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Legendary kings of Scotland

The Scottish Renaissance humanist George Buchanan gave a long list of Scottish Kings in his history of Scotland—published in Latin as Rerum Scoticarum Historia in 1582[1][2]—most of whom are now considered by historians to be figures of legend, or completely misrepresented. The list went back around 1900 years from his time, and began with Fergus I. James VI of Scotland, who was Buchanan's pupil, adopted the story of Fergus I as his ancestor, and the antiquity of the line was emphasised by the House of Stuart.

Dornadilla, fourth legendary king according to George Buchanan; painting by Jacob Jacobsz de Wet the Younger in the commission from Charles II for Holyrood Palace.

Dynastic importance edit

The genealogy of Scottish kings, going back to Fergus mac Ferchar (i.e. Fergus I) and beyond, was in place by the middle of the 13th century when it was recited at the 1249 inauguration of Alexander III of Scotland.[3] In 1301 Baldred Bisset was involved in a hearing at the Papal Curia, on the Scottish side of the debate on Edward I of England's claims, and at least helped prepare material dealing with the mythological history that was being adduced as relevant, on both sides.[4]

 
Alexander III hears his genealogy; late medieval illustration of the Scotichronicon.

The question of the antiquity of the Scottish royal lineage, and even the details of the associated origin myth, became particularly significant from 1542 when Mary, Queen of Scots came to the Scottish throne. Buchanan alluded to Mary's long ancestry in his Epithalamium written for her 1559 marriage to Francis II of France.[5] In the period before Mary's betrothal, a marriage to Prince Edward, the future Edward VI of England, was much discussed. As part of that debate, the list of legendary kings of Britain became involved, in the form of the "Brutus myth", promoted by Edward Hall over the doubts of Polydore Vergil. Publicists on the English side of the argument, including John Elder, James Henrisoun, and William Lamb, had cast doubt on Scottish history.[6]

When James VI entered Edinburgh in 1579 the pageantry included a public posting of the genealogy of the Scottish kings; and when his son Charles I visited in 1633, portraits of 107 kings were displayed, some of which (by George Jamesone) survive.[7][8] Another series of 110 imagined portraits of the monarchs from the list was painted for Charles II by Jacob de Wet II, and hung in Holyrood Palace. The de Wet portrait collection later became a noted sight for tourists, for example as written about by John Macky, A Journey through Scotland.[9]

Historiography of Buchanan's list edit

While Rerum Scoticarum Historia was published only in the year of Buchanan's death, he had worked on it during much of his life. It was published with his De jure regni apud Scotos, first printed in 1579. Of the two works, the Historia for Buchanan served as a source of precedents on dealing with bad kings (tyrants in the list inevitably come to a sorry end at the hands of the people, in line with Buchanan's monarchomach position), while the De jure is cast as a humanist dialogue between Buchanan himself and Thomas Maitland, and concentrates on classical exemplars. Both works were dedicated to James VI.[10] King James came to regard the chronicles of Buchanan and John Knox as "infamous invectives".[11]

The king-list of the Historia was, therefore, in that work, only incidental to Buchanan's purpose in the book, whatever later uses it may have been put to. After the later scholarly work of Thomas Innes, this list was given little credence in its initial parts. It was, however, the culmination of centuries of development of king-lists for the Kingdom of Scotland. Much fictional material had been introduced into these lists by the humanist Hector Boece, writing half a century before Buchanan. Peter Hume Brown in his biography of Buchanan describes him as somewhat more sceptical than Boece in what he accepted as historical; but less so than John Mair, writing earlier.[12] Buchanan has been called inconsistent in his treatment of classical sources since his rejection of the legend of Gathelus does not extend to the early Scottish kings, who are equally unsupported by classical authors.[13]

Writers who perpetuated the Boece tradition, as put into form by Buchanan, included:

The antiquity of the line was attacked by William Lloyd, who argued that Scotland was not settled before the 6th century; George Mackenzie published the 1685 Defence of the Antiquity of the Royal Line of Scotland against Lloyd, and a sequel the next year against Edward Stillingfleet, who had given a sceptical account of Boece's history in Chapter V of his Origines Britannicae.[17][18] The work of Innes, which in effect terminated the scholarly debate, was published in 1729, but the tradition continued.

