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Macbeth, King of Scotland

Macbethad mac Findláech (anglicised as Macbeth MacFinlay; died 15 August 1057), nicknamed the Red King (Middle Irish: Rí Deircc),[1] was King of Scotland (Alba) from 1040 until his death. Little is known about Macbeth's early life, although he was the son of Findláech of Moray and may have been a grandson of Malcolm II, presumably through his daughter Donada. He became Mormaer (Earl) of Moray – a semi-autonomous province – in 1032, and was probably responsible for the death of the previous mormaer, Gille Coemgáin. He subsequently married Gille Coemgáin's widow, Gruoch, but they had no children together.

Macbeth
King of Scots
Reign14 August 1040 – 15 August 1057
PredecessorDuncan I
SuccessorLulach
Mormaer of Moray
Reign1032–1057
PredecessorGille Coemgáin
SuccessorLulach
Born1005
Dingwall, Ross and Cromarty
Died(1057-08-15)15 August 1057 (aged 51/52)
Lumphanan
Burial
SpouseGruoch
HouseMoray
FatherFindláech
MotherDonada (presumed)

In 1040, Duncan I launched an attack into Moray and was killed in action by Macbeth's troops. Macbeth succeeded him as King of Alba, apparently with little opposition. His 17-year reign was mostly peaceful, although in 1054 he was faced with an English invasion, led by Siward, Earl of Northumbria, on behalf of Edward the Confessor. Macbeth was killed at the Battle of Lumphanan in 1057 by forces loyal to the future Malcolm III. He was buried on Iona, the traditional resting place of Scottish kings.

Macbeth was initially succeeded by his stepson Lulach, but Lulach ruled for only a few months before also being killed by Malcolm III, whose descendants ruled Scotland until the late 13th century. Macbeth is today best known as the main character of William Shakespeare's tragedy Macbeth and the many works that it has inspired. However, Shakespeare's Macbeth is based on Holinshed's Chronicles (published in 1577) and is not historically accurate.

Name edit

The name Mac Bethad (or, in modern Gaelic, MacBheatha), from which the anglicized "MacBeth" is derived, means "son of life".[2] Although it has the appearance of a Gaelic patronymic it does not have any meaning of filiation but instead carries an implication of a righteous man[2] or religious man.[3] An alternative proposed derivation is that it is a corruption of macc-bethad meaning "one of the elect".[2]

Macbeth's full name in Middle Irish (medieval Gaelic) was Macbethad mac Findláech. This is realised as MacBheatha mac Fhionnlaigh in modern Scottish Gaelic, and is rendered Macbeth MacFinlay (also spelled Finley, Findlay, or Findley) in modern English. Mac Findláech is a Gaelic patronymic meaning "son of Findláech", referring to his father Findláech of Moray.[4]

Royal ancestry edit

Some sources make Macbeth a grandson of King Malcolm II, presumably through his daughter Donada, and thus a cousin to Duncan I, whom he succeeded. He was possibly also a cousin to Thorfinn the Mighty, Earl of Orkney and Caithness.[5]

Mormaer and dux edit

When Cnut the Great came north in 1031 to accept the submission of King Malcolm II, Macbeth too submitted to him:

... Malcolm, king of the Scots, submitted to him, and became his man, with two other kings, Macbeth and Iehmarc ...[6]

Some have seen this as a sign of Macbeth's power; others have seen his presence, together with Iehmarc, who may be Echmarcach mac Ragnaill, as proof that Malcolm II was overlord of Moray and of the Kingdom of the Isles.[7] Whatever the true state of affairs in the early 1030s, it seems more probable that Macbeth was subject to the king of Alba, Malcolm II, who died at Glamis, on 25 November 1034. The Prophecy of Berchán, apparently alone in near-contemporary sources, says that Malcolm died a violent death: calling it a "kinslaying" without actually naming his killers.[8] Tigernach's chronicle says only:

Máel Coluim son of Cináed, king of Alba, the honour of western Europe, died.[9]

He became Mormaer (Earl) of Moray – a semi-autonomous province – in 1032, and was probably responsible for the death of the previous mormaer, Gille Coemgáin. He subsequently married Gille Coemgáin's widow, Gruoch, but they had no children together. Macbeth later accepted her son from Gille Coemgáin, Lulach, as his heir.

Malcolm II's grandson Duncan (Donnchad mac Crínáin), later King Duncan I, was acclaimed as king of Alba on 30 November 1034, apparently without opposition. Duncan appears to have been tánaise ríg, the king in waiting, so that, far from being an abandonment of tanistry, as has sometimes been argued, his kingship was a vindication of the practice. Previous successions had involved strife between various rígdomna  – men of royal blood.[10] Far from being the aged King Duncan of Shakespeare's play, the real King Duncan was a young man in 1034, and even at his death in 1040 his youthfulness is remarked upon.[11]

Duncan's early reign was apparently uneventful. His later reign, in line with his description as "the man of many sorrows" in the Prophecy of Berchán, was not successful. In 1039, Strathclyde was attacked by the Northumbrians, and a retaliatory raid led by Duncan against Durham turned into a disaster. Duncan survived the defeat, but the following year he led an army north into Moray, Macbeth's domain, apparently on a punitive expedition against Moray.[12] There he was killed in action, at the battle of Bothnagowan, now Pitgaveny, near Elgin, by the men of Moray led by Macbeth, probably on 14 August 1040.[13][14]

