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Magnús Óláfsson

Magnús Óláfsson (died 24 November 1265) was a King of Mann and the Isles. He was a son of Óláfr Guðrøðarson, King of the Isles, and a member of the Crovan dynasty. Magnús' realm encompassed Mann and parts of the Hebrides. Some leading members of Magnús' family—such as his father—styled themselves "King of the Isles"; other members—such as Magnús and his brothers—styled themselves "King of Mann and the Isles". Although kings in their own right, leading members of the Crovan dynasty paid tribute to the Kings of Norway and generally recognised a nominal Norwegian overlordship of Mann and the Hebrides. Magnus was driven out by King Alexander III.

Magnús Óláfsson
King of Mann and the Isles
Magnús' name and title as it appears on folio 49r. of British Library Cotton MS Julius A VII (the Chronicle of Mann): magnus rex manniæ et insularum.[1]
King of Mann and the Isles
Reign1254–1265
PredecessorHaraldr Guðrøðarson
SuccessorManx monarchy abolished
Died24 November 1265
Castle Rushen
Burial
SpouseMáire Nic Dubhghaill
IssueGuðrøðr Magnússon
HouseCrovan dynasty
FatherÓláfr Guðrøðarson

In 1237, Óláfr died and was succeeded by his elder son, Haraldr, who later drowned in 1248. The kingship was then taken up by his brother, Rǫgnvaldr Óláfsson. After a reign of only weeks, Rǫgnvaldr was slain and the kingship was taken up by Haraldr Guðrøðarson, a descendant of Óláfr's half-brother and deadly rival, Rǫgnvaldr Guðrøðarson, King of the Isles. After a short reign, this Haraldr was removed from power by his overlord, Hákon Hákonarson, King of Norway. In Haraldr's absence, Magnús and a relation of his, Eóghan Mac Dubhghaill, King in the Isles, unsuccessfully attempted to conquer Mann. A few years later, Magnús successfully made his return to the island and was proclaimed king.

In the 1240s, following attempts to purchase the Isles from Hákon, Alexander II, King of Scots resorted to warfare to win the region. His death in 1249 brought an abrupt end to his westward invasion, and it was not until the 1260s that a Scottish king again attempted to impose his authority into the Isles. In 1261, Alexander II's son and successor, Alexander III, attempted to purchase the Isles without success, before Scottish forces raided into the Hebrides. Hákon's response to Scottish aggression was to organise a massive fleet to re-assert Norwegian authority. In the summer of 1263, the fleet sailed down through the Hebrides. Although his forces gained strength as they sailed southwards, the Norwegian king received only lukewarm support from many of his Norse-Gaelic vassals—in fact, Magnús was one of the few who came out whole-heartedly for Hákon. At one point during the campaign, Hákon sent Magnús and some other vassals raiding deep into Lennox. Meanwhile, the main Norwegian force was occupied with the Battle of Largs—a famous, but inconclusive series of skirmishes against the Scots. Following this action, Hákon's demoralised fleet returned home having accomplished little. Not long after Hákon's departure and death, Alexander launched a punitive expedition into the Hebrides, and threatened Mann with the same. Magnús' subsequent submission to the Scottish king, and the homage rendered for his lands, symbolises the failure of Hákon's campaign, and marks the complete collapse of Norwegian influence in the Isles.

Magnús, the last reigning king of his dynasty, died at Castle Rushen in 1265, and was buried at the Abbey of St Mary of Rushen. At the time of his death, he was married to Eóghan's daughter Máire. In the year after his death, the Hebrides and Mann were formally ceded by King of Norway to the King of Scots. Ten years after Magnús' death, Guðrøðr, a bastard son of his attempted to establish himself as king on Mann. Guðrøðr's revolt was quickly and brutally crushed by Scottish forces, and the island remained part of the Kingdom of Scotland. By the 1290s, the Hebridean portion of Magnús' former island-kingdom had been incorporated into a newly created Scottish sheriffdom.

Background

 
Map of the Kingdom of the Isles circa 1200.[2] The lands of the Crovan dynasty bordering those of Clann Somhairle.