Subsequently, John Pinkerton and William Forbes Skene contributed to the study of the king-lists. Reference works continued, however, to copy Buchanan's list, and the mythological history took many years to drop out of circulation, persisting in print as factual well into the 19th century (for example the fourth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1810), the Encyclopædia Perthensis (1816),[22] the London Encyclopedia (1829), and the individual kings in reference books by George Crabb[23] and John Platts[24]).

Legendary content edit

See list of Scottish monarchs for the view of contemporary historians of Scotland. The first historical figure in Buchanan's list is Caratacus. The rediscovery of the works of Tacitus prompted Boece to include this well-attested figure from the period of the Roman occupation of Britain.

The last legendary figure is more complex to discuss. The kings in the list from about the 6th century (in the Fifth Book of Buchanan) onwards may have some relationship to historical figures in the Kingdom of Dalriada, extending in present-day terms from western Scotland to part of Ireland. See list of Kings of Dál Riata. But the Kingdom of Scotland (i.e. Alba) was not a historical reality until Kenneth MacAlpin created it in the year 843, and what was said about his predecessors in the list by Buchanan may have little historical foundation.

The list of Kings of the Picts includes other historical figures reigning in parallel with the Dalriada kings, in other areas of what is now Scotland. The critical Essay (1729) of Innes, while demolishing the king-list going back to Boece, substituted in part kings of the Picts, and is now regarded as questionable in its own way. Innes was a Jacobite and concerned therefore to lay emphasis on legitimacy of descent and primogeniture.[25]

Legendary kings (Buchanan), BC edit

Numbering (Buchanan) Name Accession date (Buchanan) Alternate names Comments
1 Fergus I 330 BC The first king of Scotland, according to the fictitious chronology of Boece and Buchanan. He is said to have come to Scotland from Ireland about 330 BC to assist the Scots already settled in Scotland against the joint attack of the Picts and Britons. He is then said to have gone back to Ireland to quell disturbances, and to have been drowned in the passage off the rock or port which got the name of Carrick Fergus from him. According to John Fordoun, Andrew of Wyntoun, and most of the earlier genealogical lists of Scottish kings, the same account is given of the settlement of the Scots from Ireland by a King Fergus, son of Ferchard. According to other lists, Ferchard or Feardach, the father of Fergus, was the first and Fergus the second king.[26]
2 Feritharis 305 BC Ferithais (Bellenden)[27] Brother of Fergus, and in Buchanan's view elected king.[28]
3 Mainus 290 BC
4 Dornadilla 262 BC Dorvidilla (Bellenden)[27] The identification of Dun Dornaigil as Dornadilla's castle is mentioned in Itinerarium septentrionale (1726) by Alexander Gordon.[29] Dorvidilla, in Boece, was fond of hunting dogs, and made laws regulating hunting.[30]
5 Nothatus 232 BC Nathak (Bellenden)[27] In legend, killed by Dovallus; a story adopted by Clan Macdowall for their ancestry.[31]
6 Reutherus Reuther (Boece),[32] Rewthar (Bellenden)[27] Claimed as the eponym of Rutherglen.[33]
7 Reuthra Rewtha (Bellenden)[27]
8 Thereus
9 Josina Josyne (Bellenden)[27]
10 Finnanus Fynnane (Bellenden)[27]
11 Durstus
12 Evenus I
13 Gillus
14 Evenus II
15 Ederus
16 Evenus III
17 Metallanus According to Boece, he received Roman ambassadors.[34]

Legendary kings (Buchanan), Caratacus to Eugenius I edit

Numbering (Buchanan) Name Accession date (Buchanan) Alternate names Comments
18 Caractacus
19 Corbredus I
20 Dardannus
21 Corbredus II Galdus
22 Luctacus Lugthacus (Boece)[32] Boece says some of his crimes must go unmentioned (and then mentions them).[35]
23 Mogaldus Mogallus (Boece)[32]
24 Conarus
25 Ethodius
26 Satrael Satrahel (Boece)[32]
27 Donaldus I Boece makes him the first Christian king.[32]
28 Ethodius II
29 Athirco Athircon, son of Echodius (James Ussher)[36]
30 Nathalocus A usurper killed by a servant, a story which was the subject of an 1845 poem by James Clerk Maxwell.[37]
31 Findochus Findocus (Boece)[32]
32 Donaldus II
33 Donaldus III
34 Crathilinthus Crathlinthus (Boece)[32]
35 Fincormachus
36 Romachus
37 Angusianus
38 Fethelmachus Fethelmacus (Boece)[32]
39 Eugenius I Evenus I Thought to have possibly been the same person as Eochaid Muinremuir father of Erc of Dalriada