King of Alba edit

On Duncan's death, Macbeth became king. Had his reign not been universally accepted, resistance would have been expected, but none is known to have occurred. In 1045, Duncan's father Crínán of Dunkeld (a scion of the Scottish branch of the Cenél Conaill and Hereditary Abbot of Iona) was killed in a battle between two Scottish armies.[15] Duncan's younger brother Maldred of Allerdale is believed to have died in the same battle, the family fighting Macbeth in defence of Duncan I's young son Malcolm III.[16]

John of Fordun wrote that Duncan's wife fled Scotland, taking her children, including the future kings Malcolm III (Máel Coluim mac Donnchada) and Donald III (Domnall Bán mac Donnchada, or Donalbane) with her. On the basis of the authors' beliefs as to whom Duncan married, various places of exile, Northumbria and Orkney among them, have been proposed. However, E. William Robertson proposes the safest place for Duncan's widow and her children would be with her or Duncan's kin and supporters in Atholl.[17]

After the defeat of Crínán, Macbeth was evidently unchallenged. Marianus Scotus tells how the king made a pilgrimage to Rome in 1050, where, Marianus says, he gave money to the poor as if it were seed.[18]

Karl Hundason edit

The Orkneyinga Saga says that a dispute between Thorfinn Sigurdsson, Earl of Orkney, and Karl Hundason began when Karl Hundason became "King of Scots" and claimed Caithness. The identity of Karl Hundason, unknown to Scots and Irish sources, has long been a matter of dispute, and it is far from clear that the matter is settled. The most common assumption is that Karl Hundason was an insulting byname (Old Norse for "Churl, son of a Dog") given to Macbeth by his enemies.[19] William Forbes Skene's suggestion that he was Duncan I of Scotland has been revived in recent years. Lastly, the idea that the whole affair is a poetic invention has been raised.[20]

According to the Orkneyinga Saga, in the war which followed, Thorfinn defeated Karl in a sea-battle off Deerness at the east end of the Orkney Mainland. Then Karl's nephew Mutatan or Muddan, appointed to rule Caithness for him, was killed at Thurso by Thorkel the Fosterer. Finally, a great battle at Tarbat Ness[21] on the south side of the Dornoch Firth ended with Karl defeated and fugitive or dead. Thorfinn, the saga says, then marched south through Scotland as far as Fife, burning and plundering as he passed. A later note in the saga claims that Thorfinn won nine Scottish earldoms.[22]

Whoever Karl Hundason may have been, it appears that the saga is reporting a local conflict with a Scots ruler of Moray or Ross:

[T]he whole narrative is consistent with the idea that the struggle of Thorfinn and Karl is a continuation of that which had been waged since the ninth century by the Orkney earls, notably Sigurd Rognvald's son, Ljot, and Sigurd the Stout, against the princes or mormaers of Moray, Sutherland, Ross, and Argyll, and that, in fine, Malcolm and Karl were mormaers of one of these four provinces.[23]

Final years edit

In 1052, Macbeth was involved indirectly in the strife in the Kingdom of England between Godwin, Earl of Wessex and Edward the Confessor when he received a number of Norman exiles from England in his court. In 1054, Edward's Earl of Northumbria, Siward, led a very large invasion of Scotland (Suthed, Duncan's widow and Malcolm's mother, was Northumbrian-born; it is probable but not proven that there was a family tie between Siward and Malcolm). The campaign led to a bloody battle at Dunsinnan,[24] in which the Annals of Ulster reported 3,000 Scots and 1,500 English dead, which can be taken as meaning very many on both sides. One of Siward's sons and a son-in-law were among the dead. The result of the invasion was that one Máel Coluim, "son of the king of the Cumbrians" (not to be confused with Máel Coluim mac Donnchada, the future Malcolm III of Scotland) was restored to his throne, i.e., as ruler of the kingdom of Strathclyde.[25] It may be that the events of 1054 are responsible for the idea, which appears in Shakespeare's play, that Malcolm III was put in power by the English.

Macbeth did not survive the English invasion for long, for he was defeated and mortally wounded or killed by the future Malcolm III ("King Malcolm Ceann-mor", son of Duncan I)[26] on the north side of the Mounth in 1057, after retreating with his men over the Cairnamounth Pass to take his last stand at the battle at Lumphanan.[27] The Prophecy of Berchán has it that he was wounded and died at Scone, sixty miles to the south, some days later.[28] Macbeth's stepson Lulach was installed as king soon after,[29] but was killed in 1058 by Malcolm who succeeded him.

Unlike later writers, no near-contemporary source remarks on Macbeth as a tyrant. The Duan Albanach, which survives in a form dating to the reign of Malcolm III, calls him "Mac Bethad the renowned". The Prophecy of Berchán, a verse history which purports to be a prophecy, describes him as "the generous king of Fortriu", and says:

The red, tall, golden-haired one, he will be pleasant to me among them; Scotland will be brimful west and east during the reign of the furious red one.[30]

Life to legend edit

 
Macbeth and Banquo encounter the witches. Illustration from Holinshed's Chronicles (1577).