Magnús was a member of the Crovan dynasty—a line of Norse-Gaelic sea-kings whose kingdom encompassed the Isle of Man (Mann) and the northern parts of the Hebrides, from the late eleventh century to the mid thirteenth century. Although the kingdom originally encompassed the entirety of the Hebrides, much of the Inner Hebrides was permanently lost in the mid twelfth century, but the dynasty retained control of the largest Hebridean islands of Lewis and Harris and Skye. Magnús was the son of Óláfr Guðrøðarson, King of the Isles (died 1237). Although Óláfr is known to have had two wives, and no contemporaneous source names the mother of his children, Magnús' mother may have been Óláfr's second wife—Cairistíona, daughter of Fearchar, Earl of Ross, (died c. 1251).[3][note 1]

Óláfr was a younger son of Guðrøðr Óláfsson, King of Dublin and the Isles (died 1187). Before his death in 1187, Guðrøðr instructed that Óláfr should succeed to the kingship. However, Guðrøðr was instead succeeded by his elder son, Rǫgnvaldr (died 1229), who had popular support.[4] Rǫgnvaldr and Óláfr, who are thought to have had different mothers, subsequently warred over the dynasty's kingdom in the early thirteenth century, until Rǫgnvaldr was slain battling Óláfr in 1229.[5] Rǫgnvaldr's son, Guðrøðr (died 1231), who was also in conflict with Óláfr, took up his father's claim to the throne, and at his height co-ruled the kingdom with Óláfr in 1231. Guðrøðr was slain in 1231, and Óláfr ruled the entire kingdom without internal opposition until his own death in 1237.[6] Óláfr was succeeded by his son, Haraldr, who later travelled to Norway and married a daughter of Hákon Hákonarson, King of Norway (died 1263), but lost his life at sea on his return voyage in 1248. In May 1249, Haraldr's brother, Rǫgnvaldr (died 1249), formally succeeded to the kingship of the Crovan dynasty's kingdom.[7]

Rǫgnvaldr Óláfsson's reign was an extremely short one; only weeks after his accession, he was slain on Mann. His killer is identified by a contemporary source as a knight named Ívarr who may have been an ally of Rǫgnvaldr Óláfsson's second cousin once removed, Haraldr Guðrøðarson (fl. 1249), who seized the kingship immediately following the killing.[8] Although at first Haraldr was recognised as a legitimate ruler of the kingdom by Henry III, King of England (died 1272),[9] Haraldr was later regarded as a usurper by his Norwegian overlord, Hákon. In 1250, Hákon summoned Haraldr to Norway to answer for his seizure of the kingship, and Haraldr was kept from returning to the Isles.[10]

Eóghan of Argyll and the invasion of Mann

Simplified pedigree illustrating Magnús' kinship to his wife, Máire Nic Dubhghaill, and his rival, Haraldr Guðrøðarson. Women are italicised.[11]
Óláfr
(died 1153)
Guðrøðr
(died 1187)
RagnhildrSomhairle
(died 1164)
Rǫgnvaldr
(died 1229)
ÍvarrÓláfr
(died 1237)
Dubhghall
(died 1175×)
Guðrøðr
(died 1231)
Haraldr
(died 1248)
Rǫgnvaldr
(died 1249)
Magnús
(died 1265)
Donnchadh
(died 1244×1248)
Haraldr
(fl. 1249)
Guðrøðr
(fl. 1275)
Eóghan
(died c.1268×1275)
Máire
(died 1302)

Eóghan Mac Dubhghaill, Lord of Argyll (died c.1268×1275) was a prominent member of Clann Somhairle, the descendants of Somhairle mac Giolla Brighde, King of the Isles (died 1164).[12] Through Somhairle's wife, Ragnhildr, daughter of Óláfr Guðrøðarson, King of the Isles (died 1153), several leading members of Clann Somhairle claimed kingship in the Hebrides.[13] In 1248, Eóghan and his second cousin, Dubhghall mac Ruaidhrí (died 1268), travelled to Hákon in Norway and requested the title of king in the Hebrides. Hákon subsequently bestowed the title upon Eóghan, and the following year, upon learning of Haraldr Óláfsson's death, Hákon sent Eóghan westward to take control of the Isles (at least temporarily) on his behalf.[14] Up until this point Eóghan had two overlords: the King of Norway, who claimed the Hebrides; and the King of Scots, who claimed Argyll and coveted the Hebrides. Unfortunately for Eóghan, soon after his return from Norway, Alexander II, King of Scots (died 1249) led an expedition deep into Argyll and demanded that Eóghan renounce his allegiance to Hákon. Eóghan refused to do so and was subsequently driven from his Scottish lordship.[15]

 
 
Map of Mann and the location of St. Michael's Isle and Castle Rushen. A photograph with a view looking south-west from St. Michael's Isle across the tidal causeway to mainland Mann.