Buchanan's Fifth Book, Fergus II to Kenneth II edit

Numbering (Buchanan) Name Accession date (Buchanan) Alternate names Comments
40 Fergusius II Fergus II, Fergus the Great See Fergus Mór.
41 Eugenius II Evenus II
42 Dongardus 452 Domangart See Domangart Réti.
43 Constantine I 457 Polydore Vergil (Anglica Historia, 1555) gives from here a succession close to Buchanan.[38]
44 Congallus I 479 See Comgall mac Domangairt.
45 Goranus 501 Gabhran Goranus,[39] Conranus (Boece).[32] See Gabrán mac Domangairt.
46 Eugenius III 535 Father of St Kentigern; see Owain mab Urien.
47 Congallus II 558 Convallus (Boece).[32] See Conall mac Comgaill.
48 Kinnatellus 574 Kynnatillus (Boece),[32] Cumatillus,[40] Amtillus.[38]
49 Aidanus 575 See Áedán mac Gabráin
50 Kennethus I 605 Kenneth I Keir (Boece)[32] See Connad Cerr
51 Eugenius IV 606 See Eochaid Buide.[41]
52 Fearchair I[42] 626 Ferquart[38] See Ferchar mac Connaid
53 Donaldus IV 638 See Domnall Brecc
54 Ferchardus II[43] 652 Ferquhardus I (Boece),[32] Fearchair Fada. See Ferchar Fota.
55 Maldvinus 670 Malduinus (Boece)[32]
56 Eugenius V 690 See Eochaid mac Domangairt.[41]
57 Eugenius VI 694
58 Amberkelethus 704 Ambirkelethus (Boece),[32] Ainbhealach, Ambercletus in Polydore Vergil.[38][44] See Ainbcellach mac Ferchair.
59 Eugenius VII 706 Likely duplicates Eugenius VI.[41] Also see Eochaid mac Echdach
60 Mordacus 723 See Muiredach mac Ainbcellaig.
61 Etfinus 730 Ethfinus (Boece)[32] See Áed Find
62 Eugene VIII 761 See Eógan mac Muiredaig.[41]
63 Fergus III 764 See Fergus mac Echdach
64 Solvathius 767 Selvach.[45] See Selbach mac Ferchair and the legend of Sholto Douglas.
65 Achaius 788 See Eochaid mac Áeda Find. Also supposed to have concluded a treaty with the Emperor Charlemagne[46]
66 Congallus III 819 Convallus II (Boece)[32] See Conall Crandomna but at a great chronological distance.
67 Dongallus 824
68 Alpinus See Alpín mac Echdach.
69 Kennethus II See Kenneth MacAlpin.