Macbeth's life, like that of King Duncan I, had progressed far towards legend by the end of the 14th century, when John of Fordun and Andrew of Wyntoun wrote their histories. Hector Boece, Walter Bower, and George Buchanan all contributed to the legend.

William Shakespeare's depiction and its influence edit

 
Macbeth and the witches, painting by Henry Fuseli

In Shakespeare's play, which is based mainly upon Raphael Holinshed's account and probably first performed in 1606, Macbeth is initially a valiant and loyal general to the elderly King Duncan. After being manipulated by Three Witches and his wife, Lady Macbeth, Macbeth murders Duncan and usurps the throne. Ultimately, the prophecies of the witches prove misleading, and Macbeth becomes a murderous tyrant. Duncan's son Malcolm stages a revolt against Macbeth, during which a guilt-ridden Lady Macbeth commits suicide. During battle, Macbeth encounters Macduff, a refugee nobleman whose wife and children had earlier been murdered on Macbeth's orders. Upon realising that he will die if he duels with Macduff, Macbeth at first refuses to do so. But when Macduff explains that if Macbeth surrenders he will be subjected to ridicule by his former subjects, Macbeth vows, "I will not yield to kiss the ground before young Malcolm's feet, to be baited by a rabble's curse." He chooses instead to fight Macduff to the death. Macduff kills and beheads Macbeth, and the play ends with Prince Malcolm becoming king.

The likely reason[31] for Shakespeare's unflattering depiction of Macbeth is that King James VI and I was descended from Malcolm III via the House of Bruce and his own House of Stewart, whereas Macbeth's line died out with the death of Lulach six months after his step-father. King James was also thought to be a descendant of Banquo through Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland. Historian Peter Berresford Ellis suggested that Shakespeare's inaccurate portrayal of MacBeth was unintentional, as he only had access to sources written from the point of view of the English and 'Anglicized Scotsmen', detached culturally and linguistically from 11th-century Scotland. Ellis thus proposed that "the degeneration of MacBeth of Scotland into a murdering usurper" preceded Shakespeare by "some 350 years after [MacBeth's] death at Lumphanan".[32]

 
Macbeth at the fort of Macduff, by J. R. Skelton

In a 1959 essay, Boris Pasternak compared Shakespeare's characterisation of Macbeth to Raskolnikov, the protagonist of Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky. Pasternak explained that neither character begins as a murderer, but becomes one by a set of faulty rationalisations and a belief that he is above the law.[33]

Lady Macbeth has also become famous in her own right. In his 1865 novel Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District, Nikolai Leskov updated The Tragedy of Macbeth so that it takes place among the Imperial Russian merchant class. In a twist on the source, however, Leskov reverses the gender roles: the woman is the murderer and the man is the instigator. Leskov's novel was the basis for Dmitri Shostakovich's 1936 opera of the same name.

References edit

  1. ^ William Forbes Skene, Chronicles, p. 102.
  2. ^ a b c Aitchison, Nicholas Boyter (1999). Macbeth: Man and Myth. Sutton. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-7509-1891-6.
  3. ^ Davis, J. Madison, ed. (1995). The Shakespeare Name and Place Dictionary. Routledge. p. 294. ISBN 978-1884964-17-6.
  4. ^ Ellis 1990, p. 2.
  5. ^ Ellis 1990, pp. 24, 55.
  6. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Ms. E, 1031.
  7. ^ Compare Duncan, Kingship of the Scots, pp. 29–30 with Hudson, Prophecy of Berchán, pp. 222–223.
  8. ^ Hudson, Prophecy of Berchán, p. 223; Duncan, Kingship of the Scots, p. 33.
  9. ^ Annals of Tigernach 1034.1
  10. ^ Duncan I as tánaise ríg, the chosen heir, see Duncan, The Kingship of the Scots, pp. 33–35; Hudson, Prophecy of Berchán, pp. 223–224, where it is accepted that Duncan was king of Strathclyde. For tanistry, etc., in Ireland, see Ó Cróinín, Early Medieval Ireland, 63–71. Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, pp. 35–39, offers a different perspective.
  11. ^ Annals of Tigernach 1040.1.
  12. ^ G. W. S. Barrow, Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000–1306, Edinburgh University Press, 1981, p. 26.
  13. ^ Broun, "Duncan I (d. 1040)"; the date is from Marianus Scotus and the killing is recorded by the Annals of Tigernach.
  14. ^ Hudson, Prophecy of Berchán, pp. 223–224; Duncan, The Kingship of the Scots, pp. 33–34.
  15. ^ Annals of Tigernach 1045.10; Annals of Ulster 1045.6.
  16. ^ The Scots Peerage (PDF). Vol. 3 – via electricscotland.com.
  17. ^ Robertson, Scotland under her Early Kings, p. 122. Hudson, Prophecy of Berchán, p. 224, refers to Earl Siward as Malcolm III's "patron"; Duncan, The Kingship of the Scots, pp. 40–42 favours Orkney; Woolf offers no opinion. Northumbria is evidently a misapprehension, further than that cannot be said with certainty.
  18. ^ Ellis 1990, p. 74.
  19. ^ However Macbeth's father may be called "jarl Hundi" in Njál's saga; Crawford, p. 72.
  20. ^ Anderson, ESSH, p. 576, note 7, refers to the account as "a fabulous story" and concludes that "[n]o solution to the riddle seems to be justified".
  21. ^ Roberts, John Lenox (1997), Lost Kingdoms: Celtic Scotland and the Middle Ages, Edinburgh University Press, p. 22, ISBN 978-0-7486-0910-9
  22. ^ Orkneyinga Saga, cc. 20 & 32.
  23. ^ Taylor, p. 338; Crawford, pp. 71–74.
  24. ^ Broun, Dauvit (2015). "Malcolm III". In Cannon, John; Crowcroft, Robert (eds.). The Oxford Companion to British History (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
  25. ^ Florence of Worcester, 1052; Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Ms. D, 1054; Annals of Ulster 1054.6; and discussed by Duncan, The Kingship of the Scots, pp. 38–41; see also Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 260–263.
  26. ^ Moncreiffe, Iain (Sir Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk). The Robertsons (Clan Donnachaidh of Atholl). W. & A. K. Johnston & G. W. Bacon Ltd., Edinburgh. 1962 (reprint of 1954), p. 6
  27. ^ Andrew Wyntoun, Original Chronicle, ed. F.J. Amours, vol. 4, pp 298–299 and 300–301 (c. 1420)
  28. ^ The exact dates are uncertain, Woolf gives 15 August, Hudson 14 August and Duncan, following John of Fordun, gives 5 December; Annals of Tigernach 1058.5; Annals of Ulster 1058.6.
  29. ^ Ellis 1990, pp. 97–98.
  30. ^ Hudson, Prophecy of Berchán, p. 91, stanzas 193 and 194.
  31. ^ . British Library. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  32. ^ Ellis 1990, p. 115.
  33. ^ Pasternak, Boris (1959). I Remember: Sketch for an Autobiography. Translated by Magarshack, David; Harari, Manya. New York: Pantheon Books. pp. 150–152. OL 6271434M.