In 1250, following Haraldr Guðrøðarson's summons to Norway, the Chronicle of Mann records that Magnús and Eóghan arrived on Mann with a force of Norwegians.[16] The exact intentions of the invaders are unknown; it is possible that they may have intended to install Magnús as king.[17] At the very least, Eóghan was likely looking for some form of compensation for his dispossession from his mainland Scottish lordship.[18] The chronicle states that the invaders made landfall at Ronaldsway, and entered into negotiations with the Manx people; although, when it was learned that Eóghan styled himself "King of the Isles", the Manxmen took offence and broke off all dialogue.[19]

The chronicle indicates that Eóghan had his men form-up on St Michael's Isle,[16] an island that was attached to Mann by a tidal causeway.[17] As evening drew near, the chronicle records that an accomplice of the knight Ívarr led a Manx assault on the island and routed the invading forces. The next day, the chronicle states that the invading forces left the shores of Mann.[16] Ívarr's connection to the Manx attack on the invading forces of Eóghan and Magnús suggests that there was still considerable opposition on Mann by adherents of Haraldr to the prospect of Magnús' kingship there.[20]

The following year, Henry III commanded the Justiciar of Ireland, John fitz Geoffrey (died 1258), to prohibit Magnús from raising military forces in Ireland for an invasion of Mann.[21] A year later Magnús succeeded to the kingship, as the chronicle records that he returned to Mann and, with the consent of the people, began his reign.[22] There are indications that opposition to Magnús, and thus possibly support of Haraldr, continued into the mid 1250s.[23] For example, the chronicle records that when Hákon bestowed upon Magnús the title of king in 1254, it further notes that when Magnús' opponents heard of this, they became dismayed and that their hopes of overthrowing him gradually faded away.[24] Furthermore, a letter of protection, written on behalf of Henry to Magnús in 1256, orders Henry's men not to receive Haraldr and Ívarr, which may thus indicate that these two men were still alive and active.[23] Although Magnús' eldest brother, Haraldr Óláfsson, appears to have ruled over the entirety of the dynasty's thirteenth-century sea-realm, as did Magnús from 1252 onwards, the situation during the years between Haraldr Óláfsson's death and Magnús' accession is uncertain, and it is possible that the kingdom was partitioned between feuding dynasts, as it had been during the bitter inter-dynastic strife of the twelfth- and thirteenth centuries.[25][note 2] Clearly the situation in the Isles was unsettled in the 1250s. For example, Henry is known to have written letters to Alexander, Hákon, and Llywelyn ap Gruffudd (died 1282), the co-ruler of Gwynedd, ordering them not allow their men invade Mann in Magnús' absence there in 1254.[26]

Scottish aggression

 
Castle Rushen, where Magnús died in 1265. By the mid thirteenth century the castle had become the power-centre on Mann. The castle dates to the late twelfth- or early thirteenth century.[27]

In 1244, Alexander made the first of several attempts by Scottish monarchs to purchase the Hebrides from the Kingdom of Norway. It was following this unsuccessful bid that Hákon sent Eóghan into the Isles in 1249, which in turn led to Eóghan's expulsion from the Scottish-mainland when Alexander launched a full-scale summer invasion into Argyll. Alexander's sudden death in the Hebrides brought an abrupt end to his westward invasion, and it was not until the 1260s that a Scottish king again attempted to impose his authority into the Isles.[28]

In 1261, Alexander III, King of Scots (died 1286) sent an emissary to Norway to discuss the Isles. Negotiations proved fruitless, and the following year William I, Earl of Ross (died 1274) is recorded to have launched a vicious attack on Skye.[29][note 3] The assault was likely carried out on behalf of Alexander, in response to the failure of Scottish mission to Norway the year previous.[29][note 4] In response, Hákon organised a massive military force to re-assert Norwegian control along the western seaboard of Scotland. At this time, the Norwegian king was at the height of his power, and his only son had just recently been recognised as heir to the throne.[32]

Norwegian retaliation

 
The Norwegian-led expedition along the south-western seaboard of Scotland.

Late in the summer of 1263, Hákon's fleet reached the northern seaboard of Scotland. Although the precise size of the fleet is unknown, the Icelandic Annals remark that "so great a host that an equally great army is not known ever to have gone from Norway".[33] Upon reaching the Scottish-mainland, the late thirteenth century Hákonar saga Hákonarsonar[34] ("The Saga of Hákon Hákonarson"),[35] states that Hákon levied a tax upon Caithness and considered plundering into the Moray Firth.[34] It is possible that he intended these acts as a form of retribution for the Earl of Ross' savage attack on Skye.[36] The fleet then made its way south along the western seaboard to Skye, where the saga records that Hákon was met by Magnús.[34] The saga states that Hákon's fleet then sailed south to Kerrera, where Dubhghall and Magnús amongst others, were sent to lead fifty ships towards Kintyre, while a smaller group was sent to Bute.[37] The fleet sent to Kintyre was likely tasked with obtaining the allegiance of Aonghus Mór mac Domhnaill, Lord of Islay (died c.1293) and a certain Murchadh,[38] both who are stated by the saga to have afterwards submitted to Hákon.[39][note 5] The saga records that several castles were secured by Hákon's forces: Rothesay Castle on Bute; and an unnamed castle in southern Kintyre,[44] which was more than likely Dunaverty Castle.[45] At Gigha, the saga relates that Eóghan surrendered himself to Hákon, and informed the Norwegian king that he had decided to side with the Scots from whom he held a larger grant of lands.[46] At about the time when Hákon let Eóghan go free, the saga records that the first messengers from the King of Scots arrived to parley.[47]