Sixth Book, later kings edit

  • (73) Grig/Gregory the Great: see Giric

Notes edit

  1. ^ "index". www.philological.bham.ac.uk.
  2. ^ Buchanan, George (8 January 1799). "The history of Scotland : from the earliest accounts of that nation, to the reign of King James VI". Glasgow : Chapman and Lang – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ William, Ferguson (1999). The identity of the Scottish Nation: An Historic Quest. Edinburgh University Press. p. 37. ISBN 0-7486-1072-3. OCLC 174737079.
  4. ^ Goldstein, R. James. "Bisset, Baldred". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2475. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ Buchanan, George (1964). George Buchanan the political poetry. pp. 24, 134. ISBN 0-906245-17-6. OCLC 249083014.
  6. ^ Marcus, Merriman (2000). The Rough Wooings: Mary Queen of Scots, 1542-1551. Tuckwell Press. pp. 42–46. ISBN 1-86232-090-X. OCLC 59400280.
  7. ^ McGrath, Elizabeth Verfasser (1990). Local Heroes: The Scottish Humanist Parnassus for Charles I. p. 258. OCLC 888498080. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 September 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 October 2011.
  10. ^ Burns, James H. Sonstige, ed. (26 July 1991). The Cambridge History of Political Thought: 1450–1700. pp. 216–217. ISBN 0-521-24716-0. OCLC 1198866066.
  11. ^ Stewart, Alan (11 March 2014). The Cradle King: The Life of James VI and I, The First Monarch of a United Great Britain. p. 148. ISBN 978-1-4668-6602-7. OCLC 872643894.
  12. ^ "George Buchanan, humanist and reformer, a biography". 1890.
  13. ^ Acta Conventus Neo-Latini Sanctandreani : Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress of Neo-Latin Studies, St. Andrews, 24 August to 1 September 1982. 1986. ISBN 9780866980708.
  14. ^ a b McClure, J. Derrick. "Johnston, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/14944. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  15. ^ "English Poetry, Second Edition Bibliography: G".
  16. ^ Vol. vi in Whole works; now for the first time collected, with a life of the author and an account of his writings (1864), edited by Charles Richard Elrington.
  17. ^ Jackson, Clare. "Mackenzie, Sir George, of Rosehaugh". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17579. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  18. ^ "Origines Britannicae; or the antiquities of the British churches; to which is added a historical account of Church government as first received in Great Britain and Ireland". Oxford, Univ. Pr. 1842.
  19. ^ "The British compendium; or, Rudiments of honour: Containing the origin of the Scots, and succession of their kings for above 2000 years". 1741.
  20. ^ "Anderson, James (1680?-1739)" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  21. ^ At Google Books, table as p. 12 of volume as scanned.
  22. ^ Encyclopaedia Perthensis; or Universal dictionary of the arts, sciences, literature, &c. intended to supersede the use of other books of reference. Printed by John Brown. 1816. p. 77. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  23. ^ Universal Historical Dictionary (1833); Google Books.
  24. ^ New Universal Biography (1826); Google Books.
  25. ^ Halloran, Brian M. "Innes, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/14432. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  26. ^ "Fergus I" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g Contents from Boece, taken from 1821 edition of the translation by John Bellenden, which was from Latin into Scots of the 16th century.
  28. ^ British Identities before Nationalism (PDF) 23 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, p. 125.
  29. ^ "Publication Account | Canmore".
  30. ^ "Read the eBook The Perth incident of 1396 from a folk-lore point of view; by Robert Craig Maclagan online for free (page 16 of 25)". www.ebooksread.com.
  31. ^ "Family Finder | CLAN by Scotweb".
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Kings".
  33. ^ Topographical Dictionary of Scotland (1846) by Samuel Lewis.
  34. ^ "Book III English". www.philological.bham.ac.uk.
  35. ^ "Book V English". www.philological.bham.ac.uk.
  36. ^ "Whole works; now for the first time collected, with a life of the author and an account of his writings". Dublin, Hodges, Smith. 1864.
  37. ^ "Read the eBook the life of James Clerk Maxwell: With a selection from his correspondence and occasional writings and a sketch of his contributions to science by Lewis Campbell online for free (Page 44 of 49)".
  38. ^ a b c d http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/polverg/3eng.html: Polydore Vergil gives the succession as Constantine, Congallus, Goranus, Eugene III, Convallus, Amtillus, Aidan, Kenneth, Eugene IV, Ferquart, Donald, Maldwin, Eugene V, Eugene VI, and Ambercletus.
  39. ^ "Goranus, Gabhran" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  40. ^ "Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland". Glasgow, John Tweed. 1867.
  41. ^ a b c d Summerson, Henry. "Eugenius I-VIII". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52471. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  42. ^ "Fearchair I" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  43. ^ "Ferchardus II" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  44. ^ "Read the eBook Polydore Vergil's English history, from an early translation preserved among the mss. of the old royal library in the British museum by Polydore Vergil online for free (page 13 of 30)". www.ebooksread.com.
  45. ^ "Selvach" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  46. ^ Hume, David; Hunter, L. (8 January 1820). "The history of the house and race of Douglas and Angus". London [L. Hunter] printed for Mortimer and M'Leod, Aberdeen – via Internet Archive.