Sources edit

  • The Annals of Ulster, AD 431–1201, CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts, 2003, retrieved 15 November 2008
  • The Annals of Tigernach, CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts, 1996, retrieved 15 November 2008
  • Gaelic notes from the Book of Deer (with translation), CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts, 2001, retrieved 15 November 2008
  • Anderson, Alan Orr (1922), Early Sources of Scottish History A.D. 500 to 1286, vol. I (1990 revised & corrected ed.), Stamford: Paul Watkins, ISBN 1-871615-03-8
  • Anderson, Alan Orr (1908), Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286, London: D. Nutt
  • Anderson, M. O. (1980), Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland (2nd ed.), Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, ISBN 0-7011-1604-8
  • Bannerman, John (1974), Studies in the History of Dalriada, Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, ISBN 0-7011-2040-1
  • Barrell, Andrew D. M. (2000), Medieval Scotland, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-58602-3
  • Barrow, G. W. S. (1989), Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000–1306 (2nd ed.), Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 0-7486-0104-X
  • Broun, Dauvit (1999), The Irish Identity of the Kingdom of the Scots in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries, Woodbridge: Boydell Press, ISBN 978-0-85115-375-9
  • Cowan, Edward J. (1993), "The Historical MacBeth", in Sellar, W. D. H. (ed.), Moray: Province and People, Edinburgh: The Scottish Society for Northern Studies, pp. 117–142, ISBN 0-9505994-7-6
  • Crawford, Barbara (1987), Scandinavian Scotland, Leicester: Leicester University Press, ISBN 0-7185-1282-0
  • Driscoll, Stephen T. (2002), Alba: The Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland AD 800–1124, The Making of Scotland, Edinburgh: Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-145-3
  • Duncan, Archibald A. M. (1978), Scotland: The Making of the Kingdom (2nd ed.), Edinburgh: Mercat Press, ISBN 0-901824-83-6
  • Duncan, Archibald A. M. (2002), The Kingship of the Scots 842–1292: Succession and Independence, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-1626-8
  • Ellis, Peter Berresford (1990), MacBeth, High King of Scotland, 1040-57, Belfast: Blackstaff Press, ISBN 0-85640-448-9
  • Foster, Sally M. (2004), Picts, Gaels and Scots: Early Historic Scotland (2nd ed.), London: Batsford, ISBN 978-0-7134-8874-6
  • Smyth, Alfred P. (1984), Warlords and Holy Men: Scotland AD 80–1000, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 0-7486-0100-7
  • Swanton, Michael (1996), The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, New York: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-92129-5
  • Taylor, A. B. (1937), "Karl Hundason, "King of Scots"" (PDF), Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, LXXI: 334–340, doi:10.9750/PSAS.071.334.342, S2CID 257294925
  • Woolf, Alex (2007), "The Cult of Moluag, the See of Mortlach and Church Organisation in Northern Scotland in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries", in Arbuthnot, Sharon J.; Hollo, Kaarina (eds.), Fil suil nglais – A Grey Eye Looks Back: A Festschrift for Colm O'Baoill (PDF), Brig o' Turk: Clann Tuirc, pp. 317–322, ISBN 978-0-9549733-7-7
  • Woolf, Alex (2000), "The 'Moray Question' and the Kingship of Alba in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries", The Scottish Historical Review, LXXIX (2), Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press: 145–164, doi:10.3366/shr.2000.79.2.145, ISSN 1750-0222, S2CID 162334631
  • Woolf, Alex (2007), From Pictland to Alba, 789–1070, The New Edinburgh History of Scotland, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-1234-5

Further reading edit

  • Tranter, Nigel MacBeth the King Hodder & Stoughton, 1978.
  • Dunnett, Dorothy King Hereafter Knopf, 1982, ISBN 0-394-52378-4.
  • Gregg, William H. Controversial issues in Scottish history Putnam, 1910.
  • Marsden, John Alba of the Ravens: In Search of the Celtic Kingdom of the Scots Constable, 1997, ISBN 0-09-475760-7.
  • Walker, Ian Lords of Alba Sutton Publishing, 2006, ISBN 0-7509-3492-1.

