brian Claire Brady Laoise T Moore and Daniel G Bradley Brady C Moore L T Bradley D G 2006 The scale and nature of Viking settlement in Ireland from Y chromosome admixture analysis European Journal of Human Genetics 14 12 1288 94 doi 10 1038 sj ejhg 5201709 PMID 16957681 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link McNeill T E 2005 Archaeology In Sean Duffy ed Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Abingdon and New York pp 24 26 o Corrain Donnchadh 1978 Nationality and Kingship in Pre Norman Ireland in T W Moody ed Historical Studies XI Nationality and the pursuit of national independence papers read before the Conference held at Trinity College Dublin 26 31 May 1975 Belfast Appletree Press retrieved 19 March 2010 o Corrain Donnchadh 1998 The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland in the Ninth Century PDF Peritia Belgium Brepols 12 296 339 doi 10 1484 J Peri 3 334 ISBN 2 503 50624 0 retrieved 19 March 2010 o Corrain Donnchadh Vikings amp Ireland PDF retrieved 19 March 2010 o Corrain Donnchadh 2001 The Vikings in Ireland in Larsen Anne Christine ed The Vikings in Ireland Roskilde The Viking Ship Museum pp 17 29 ISBN 0 19 922665 2 o Croinin Daibhi 2005 Ireland 400 800 in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 182 234 ISBN 978 0 19 922665 8 Viking Network Ireland The archaeology of the early viking age in Ireland archived from the original on 28 January 2010 retrieved 19 March 2010 Wallace Patrick F 2005 The archaeology of ireland s Viking age towns in o Croinin Daibhi ed Prehistoric and Early Ireland A New History of Ireland vol I Oxford Oxford University Press pp 814 41 ISBN 978 0 19 922665 8 Woolf Alex 2007 From Pictland to Alba 789 1070 The New Edinburgh History of Scotland vol 2 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1234 5External links EditTreasures of early Irish art 1500 B C to 1500 A D an exhibition catalogue from The Metropolitan Museum of Art fully available online as PDF which contains material on this period section 4 pp 144 86 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Ireland 800 1169 amp oldid 1132963140, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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