External links edit

  • 1831 English translation of Buchanan
  • Boece, Scotorum Historia (1575 edition)
  • Chart
  • Holinshed, A History of Scotland
  • Link to another translation of Buchanan
  • Links to Buchanan's Latin
  • Metrical version of Boece, by William Stewart, edited by William Barclay Turnbull (1858)
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Fergus I". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

legendary, kings, scotland, scottish, renaissance, humanist, george, buchanan, gave, long, list, scottish, kings, history, scotland, published, latin, rerum, scoticarum, historia, 1582, most, whom, considered, historians, figures, legend, completely, misrepres. The Scottish Renaissance humanist George Buchanan gave a long list of Scottish Kings in his history of Scotland published in Latin as Rerum Scoticarum Historia in 1582 1 2 most of whom are now considered by historians to be figures of legend or completely misrepresented The list went back around 1900 years from his time and began with Fergus I James VI of Scotland who was Buchanan s pupil adopted the story of Fergus I as his ancestor and the antiquity of the line was emphasised by the House of Stuart Dornadilla fourth legendary king according to George Buchanan painting by Jacob Jacobsz de Wet the Younger in the commission from Charles II for Holyrood Palace Contents 1 Dynastic importance 2 Historiography of Buchanan s list 3 Legendary content 4 Legendary kings Buchanan BC 5 Legendary kings Buchanan Caratacus to Eugenius I 6 Buchanan s Fifth Book Fergus II to Kenneth II 7 Sixth Book later kings 8 Notes 9 External linksDynastic importance editThe genealogy of Scottish kings going back to Fergus mac Ferchar i e Fergus I and beyond was in place by the middle of the 13th century when it was recited at the 1249 inauguration of Alexander III of Scotland 3 In 1301 Baldred Bisset was involved in a hearing at the Papal Curia on the Scottish side of the debate on Edward I of England s claims and at least helped prepare material dealing with the mythological history that was being adduced as relevant on both sides 4 nbsp Alexander III hears his genealogy late medieval illustration of the Scotichronicon The question of the antiquity of the Scottish royal lineage and even the details of the associated origin myth became particularly significant from 1542 when Mary Queen of Scots came to the Scottish throne Buchanan alluded to Mary s long ancestry in his Epithalamium written for her 1559 marriage to Francis II of France 5 In the period before Mary s betrothal a marriage to Prince Edward the future Edward VI of England was much discussed As part of that debate the list of legendary kings of Britain became involved in the form of the Brutus myth promoted by Edward Hall over the doubts of Polydore Vergil Publicists on the English side of the argument including John Elder James Henrisoun and William Lamb had cast doubt on Scottish history 6 When James VI entered Edinburgh in 1579 the pageantry included a public posting of the genealogy of the Scottish kings and when his son Charles I visited in 1633 portraits of 107 kings were displayed some of which by George Jamesone survive 7 8 Another series of 110 imagined portraits of the monarchs from the list was painted for Charles II by Jacob de Wet II and hung in Holyrood Palace The de Wet portrait collection later became a noted sight for tourists for example as written about by John Macky A Journey through Scotland 9 Historiography of Buchanan s list editWhile Rerum Scoticarum Historia was published only in the year of Buchanan s death he had worked on it during much of his life It was published with his De jure regni apud Scotos first printed in 1579 Of the two works the Historia for Buchanan served as a source of precedents on dealing with bad kings tyrants in the list inevitably come to a sorry end at the hands of the people in line with Buchanan s monarchomach position while the De jure is cast as a humanist dialogue between Buchanan himself and Thomas Maitland and concentrates on classical exemplars Both works were dedicated to James VI 10 King James came to regard the chronicles of Buchanan and John Knox as infamous invectives 11 The king list of the Historia was therefore in that work only incidental to Buchanan s purpose in the book whatever later uses it may have been put to After the later scholarly work of Thomas Innes this list was given little credence in its initial parts It was however the culmination of centuries of development of king lists for the Kingdom