External links edit

Macbeth, King of Scotland
Born: 1005 Died: 15 August 1057
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Alba
1040–1057
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mormaer of Moray
1032–1057

macbeth, king, scotland, this, article, about, scottish, king, other, uses, macbeth, disambiguation, macbethad, findláech, anglicised, macbeth, macfinlay, died, august, 1057, nicknamed, king, middle, irish, deircc, king, scotland, alba, from, 1040, until, deat. This article is about the Scottish king For other uses see Macbeth disambiguation Macbethad mac Findlaech anglicised as Macbeth MacFinlay died 15 August 1057 nicknamed the Red King Middle Irish Ri Deircc 1 was King of Scotland Alba from 1040 until his death Little is known about Macbeth s early life although he was the son of Findlaech of Moray and may have been a grandson of Malcolm II presumably through his daughter Donada He became Mormaer Earl of Moray a semi autonomous province in 1032 and was probably responsible for the death of the previous mormaer Gille Coemgain He subsequently married Gille Coemgain s widow Gruoch but they had no children together MacbethKing of ScotsReign14 August 1040 15 August 1057PredecessorDuncan ISuccessorLulachMormaer of MorayReign1032 1057PredecessorGille CoemgainSuccessorLulachBorn1005Dingwall Ross and CromartyDied 1057 08 15 15 August 1057 aged 51 52 LumphananBurialIonaSpouseGruochHouseMorayFatherFindlaechMotherDonada presumed In 1040 Duncan I launched an attack into Moray and was killed in action by Macbeth s troops Macbeth succeeded him as King of Alba apparently with little opposition His 17 year reign was mostly peaceful although in 1054 he was faced with an English invasion led by Siward Earl of Northumbria on behalf of Edward the Confessor Macbeth was killed at the Battle of Lumphanan in 1057 by forces loyal to the future Malcolm III He was buried on Iona the traditional resting place of Scottish kings Macbeth was initially succeeded by his stepson Lulach but Lulach ruled for only a few months before also being killed by Malcolm III whose descendants ruled Scotland until the late 13th century Macbeth is today best known as the main character of William Shakespeare s tragedy Macbeth and the many works that it has inspired However Shakespeare s Macbeth is based on Holinshed s Chronicles published in 1577 and is not historically accurate Contents 1 Name 2 Royal ancestry 3 Mormaer and dux 4 King of Alba 4 1 Karl Hundason 4 2 Final years 5 Life to legend 5 1 William Shakespeare s depiction and its influence 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksName editThe name Mac Bethad or in modern Gaelic MacBheatha from which the anglicized MacBeth is derived means son of life 2 Although it has the appearance of a Gaelic patronymic it does not have any meaning of filiation but instead carries an implication of a righteous man 2 or religious man 3 An alternative proposed derivation is that it is a corruption of macc bethad meaning one of the elect 2 Macbeth s full name in Middle Irish medieval Gaelic was Macbethad mac Findlaech This is realised as MacBheatha mac Fhionnlaigh in modern Scottish Gaelic and is rendered Macbeth MacFinlay also spelled Finley Findlay or Findley in modern English Mac Findlaech is a Gaelic patronymic meaning son of Findlaech referring to his father Findlaech of Moray 4 Royal ancestry editSome sources make Macbeth a grandson of King Malcolm II presumably through his daughter Donada and thus a cousin to Duncan I whom he succeeded He was possibly also a cousin to Thorfinn the Mighty Earl of Orkney and Caithness 5 Mormaer and dux editWhen Cnut the Great came north in 1031 to accept the submission of King Malcolm II Macbeth too submitted to him Malcolm king of the Scots submitted to him and became his man with two other kings Macbeth and Iehmarc 6 Some have seen this as a sign of Macbeth s power others have seen his presence together with Iehmarc who may be Echmarcach mac Ragnaill as proof that Malcolm II was overlord of Moray and of the Kingdom of the Isles 7 Whatever the true state of affairs in the early 1030s it seems more probable that Macbeth was subject to the king of Alba Malcolm II who died at Glamis on 25 November 1034 The Prophecy of Berchan apparently alone in near contemporary sources says that Malcolm died a violent death calling it a kinslaying without actually naming his killers 8 Tigernach s chronicle says only Mael Coluim son of Cinaed king of Alba the honour of western Europe died 9 He became Mormaer Earl of Moray a semi autonomous province in 1032 and was probably responsible for the death of the previous mormaer Gille Coemgain He subsequently married Gille Coemgain s widow Gruoch but they had no children together Macbeth later accepted her son from Gille Coemgain Lulach as his heir Malcolm II s grandson Duncan Donnchad mac Crinain later King Duncan I was acclaimed as king of Alba on 30 November 1034 apparently without opposition Duncan appears to have been tanaise rig the king in waiting so that far from being an abandonment of tanistry as has sometimes been argued his kingship was a vindication of the practice Previous successions had involved strife between various rigdomna men of royal blood 10 Far from being the aged King Duncan of Shakespeare s play the real King Duncan was a young man in 1034 and even at his death in 1040 his youthfulness is remarked upon 11 Duncan s early reign