The saga indicates that negotiations started peacefully enough, although as time drew on, and the weather grew worse, a time-pressed Hákon broke off all dialogue.[48] He sent a detachment of ships deep into Lennox, through Loch Long—different versions of the saga number the force at forty and sixty ships—led by Magnús, Dubhghall, (Dubhghall's brother) Ailéan mac Ruaidhrí, Aonghus Mór, and Murchad. The saga states that the ships were dragged across land to Loch Lomond[49]—which indicates that the invaders would have beached their ships and made portage across the isthmus between the two lochs (between what are today the settlements of Arrochar and Tarbet).[50][note 6] The saga vividly describes how the invaders wasted the well-inhabited islands of the loch and the dwellings surrounding the loch.[52] The fact that Hákon tasked his Norse-Gaelic magnates with leading this foray likely indicates that their boats were lighter than those of the Norwegians, and thus easier to portage from one loch to another; it could also indicate that the undertaking was meant to test their faithfulness to the Norwegian cause.[53]

 
Looking south-east from Tarbet harbour, on the north-western shores of Loch Lomond. After dragging their vessels overland from Loch Long, Magnús and his Hebredian comrades launched their ships from what is today Tarbet, and plundered the islands and shores of Loch Lomond.

While Lennox was being plundered,[54] Hákon and his main force, stationed between the Cumbraes and the Scottish mainland,[55] were occupied with the events surrounding the Battle of Largs, between 30 September and 3 October.[56] Although claimed by later Scottish chroniclers as a great victory, in reality the so-called battle was nothing more than "a series of disorderly skirmishes", with relatively few casualties that achieved little for either side.[56] Following the encounter, Hákon led his fleet northward up through the Hebrides. At Mull, he parted with his Norse-Gaelic lords: Dubhghall was rewarded with Eóghan's former island-domain; Murchad was given Arran, and a certain Ruaidrí was given Bute.[57][note 7] The Norwegian fleet left the Hebrides and reached Orkney by the end of October, where an ill Hákon died in mid December.[61] Despite the saga's claim that Hákon had been triumphant,[62] in reality the campaign was a failure. Alexander's kingdom had successfully defended itself from Norwegian might, and many of Hákon's Norse-Gaelic supporters had been reluctant to support his cause.[61]

Hebridean-Manx subjugation

Within months of Hákon's abortive campaign, embassies were sent forth from Norway to discuss terms of peace. Meanwhile, Alexander seized the initiative and made ready to punish the magnates who had supported Hákon. In 1264, Alexander assembled a fleet and made ready to invade Mann. Without any protection from his Norwegian overlord,[63] or from Henry III (who was held captive at the time),[64][note 8] Magnús had no choice but to submit to the demands of the powerful King of Scots. The two monarchs met at Dumfries, where Magnús swore oaths to Alexander, rendered homage, and surrendered hostages. In return for Alexander's promise of protection against Norwegian retribution, Magnús was forced to provide Alexander's navy with several "pirate type galleys"—five of twenty oars and five of twelve oars.[63] Alexander then ordered an invasion of the Western Isles, led by Uilleam, Earl of Mar (died ×1281), Alexander Comyn, Earl of Buchan (died 1289), and Alan Durward (died 1275).[66] According to the thirteenth-century Gesta Annalia I, the Scots invaders plundered and killed throughout the islands;[67] the expedition itself is corroborated by the late thirteenth century Magnúss saga lagabœtis[68] ("The Saga of Magnús the Lawmender"),[35] which indicates that Scottish forces went into the Hebrides and secured the submission of Aonghus Mór amongst others.[68] Another punitive expedition, possibly led by the Earl of Ross, was launched into Caithness and Ross.[69] The submission forced upon the island-magnates, particularly that of Magnús, marked the complete collapse of Norwegian influence in the Isles.[70]

Acta and honours

 
Magnús' surviving 1256 charter.