of Scotland Much fictional material had been introduced into these lists by the humanist Hector Boece writing half a century before Buchanan Peter Hume Brown in his biography of Buchanan describes him as somewhat more sceptical than Boece in what he accepted as historical but less so than John Mair writing earlier 12 Buchanan has been called inconsistent in his treatment of classical sources since his rejection of the legend of Gathelus does not extend to the early Scottish kings who are equally unsupported by classical authors 13 Writers who perpetuated the Boece tradition as put into form by Buchanan included Alexander Gardyne Theatre of the Scotish Kings sic published 1709 by James Watson 14 15 David Hume of Godscroft Gilbert Gray James Ussher 16 James Wallace The History of the Kingdom of Scotland from Fergus the First King to the Union 1724 John Johnston Inscriptiones Historicae Regum Scotorum continuata annorum serie a Fergusio I ad Jacobum VI 1602 14 The antiquity of the line was attacked by William Lloyd who argued that Scotland was not settled before the 6th century George Mackenzie published the 1685 Defence of the Antiquity of the Royal Line of Scotland against Lloyd and a sequel the next year against Edward Stillingfleet who had given a sceptical account of Boece s history in Chapter V of his Origines Britannicae 17 18 The work of Innes which in effect terminated the scholarly debate was published in 1729 but the tradition continued Francis Nichols The British Compendium 1741 19 James Anderson Royal Genealogies 1732 This book was based on a work of Johann Hubner but with Anderson s additions 20 The king list is Table 499 attributed to Boece and Buchanan 21 William Guthrie Subsequently John Pinkerton and William Forbes Skene contributed to the study of the king lists Reference works continued however to copy Buchanan s list and the mythological history took many years to drop out of circulation persisting in print as factual well into the 19th century for example the fourth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica 1810 the Encyclopaedia Perthensis 1816 22 the London Encyclopedia 1829 and the individual kings in reference books by George Crabb 23 and John Platts 24 Legendary content editSee list of Scottish monarchs for the view of contemporary historians of Scotland The first historical figure in Buchanan s list is Caratacus The rediscovery of the works of Tacitus prompted Boece to include this well attested figure from the period of the Roman occupation of Britain The last legendary figure is more complex to discuss The kings in the list from about the 6th century in the Fifth Book of Buchanan onwards may have some relationship to historical figures in the Kingdom of Dalriada extending in present day terms from western Scotland to part of Ireland See list of Kings of Dal Riata But the Kingdom of Scotland i e Alba was not a historical reality until Kenneth MacAlpin created it in the year 843 and what was said about his predecessors in the list by Buchanan may have little historical foundation The list of Kings of the Picts includes other historical figures reigning in parallel with the Dalriada kings in other areas of what is now Scotland The critical Essay 1729 of Innes while demolishing the king list going back to Boece substituted in part kings of the Picts and is now regarded as questionable in its own way Innes was a Jacobite and concerned therefore to lay emphasis on legitimacy of descent and primogeniture 25 Legendary kings Buchanan BC editNumbering Buchanan Name Accession date Buchanan Alternate names Comments1 Fergus I 330 BC The first king of Scotland according to the fictitious chronology of Boece and Buchanan He is said to have come to Scotland from Ireland about 330 BC to assist the Scots already settled in Scotland against the joint attack of the Picts and Britons He is then said to have gone back to Ireland to quell disturbances and to have been drowned in the passage off the rock or port which got the name of Carrick Fergus from him According to John Fordoun Andrew of Wyntoun and most of the earlier genealogical lists of Scottish kings the same account is given of the settlement of the Scots from Ireland by a King Fergus son of Ferchard According to other lists Ferchard or Feardach the father of Fergus was the first and Fergus the second king 26 2 Feritharis 305 BC Ferithais Bellenden 27 Brother of Fergus and in Buchanan s view elected king 28 3 Mainus 290 BC4 Dornadilla 262 BC Dorvidilla Bellenden 27 The identification of Dun Dornaigil as Dornadilla