was apparently uneventful His later reign in line with his description as the man of many sorrows in the Prophecy of Berchan was not successful In 1039 Strathclyde was attacked by the Northumbrians and a retaliatory raid led by Duncan against Durham turned into a disaster Duncan survived the defeat but the following year he led an army north into Moray Macbeth s domain apparently on a punitive expedition against Moray 12 There he was killed in action at the battle of Bothnagowan now Pitgaveny near Elgin by the men of Moray led by Macbeth probably on 14 August 1040 13 14 King of Alba editOn Duncan s death Macbeth became king Had his reign not been universally accepted resistance would have been expected but none is known to have occurred In 1045 Duncan s father Crinan of Dunkeld a scion of the Scottish branch of the Cenel Conaill and Hereditary Abbot of Iona was killed in a battle between two Scottish armies 15 Duncan s younger brother Maldred of Allerdale is believed to have died in the same battle the family fighting Macbeth in defence of Duncan I s young son Malcolm III 16 John of Fordun wrote that Duncan s wife fled Scotland taking her children including the future kings Malcolm III Mael Coluim mac Donnchada and Donald III Domnall Ban mac Donnchada or Donalbane with her On the basis of the authors beliefs as to whom Duncan married various places of exile Northumbria and Orkney among them have been proposed However E William Robertson proposes the safest place for Duncan s widow and her children would be with her or Duncan s kin and supporters in Atholl 17 After the defeat of Crinan Macbeth was evidently unchallenged Marianus Scotus tells how the king made a pilgrimage to Rome in 1050 where Marianus says he gave money to the poor as if it were seed 18 Karl Hundason edit The Orkneyinga Saga says that a dispute between Thorfinn Sigurdsson Earl of Orkney and Karl Hundason began when Karl Hundason became King of Scots and claimed Caithness The identity of Karl Hundason unknown to Scots and Irish sources has long been a matter of dispute and it is far from clear that the matter is settled The most common assumption is that Karl Hundason was an insulting byname Old Norse for Churl son of a Dog given to Macbeth by his enemies 19 William Forbes Skene s suggestion that he was Duncan I of Scotland has been revived in recent years Lastly the idea that the whole affair is a poetic invention has been raised 20 According to the Orkneyinga Saga in the war which followed Thorfinn defeated Karl in a sea battle off Deerness at the east end of the Orkney Mainland Then Karl s nephew Mutatan or Muddan appointed to rule Caithness for him was killed at Thurso by Thorkel the Fosterer Finally a great battle at Tarbat Ness 21 on the south side of the Dornoch Firth ended with Karl defeated and fugitive or dead Thorfinn the saga says then marched south through Scotland as far as Fife burning and plundering as he passed A later note in the saga claims that Thorfinn won nine Scottish earldoms 22 Whoever Karl Hundason may have been it appears that the saga is reporting a local conflict with a Scots ruler of Moray or Ross T he whole narrative is consistent with the idea that the struggle of Thorfinn and Karl is a continuation of that which had been waged since the ninth century by the Orkney earls notably Sigurd Rognvald s son Ljot and Sigurd the Stout against the princes or mormaers of Moray Sutherland Ross and Argyll and that in fine Malcolm and Karl were mormaers of one of these four provinces 23 Final years edit In 1052 Macbeth was involved indirectly in the strife in the Kingdom of England between Godwin Earl of Wessex and Edward the Confessor when he received a number of Norman exiles from England in his court In 1054 Edward s Earl of Northumbria Siward led a very large invasion of Scotland Suthed Duncan s widow and Malcolm s mother was Northumbrian born it is probable but not proven that there was a family tie between Siward and Malcolm The campaign led to a bloody battle at Dunsinnan 24 in which the Annals of Ulster reported 3 000 Scots and 1 500 English dead which can be taken as meaning very many on both sides One of Siward s sons and a son in law were among the dead The result of the invasion was that one Mael Coluim son of the king of the Cumbrians not to be confused with Mael Coluim mac Donnchada the future Malcolm III of Scotland was restored to his throne i e as ruler of the kingdom of Strathclyde 25 It may be that the events of 1054 are responsible for the idea which appears in Shakespeare s play that Malcolm III was put in power by the English Macbeth did not survive the English invasion for long for he was defeated and mortally wounded or killed by the future Malcolm III King Malcolm Ceann mor son of Duncan I 26 on the north side of the Mounth in 1057 after retreating with his men over the Cairnamounth Pass to take his last stand at the battle at Lumphanan 27 The Prophecy of Berchan has it that he was wounded and died at Scone sixty miles to the south some days later 28 Macbeth s stepson Lulach was installed as king soon after 29 but was killed in 1058 by Malcolm who succeeded him Unlike later writers no near contemporary source remarks on Macbeth as a tyrant The Duan Albanach which survives in a form dating to the reign of Malcolm III calls him Mac Bethad the renowned The Prophecy of Berchan a verse history which purports to be a prophecy describes him as the