Only twenty originals, copies, or abstract versions of royal charters of the kings of the Crovan dynasty are known. Of these, only three date to the reign of Magnús—one of which, a grant to Conishead Priory in 1256, is the only original royal charter of the dynasty in existence.[71][note 9] Important devices attached to royal charters were double-sided waxen seals, used to authenticate such instruments. Although no seals of the dynasty now survive, there exists several seventeenth- and eighteenth-century descriptions and depictions of ones believed to have belonged to Magnús' uncle Rǫgnvaldr, and brother Haraldr. This limited evidence suggests that, in the twelfth- and thirteenth centuries, the kings of the dynasty bore a sailing ship upon their seals, which would have likely represented the clinker-built galley utilised in the Isles at the time.[73] Borne by men whose strength lay in the power of armed galley-fleets, such a symbol would have represented their authority in the Isles.[74]

 
Magnús' name as it appears on folio 122r of AM 45 fol (Codex Frisianus): "Magnus konvngr or Man".[75]

The Chronicle of Mann, the only narrative source for the dynasty's realm, was compiled on Mann during Magnús' reign.[76] Analysis of the document reveals that the main scribe's last entry dates to 1257, in an account which records the dedication of the Abbey of St Mary of Rushen in the presence of Magnús and Richard, Bishop of the Isles. The chronicle thus appears to have been commissioned by, or on behalf of, Magnús himself.[77] The chronicle is somewhat biased in favour of one line of the dynasty over another—the line of Magnús's father, Óláfr, over that of Óláfr's rival half-brother Rǫgnvaldr. For example, Haraldr Guðrøðarson is depicted as a usurper and tyrant, in contrast to the legitimate kingship of his cousin, Magnús.[76] In fact, one reason for the chronicle's composition may have been to legitimise the line of Óláfr which, at the time of the chronicle's compilation, was then represented by Magnús himself.[77]

Like his father and his brother Haraldr, Magnús is recorded within the Chronicle of Mann as having been knighted by Henry III.[78] The knighthoods of Haraldr (in 1247) and Magnús (in 1256) appear to be confirmed by independent English sources. For example, within Henry's letter to Magnús in 1256, Magnús is described to have been invested with a military belt by the English king.[79] Several of the leading members of the Crovan dynasty styled themselves in Latin rex insularum ("King of the Isles"). Magnús and his aforesaid brother, Haraldr, styled themselves in Latin rex manniae et insularum ("King of Mann and the Isles").[80][note 10]

Death

 
Thirteenth-century coffin-lid which may be that of either Magnús, his brother Rǫgnvaldr, or their father Óláfr.[82]

Following his submission to Alexander, Magnús, the last reigning king of the Crovan dynasty, ruled peacefully until his death in 1265.[83] According to the Chronicle of Mann, the king died at Castle Rushen on 24 November, and was buried at the Abbey of St Mary of Rushen.[84][note 11] There is a possibility that a coffin-lid found at Rushen, may be associated with the tomb of one of the three kings of the dynasty known to have been buried there.[82][note 12] At the time of his death,[86] Magnús is known to have been married to Eóghan's daughter, Máire (died 1302).[12][note 13] As the last of a long line of Norse-Gaelic rulers of Mann, his death ended the island's so-called "golden-age" of Scandinavian sea-kings.[88] The continuation of Historia rerum Anglicarum records simply, that on his death, "kings ceased to reign on Mann".[89]

Dismantled kingdom

Three years after the inconclusive skirmish at Largs, terms of peace were finally agreed upon between the kingdoms of Norway and Scotland. On 2 July 1266, with the conclusion of the Treaty of Perth, the centuries-old territorial dispute over Scotland's western seaboard was at last settled.[90] Within the treaty, Magnús Hákonarson, King of Norway (died 1280) ceded the Hebrides and Mann to Alexander, who in turn agreed to pay 4,000 merks sterling over four years, and in addition to pay 100 merks sterling in perpetuity. Other conditions stipulated that the inhabitants of the islands would be subject to laws of Scotland; that they were not to be punished for their actions previous to the treaty; and that they were free to remain or leave their possessions peacefully.[91] In 1266, the Chronicle of Lanercost records that Alexander ruled Mann through appointed bailiffs; Scottish exchequer accounts record that the Sheriff of Dumfries was given allowance for maintaining seven Manx hostages.[92]

In 1275, Magnús Óláfsson's illegitimate son, Guðrøðr, led a revolt on Mann and attempted to establish himself as king.[93] According to the Chronicle of Mann and the Chronicle of Lanercost, a Scottish fleet landed on Mann on 7 October, and early the next morning the revolt was crushed as the Scots routed the rebels at the Battle of Ronaldsway.[94][note 14] Guðrøðr may very well have been slain in the defeat,[97] although one source, the continuation of Historia rerum Anglicarum, states that he, his wife and his followers escaped the carnage to Wales.[98][note 15]