s castle is mentioned in Itinerarium septentrionale 1726 by Alexander Gordon 29 Dorvidilla in Boece was fond of hunting dogs and made laws regulating hunting 30 5 Nothatus 232 BC Nathak Bellenden 27 In legend killed by Dovallus a story adopted by Clan Macdowall for their ancestry 31 6 Reutherus Reuther Boece 32 Rewthar Bellenden 27 Claimed as the eponym of Rutherglen 33 7 Reuthra Rewtha Bellenden 27 8 Thereus9 Josina Josyne Bellenden 27 10 Finnanus Fynnane Bellenden 27 11 Durstus12 Evenus I13 Gillus14 Evenus II15 Ederus16 Evenus III17 Metallanus According to Boece he received Roman ambassadors 34 Legendary kings Buchanan Caratacus to Eugenius I editNumbering Buchanan Name Accession date Buchanan Alternate names Comments18 Caractacus19 Corbredus I20 Dardannus21 Corbredus II Galdus22 Luctacus Lugthacus Boece 32 Boece says some of his crimes must go unmentioned and then mentions them 35 23 Mogaldus Mogallus Boece 32 24 Conarus25 Ethodius26 Satrael Satrahel Boece 32 27 Donaldus I Boece makes him the first Christian king 32 28 Ethodius II29 Athirco Athircon son of Echodius James Ussher 36 30 Nathalocus A usurper killed by a servant a story which was the subject of an 1845 poem by James Clerk Maxwell 37 31 Findochus Findocus Boece 32 32 Donaldus II33 Donaldus III34 Crathilinthus Crathlinthus Boece 32 35 Fincormachus36 Romachus37 Angusianus38 Fethelmachus Fethelmacus Boece 32 39 Eugenius I Evenus I Thought to have possibly been the same person as Eochaid Muinremuir father of Erc of DalriadaBuchanan s Fifth Book Fergus II to Kenneth II editNumbering Buchanan Name Accession date Buchanan Alternate names Comments40 Fergusius II Fergus II Fergus the Great See Fergus Mor 41 Eugenius II Evenus II42 Dongardus 452 Domangart See Domangart Reti 43 Constantine I 457 Polydore Vergil Anglica Historia 1555 gives from here a succession close to Buchanan 38 44 Congallus I 479 See Comgall mac Domangairt 45 Goranus 501 Gabhran Goranus 39 Conranus Boece 32 See Gabran mac Domangairt 46 Eugenius III 535 Father of St Kentigern see Owain mab Urien 47 Congallus II 558 Convallus Boece 32 See Conall mac Comgaill 48 Kinnatellus 574 Kynnatillus Boece 32 Cumatillus 40 Amtillus 38 49 Aidanus 575 See Aedan mac Gabrain50 Kennethus I 605 Kenneth I Keir Boece 32 See Connad Cerr51 Eugenius IV 606 See Eochaid Buide 41 52 Fearchair I 42 626 Ferquart 38 See Ferchar mac Connaid53 Donaldus IV 638 See Domnall Brecc54 Ferchardus II 43 652 Ferquhardus I Boece 32 Fearchair Fada See Ferchar Fota 55 Maldvinus 670 Malduinus Boece 32 56 Eugenius V 690 See Eochaid mac Domangairt 41 57 Eugenius VI 69458 Amberkelethus 704 Ambirkelethus Boece 32 Ainbhealach Ambercletus in Polydore Vergil 38 44 See Ainbcellach mac Ferchair 59 Eugenius VII 706 Likely duplicates Eugenius VI 41 Also see Eochaid mac Echdach60 Mordacus 723 See Muiredach mac Ainbcellaig 61 Etfinus 730 Ethfinus Boece 32 See Aed Find62 Eugene VIII 761 See Eogan mac Muiredaig 41 63 Fergus III 764 See Fergus mac Echdach64 Solvathius 767 Selvach 45 See Selbach mac Ferchair and the legend of Sholto Douglas 65 Achaius 788 See Eochaid mac Aeda Find Also supposed to have concluded a treaty with the Emperor Charlemagne 46 66 Congallus III 819 Convallus II Boece 32 See Conall Crandomna but at a great chronological distance 67 Dongallus 82468 Alpinus See Alpin mac Echdach 69 Kennethus II See Kenneth MacAlpin Sixth Book later kings edit 73 Grig Gregory the Great see GiricNotes edit index www philological bham ac uk Buchanan George 8 January 1799 The history of Scotland from the earliest accounts of that nation to the reign of King James VI Glasgow Chapman and Lang via Internet Archive William Ferguson 1999 The identity of the Scottish Nation An Historic Quest Edinburgh University Press p 37 ISBN 0 7486 1072 3 OCLC 174737079 Goldstein R James Bisset Baldred Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 2475 Subscription or UK public library membership required Buchanan George 1964 George Buchanan the political poetry pp 24 134 ISBN 0 906245 17 6 OCLC 249083014 Marcus Merriman 2000 The Rough Wooings Mary Queen of Scots 1542 1551 Tuckwell Press pp 42 46 ISBN 1 86232 090 X OCLC 59400280 McGrath Elizabeth Verfasser 1990 Local Heroes The Scottish Humanist Parnassus for Charles I p 258 OCLC 888498080 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help This Noble College Rare art of decoration Archived from the original on 1 September 2011 Retrieved 27 July 2011 ScotSites eBooks Travellers Tales of Scotland Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 Burns James H Sonstige ed 26 July 