generous king of Fortriu and says The red tall golden haired one he will be pleasant to me among them Scotland will be brimful west and east during the reign of the furious red one 30 Life to legend editMain articles Macbeth and Macbeth character nbsp Macbeth and Banquo encounter the witches Illustration from Holinshed s Chronicles 1577 Macbeth s life like that of King Duncan I had progressed far towards legend by the end of the 14th century when John of Fordun and Andrew of Wyntoun wrote their histories Hector Boece Walter Bower and George Buchanan all contributed to the legend William Shakespeare s depiction and its influence edit nbsp Macbeth and the witches painting by Henry Fuseli In Shakespeare s play which is based mainly upon Raphael Holinshed s account and probably first performed in 1606 Macbeth is initially a valiant and loyal general to the elderly King Duncan After being manipulated by Three Witches and his wife Lady Macbeth Macbeth murders Duncan and usurps the throne Ultimately the prophecies of the witches prove misleading and Macbeth becomes a murderous tyrant Duncan s son Malcolm stages a revolt against Macbeth during which a guilt ridden Lady Macbeth commits suicide During battle Macbeth encounters Macduff a refugee nobleman whose wife and children had earlier been murdered on Macbeth s orders Upon realising that he will die if he duels with Macduff Macbeth at first refuses to do so But when Macduff explains that if Macbeth surrenders he will be subjected to ridicule by his former subjects Macbeth vows I will not yield to kiss the ground before young Malcolm s feet to be baited by a rabble s curse He chooses instead to fight Macduff to the death Macduff kills and beheads Macbeth and the play ends with Prince Malcolm becoming king The likely reason 31 for Shakespeare s unflattering depiction of Macbeth is that King James VI and I was descended from Malcolm III via the House of Bruce and his own House of Stewart whereas Macbeth s line died out with the death of Lulach six months after his step father King James was also thought to be a descendant of Banquo through Walter Stewart 6th High Steward of Scotland Historian Peter Berresford Ellis suggested that Shakespeare s inaccurate portrayal of MacBeth was unintentional as he only had access to sources written from the point of view of the English and Anglicized Scotsmen detached culturally and linguistically from 11th century Scotland Ellis thus proposed that the degeneration of MacBeth of Scotland into a murdering usurper preceded Shakespeare by some 350 years after MacBeth s death at Lumphanan 32 nbsp Macbeth at the fort of Macduff by J R Skelton In a 1959 essay Boris Pasternak compared Shakespeare s characterisation of Macbeth to Raskolnikov the protagonist of Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky Pasternak explained that neither character begins as a murderer but becomes one by a set of faulty rationalisations and a belief that he is above the law 33 Lady Macbeth has also become famous in her own right In his 1865 novel Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District Nikolai Leskov updated The Tragedy of Macbeth so that it takes place among the Imperial Russian merchant class In a twist on the source however Leskov reverses the gender roles the woman is the murderer and the man is the instigator Leskov s novel was the basis for Dmitri Shostakovich s 1936 opera of the same name References edit William Forbes Skene Chronicles p 102 a b c Aitchison Nicholas Boyter 1999 Macbeth Man and Myth Sutton p 38 ISBN 978 0 7509 1891 6 Davis J Madison ed 1995 The Shakespeare Name and Place Dictionary Routledge p 294 ISBN 978 1884964 17 6 Ellis 1990 p 2 Ellis 1990 pp 24 55 Anglo Saxon Chronicle Ms E 1031 Compare Duncan Kingship of the Scots pp 29 30 with Hudson Prophecy of Berchan pp 222 223 Hudson Prophecy of Berchan p 223 Duncan Kingship of the Scots p 33 Annals of Tigernach 1034 1 Duncan I as tanaise rig the chosen heir see Duncan The Kingship of the Scots pp 33 35 Hudson Prophecy of Berchan pp 223 224 where it is accepted that Duncan was king of Strathclyde For tanistry etc in Ireland see o Croinin Early Medieval Ireland 63 71 Byrne Irish Kings and High Kings pp 35 39 offers a different perspective Annals of Tigernach 1040 1 G W S Barrow Kingship and Unity Scotland 1000 1306 Edinburgh University Press 1981 p 26 Broun Duncan I d 1040 the date is from Marianus Scotus and the killing is recorded by the Annals of Tigernach Hudson Prophecy of Berchan pp 223 224 Duncan The Kingship of the Scots pp 33 34 Annals of Tigernach 1045 10 Annals of Ulster 1045 6 The Scots Peerage PDF Vol 3 via electricscotland com Robertson Scotland under her Early Kings p 122 Hudson Prophecy of Berchan p 224 refers to Earl Siward as Malcolm III s patron Duncan The Kingship of the Scots pp 40 42 favours Orkney Woolf offers no opinion Northumbria is evidently a misapprehension further than that cannot be said with certainty Ellis 1990 p 74 However Macbeth s father may be called jarl Hundi in Njal s saga Crawford p 72 Anderson ESSH p 576 note 7 refers to the account as a fabulous story and concludes that n o solution to the riddle seems to be justified Roberts John Lenox 1997 Lost Kingdoms Celtic Scotland and the Middle Ages Edinburgh University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 7486 0910 9 Orkneyinga Saga cc 20 amp 32 Taylor p 338 Crawford pp 71 74 Broun Dauvit 2015 Malcolm III