By the end of the thirteenth century, the islands once ruled by Magnús and his fellow members of the Crovan dynasty before him, were incorporated into the Scottish realm. In 1293, the parliament of John, King of Scots (died 1314) established three new sheriffdoms within his kingdom. One of these three, the Sheriffdom of Skye, was granted to William I, Earl of Ross (died 1323). This sheriffdom included the seaboard north of Ardnamurchan (Wester Ross and Kintail), and the islands of Skye, Lewis, Uist, Barra, Eigg, and Rum. It is possible that parts of the sheriffdom may have been taken over earlier, sometime after the dismantling of the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles.[100]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ On Óláfr's death in 1237, he was succeeded by his son, Haraldr (died 1248). According to the Chronicle of Mann, Haraldr was only fourteen years old at the time of his father's death. This dates Haraldr's birth to about the time of the marriage of Óláfr and Cairistíona.[3]
  2. ^ For example, the permanent partitioning between brothers-in-law Somhairle and Guðrøðr Óláfsson in the mid twelfth century, when the dynasty lost control of the Inner Hebrides; the partitioning between half-brothers Rǫgnvaldr and Óláfr Guðrøðarson, in the late twelfth- and early thirteenth centuries; and the partitioning between the same Óláfr and his nephew, Guðrøðr Rögnvaldsson, in 1230.[25]
  3. ^ For example, the Scots who took part in the attack are said to have "taken the little children, and laid them on their spear-points, and shook their spears until they brought the children down to their hands; and so threw them away dead".[30]
  4. ^ When the embassy attempted to leave Norway without permission, Hákon held the Scots against their will for a time.[31]
  5. ^ The Mediaeval Gaelic personal name Murchad is rendered in Old Norse as Margaðr.[40] Although several scholars have identified Murchadh as an otherwise unknown brother of Aonghus Mór, he is more likely to have been a member of Clann Suibhne[41]—a recently dispossessed-kindred, descended from Murchadh's grandfather, Suibhne (died thirteenth century).[42] In 1262, Skipness and parts of Knapdale, Kintyre, and Cowal, belonging to Dubhghall mac Suibhne (Murchadh's uncle), passed into the hands of Walter Stewart, Earl of Menteith (died c.1293) under uncertain circumstances. Members of Clann Suibhne sought to reacquire their ancestral lands as late as the first decade in the fourteenth century, before settling in Ireland for good.[43]
  6. ^ Although the placename Tarbet is popularly stated to translate as "place of portage" on account of the saga's account, it actually means "isthmus".[51]
  7. ^ The saga states that Ruaidrí claimed Bute as his birthright, and that he slaughtered the garrison of the island's castle who had surrendered under truce, and afterwards viciously harried the surrounding district.[58] Ruaidrí may have been a son of Óspakr Ǫgmundarson, King of the Isles (died 1230), a supposed member of Clann Somhairle, whom Hákon had recognised as king in the Isles.[59] In 1230, Hákon supplied Óspakr with an invasion fleet which sailed down through the Hebrides to Bute. Although the force seized Rothesay Castle from the Scots, Óspakr died soon after from wounds suffered in the assault.[60]
  8. ^ Henry was captured following the disastrous Battle of Lewes, fought on 14 May 1264, during a period of open-rebellion in England.[65] If Henry had not been captured, he may not have allowed Alexander to gain Magnús' submission.[64]
  9. ^ Magnús is known to have made several grants during his reign. One such transaction concerned his grant of commercial privileges to the monastery of Holm Cultram.[72]
  10. ^ It is unknown how the royal descendants of Rǫgnvaldr Guðrøðarson styled themselves.[80] Contradicting contemporary sources may indicate that Óláfr Guðrøðarson (died 1237) had a fourth son, named Guðrøðr.[81]
  11. ^ This record is the earliest mention of the castle in the chronicle.[85]
  12. ^ The three kings are Magnús, Magnús' brother Rǫgnvaldr, and their father, Óláfr.[82]
  13. ^ After becoming a widow, Máire had three successive husbands: Maol Íosa II, Earl of Strathearn (died 1271), Hugh, Lord of Abernethy (died 1291/1292), and William Fitzwarin (died 1299).[87]
  14. ^ The accounts of the revolt's suppression in both chronicles are thought to be derived from the same original source.[95] One of the Scots magnates present at the battle was Alasdair Mac Dubhghaill, Lord of Argyll (died 1310), son of Magnús' father-in-law.[96]
  15. ^ The annals date to about 1290, when they were copied from contemporary notes.[99]