1991 The Cambridge History of Political Thought 1450 1700 pp 216 217 ISBN 0 521 24716 0 OCLC 1198866066 Stewart Alan 11 March 2014 The Cradle King The Life of James VI and I The First Monarch of a United Great Britain p 148 ISBN 978 1 4668 6602 7 OCLC 872643894 George Buchanan humanist and reformer a biography 1890 Acta Conventus Neo Latini Sanctandreani Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress of Neo Latin Studies St Andrews 24 August to 1 September 1982 1986 ISBN 9780866980708 a b McClure J Derrick Johnston John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14944 Subscription or UK public library membership required English Poetry Second Edition Bibliography G Vol vi in Whole works now for the first time collected with a life of the author and an account of his writings 1864 edited by Charles Richard Elrington Jackson Clare Mackenzie Sir George of Rosehaugh Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17579 Subscription or UK public library membership required Origines Britannicae or the antiquities of the British churches to which is added a historical account of Church government as first received in Great Britain and Ireland Oxford Univ Pr 1842 The British compendium or Rudiments of honour Containing the origin of the Scots and succession of their kings for above 2000 years 1741 Anderson James 1680 1739 Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 At Google Books table as p 12 of volume as scanned Encyclopaedia Perthensis or Universal dictionary of the arts sciences literature amp c intended to supersede the use of other books of reference Printed by John Brown 1816 p 77 Retrieved 26 February 2013 Universal Historical Dictionary 1833 Google Books New Universal Biography 1826 Google Books Halloran Brian M Innes Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14432 Subscription or UK public library membership required Fergus I Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 a b c d e f g Contents from Boece taken from 1821 edition of the translation by John Bellenden which was from Latin into Scots of the 16th century British Identities before Nationalism PDF Archived 23 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 125 Publication Account Canmore Read the eBook The Perth incident of 1396 from a folk lore point of view by Robert Craig Maclagan online for free page 16 of 25 www ebooksread com Family Finder CLAN by Scotweb a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Kings Topographical Dictionary of Scotland 1846 by Samuel Lewis Book III English www philological bham ac uk Book V English www philological bham ac uk Whole works now for the first time collected with a life of the author and an account of his writings Dublin Hodges Smith 1864 Read the eBook the life of James Clerk Maxwell With a selection from his correspondence and occasional writings and a sketch of his contributions to science by Lewis Campbell online for free Page 44 of 49 a b c d http www philological bham ac uk polverg 3eng html Polydore Vergil gives the succession as Constantine Congallus Goranus Eugene III Convallus Amtillus Aidan Kenneth Eugene IV Ferquart Donald Maldwin Eugene V Eugene VI and Ambercletus Goranus Gabhran Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland Glasgow John Tweed 1867 a b c d Summerson Henry Eugenius I VIII Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 52471 Subscription or UK public library membership required Fearchair I Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Ferchardus II Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Read the eBook Polydore Vergil s English history from an early translation preserved among the mss of the old royal library in the British museum by Polydore Vergil online for free page 13 of 30 www ebooksread com Selvach Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Hume David Hunter L 8 January 1820 The history of the house and race of Douglas and Angus London L Hunter printed for Mortimer and M Leod Aberdeen via Internet Archive External links edit1831 English translation of Buchanan Boece Scotorum Historia 1575 edition Chart Holinshed A History of Scotland Link to another translation of Buchanan Links to Buchanan s Latin Metrical version of Boece by William Stewart edited by William Barclay Turnbull 1858 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Fergus I Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Legendary kings of Scotland amp oldid 1166153181, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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