In Cannon John Crowcroft Robert eds The Oxford Companion to British History 2nd ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 6 August 2020 Florence of Worcester 1052 Anglo Saxon Chronicle Ms D 1054 Annals of Ulster 1054 6 and discussed by Duncan The Kingship of the Scots pp 38 41 see also Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 260 263 Moncreiffe Iain Sir Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk The Robertsons Clan Donnachaidh of Atholl W amp A K Johnston amp G W Bacon Ltd Edinburgh 1962 reprint of 1954 p 6 Andrew Wyntoun Original Chronicle ed F J Amours vol 4 pp 298 299 and 300 301 c 1420 The exact dates are uncertain Woolf gives 15 August Hudson 14 August and Duncan following John of Fordun gives 5 December Annals of Tigernach 1058 5 Annals of Ulster 1058 6 Ellis 1990 pp 97 98 Hudson Prophecy of Berchan p 91 stanzas 193 and 194 The History of Scotland by John Leslie 1578 British Library Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2016 Ellis 1990 p 115 Pasternak Boris 1959 I Remember Sketch for an Autobiography Translated by Magarshack David Harari Manya New York Pantheon Books pp 150 152 OL 6271434M Sources editThe Annals of Ulster AD 431 1201 CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2003 retrieved 15 November 2008 The Annals of Tigernach CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 1996 retrieved 15 November 2008 Gaelic notes from the Book of Deer with translation CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts 2001 retrieved 15 November 2008 Anderson Alan Orr 1922 Early Sources of Scottish History A D 500 to 1286 vol I 1990 revised amp corrected ed Stamford Paul Watkins ISBN 1 871615 03 8 Anderson Alan Orr 1908 Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers A D 500 to 1286 London D Nutt Anderson M O 1980 Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland 2nd ed Edinburgh Scottish Academic Press ISBN 0 7011 1604 8 Bannerman John 1974 Studies in the History of Dalriada Edinburgh Scottish Academic Press ISBN 0 7011 2040 1 Barrell Andrew D M 2000 Medieval Scotland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58602 3 Barrow G W S 1989 Kingship and Unity Scotland 1000 1306 2nd ed Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0104 X Broun Dauvit 1999 The Irish Identity of the Kingdom of the Scots in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries Woodbridge Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 375 9 Cowan Edward J 1993 The Historical MacBeth in Sellar W D H ed Moray Province and People Edinburgh The Scottish Society for Northern Studies pp 117 142 ISBN 0 9505994 7 6 Crawford Barbara 1987 Scandinavian Scotland Leicester Leicester University Press ISBN 0 7185 1282 0 Driscoll Stephen T 2002 Alba The Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland AD 800 1124 The Making of Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 145 3 Duncan Archibald A M 1978 Scotland The Making of the Kingdom 2nd ed Edinburgh Mercat Press ISBN 0 901824 83 6 Duncan Archibald A M 2002 The Kingship of the Scots 842 1292 Succession and Independence Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1626 8 Ellis Peter Berresford 1990 MacBeth High King of Scotland 1040 57 Belfast Blackstaff Press ISBN 0 85640 448 9 Foster Sally M 2004 Picts Gaels and Scots Early Historic Scotland 2nd ed London Batsford ISBN 978 0 7134 8874 6 Smyth Alfred P 1984 Warlords and Holy Men Scotland AD 80 1000 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0100 7 Swanton Michael 1996 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 92129 5 Taylor A B 1937 Karl Hundason King of Scots PDF Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland LXXI 334 340 doi 10 9750 PSAS 071 334 342 S2CID 257294925 Woolf Alex 2007 The Cult of Moluag the See of Mortlach and Church Organisation in Northern Scotland in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries in Arbuthnot Sharon J Hollo Kaarina eds Fil suil nglais A Grey Eye Looks Back A Festschrift for Colm O Baoill PDF Brig o Turk Clann Tuirc pp 317 322 ISBN 978 0 9549733 7 7 Woolf Alex 2000 The Moray Question and the Kingship of Alba in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries The Scottish Historical Review LXXIX 2 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 145 164 doi 10 3366 shr 2000 79 2 145 ISSN 1750 0222 S2CID 162334631 Woolf Alex 2007 From Pictland to Alba 789 1070 The New Edinburgh History of Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1234 5Further reading edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Macbeth Tranter Nigel MacBeth the King Hodder amp Stoughton 1978 Dunnett Dorothy King Hereafter Knopf 1982 ISBN 0 394 52378 4 Gregg William H Controversial issues in Scottish history Putnam 1910 Marsden John Alba of the Ravens In Search of the Celtic Kingdom of the Scots Constable 1997 ISBN 0 09 475760 7 Walker Ian Lords of Alba Sutton Publishing 2006 ISBN 0 7509 3492 1 External links editMacbeth at the official website of the British monarchy Macbeth at BBC History Macbeth King of ScotlandHouse of MorayBorn 1005 Died 15 August 1057 Regnal titles Preceded byDuncan I King of Alba1040 1057 Succeeded byLulach Preceded byGille Coemgain Mormaer of Moray1032 1057 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Macbeth King of Scotland amp oldid 1217796826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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