Citations

  1. ^ Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 108–109; Cotton MS Julius A VII (n.d.).
  2. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 25.
  3. ^ a b McDonald 2007: p. 79 fn 48.
  4. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 70–71.
  5. ^ Duffy 2004c. See also: McNamee 2004.
  6. ^ McNamee 2004.
  7. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 87–88, 151–152.
  8. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 88.
  9. ^ Anderson 1922: p. 567 fn 2.
  10. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 88–89.
  11. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 27. See also: Sellar 2004b. See also: Sellar 2000: pp. 192, 194. See also: Duncan; Brown 1956–1957: pp. 196–197, 200.
  12. ^ a b Sellar 2004b.
  13. ^ Beuermann 2010: p. 102.
  14. ^ Beuermann 2010: p. 108. See also: Sellar 2004b. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 554–555.
  15. ^ Sellar 2004b. See also: Stringer 2004.
  16. ^ a b c McDonald 2007: p. 89. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 567–569. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 104–109.
  17. ^ a b McDonald 2007: p. 89.
  18. ^ Sellar 2004b. See also: Stringer 2004. See also: Brown 2004: p. 81. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 104.
  19. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 104. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 567–569. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 104–109.
  20. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 89. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: p. 206 fn 49.
  21. ^ Duffy 2007: p. 21. See also: McDonald 2007: p. 89. See also: Close rolls of the reign of Henry III. Preserved in the Public Record Office 1970: p. 177. See also: Sweetman 1875: p. 478 (#3206). See also: Cooper 1832: pp. 425–426.
  22. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 89. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 573, See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 108–109.
  23. ^ a b McDonald 2007: pp. 89–90.
  24. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 89–90. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 578. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 108–109.
  25. ^ a b McDonald 2007: p. 92.
  26. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 104 fn 4.
  27. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 40, 84, 210.
  28. ^ Stringer 2004.
  29. ^ a b Munro; Munro 2004. See also: Reid 2004. See also: McDonald 1997: pp. 106–107. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 117–118. See also: Duncan; Brown 1956–1957: p. 212.
  30. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 106. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 605–606.
  31. ^ Power 2005: p. 50. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 601–602.
  32. ^ Power 2005: pp. 50–53.
  33. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 107. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 607.
  34. ^ a b c McDonald 1997: p. 108. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 615–616.
  35. ^ a b Clunies Ross 2010: pp. 59, 91–92. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 103–106.
  36. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 108.
  37. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 109. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 617.
  38. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 109.
  39. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 109. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 618.
  40. ^ Ó Cuív 1988: p. 80.
  41. ^ Sellar 2000: pp. 206–207.
  42. ^ Woolf 2005. See also: Ewart; Triscott 1996: p 518.
  43. ^ McDonald 2005: p. 189 fn 36. See also: Brown 2004: p. 82. See also: Ewart; Triscott 1996: p 518. See also: Barrow 1973: p. 373.
  44. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 110. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 619–620.
  45. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 110.
  46. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 111–112. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 617.
  47. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 111–112. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 622–623.
  48. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 112. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 622–625.
  49. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 112. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 625–626, 625 fn 7.
  50. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 258. See also: Barrow 1981: p. 117.
  51. ^ Cox (2010) pp. 53–54.
  52. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 112. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 625–626.
  53. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 112. See also: Rixson 1998: p. 73.
  54. ^ Sellar 2000: p. 206. Barrow 1981: p. 117.
  55. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 258–260.
  56. ^ a b McDonald 1997: pp. 113–114.
  57. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 114. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 634–635.
  58. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 110–111. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 620–622.
  59. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 110–111. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 120–121. See also: Duncan; Brown 1956–1957: p. 203 fn 5.
  60. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 250–252. 258. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 90. See also. Anderson 1922: pp. 473–477.
  61. ^ a b Barrow 1981: pp. 118–119.
  62. ^ Anderson 1922: p. 635.
  63. ^ a b McDonald 2007: pp. 53, 207, 222. See also: Brown 2004: pp. 83–85. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 115. See also: Skene 1872b: p. 296.
  64. ^ a b Duncan 1996: p. 581, 581 fn 30.
  65. ^ Ridgeway 2004.
  66. ^ Paton; Reid 2004. See also: Young 2004a. See also: Young 2004b.
  67. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 116. See also: Skene 1872a: pp. 300–301. See also: Skene 1872b: p. 296.
  68. ^ a b McDonald 1997: p. 116. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 648–649. See also: Vigfusson 1887: pp. 363–364.
  69. ^ Brown 2004: p. 84. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 116.
  70. ^ Brown 2004: p. 84.
  71. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 202.
  72. ^ Jamroziak (2008) pp. 32–33; Grainger; Collingwood (1929) pp. 94–95 § 266a; PoMS, H1/18/2 (n.d.); PoMS, Transaction Factoid No. 7707 (n.d.).
  73. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 204–206.
  74. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 206. See also: McDonald 1995: p. 143.
  75. ^ Unger (1871) p. 572; AM 45 Fol (n.d.).
  76. ^ a b Oram; Adderley 2010: p. 128. See also: Woolf 2008: pp. 113–116. See also: McDonald 2007: pp. 37–38, 99–100.
  77. ^ a b McDonald 2007: pp. 76, 99–100.
  78. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 215. See also: McDonald 2005: p. 193 fn 50. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 587, 587 fn 1. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 108–109.
  79. ^ McDonald 2005: p. 193 fn 50. See also: Oliver 1861: p. 86. See also: Rymer; Sanderson; Holmes 1739: pt. 2 p. 12.
  80. ^ a b Sellar 2000: pp. 192–193.
  81. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 106–107.
  82. ^ a b c McDonald 2007: p. 201. See also: Kermode 2005: p. 6. See also: Kermode; Herdman 1904: p. 86.
  83. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 89–90, 100. See also: Sellar 2000: p. 210.
  84. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 89–90. See also: Sellar 2000: p. 210. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 653, 653 fn 1. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 94–95.
  85. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 211.
  86. ^ Munch; Goss 1874: p. 206.
  87. ^ Sellar 2004b. See also: Higgitt 2000: p. 19. See also: Henderson 1898: pp. 35–36. See also: Bain 1884: p. 285 (#1117).
  88. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 100.
  89. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 90. See also: Howlett 1895: p. 549.
  90. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 119–121.
  91. ^ Lustig 1979: pp. 44–45.
  92. ^ Duncan; Brown 1956–1957: p. 214. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 657.
  93. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 54. See also: Sellar 2000: p. 210.
  94. ^ McDonald 2007: pp. 54. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 672–673. See also: Munch; Goss 1874: pp. 110–111.
  95. ^ Anderson 1922: p. 673 fn 1.
  96. ^ Sellar 2004a.
  97. ^ Sellar 2000: p. 210.
  98. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 107. See also: Anderson 1908: pp. 382–383. See also: Howlett 1895: p. 570.
  99. ^ Anderson 1908: p. 382 fn 1. See also: Howlett 1895: p. lxxxviii.
  100. ^ Brown 2004: p. 85. See also: Munro; Munro 2004. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 131. See also: Duncan; Brown 1956–1957: p. 216.
  101. ^ a b McDonald 2007: p. 71.
  102. ^ Duffy 2004a
  103. ^ McDonald 2007: p. 64. See also: Duffy 2004a. See also: Sellar 2000: p. 192.
  104. ^ a b Oram 2004.
  105. ^ Duffy 2004b.

References

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Secondary sources

External links

  • Magnus, king of the Isles (d.1265) @ People of Medieval Scotland, 1093–1314
  •   Media related to Magnús Óláfsson at Wikimedia Commons
Magnús Óláfsson
 Died: 1265
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Mann and the Isles
1254–1265
Extinct

magnús, Óláfsson, other, people, named, disambiguation, died, november, 1265, king, mann, isles, Óláfr, guðrøðarson, king, isles, member, crovan, dynasty, magnús, realm, encompassed, mann, parts, hebrides, some, leading, members, magnús, family, such, father, . For other people named Magnus olafsson see Magnus olafsson disambiguation Magnus olafsson died 24 November 1265 was a King of Mann and the Isles He was a son of olafr Gudrodarson King of the Isles and a member of the Crovan dynasty Magnus realm encompassed Mann and parts of the Hebrides Some leading members of Magnus family such as his father styled themselves King of the Isles other members such as Magnus and his brothers styled themselves King of Mann and the Isles Although kings in their own right leading members of the Crovan dynasty paid tribute to the Kings of Norway and generally recognised a nominal Norwegian overlordship of Mann and the Hebrides Magnus was driven out by King Alexander III Magnus olafssonKing of Mann and the IslesMagnus name and title as it appears on folio 49r of British Library Cotton MS Julius A VII the Chronicle of Mann magnus rex manniae et insularum 1 King of Mann and the IslesReign1254 1265PredecessorHaraldr GudrodarsonSuccessorManx monarchy abolishedDied24 November 1265Castle RushenBurialAbbey of St Mary of RushenSpouseMaire Nic DubhghaillIssueGudrodr MagnussonHouseCrovan dynastyFatherolafr GudrodarsonIn 1237 olafr died and was succeeded by his elder son Haraldr who later drowned in 1248 The kingship was then taken up by his brother Rǫgnvaldr olafsson After a reign of only weeks Rǫgnvaldr was slain and the kingship was taken up by Haraldr Gudrodarson a descendant of olafr s half brother and deadly rival Rǫgnvaldr Gudrodarson King of the Isles After a short reign this Haraldr was removed from power by his overlord Hakon Hakonarson King of Norway In Haraldr s absence Magnus and a relation of his Eoghan Mac Dubhghaill King in the Isles unsuccessfully attempted to conquer Mann A few years later Magnus successfully made his return to the island and was proclaimed king In the 1240s following attempts to purchase the Isles from Hakon Alexander II King of Scots resorted to warfare to win the region His death in 1249 brought an abrupt end to his westward invasion and it was not until the 1260s that a Scottish king again attempted to impose his authority into the Isles In 1261 Alexander II s son and successor Alexander III attempted to purchase the Isles without success before Scottish forces raided into the Hebrides Hakon s response to Scottish aggression was to organise a massive fleet to re assert Norwegian authority In the summer of 1263 the fleet sailed down through the Hebrides Although his forces gained strength as they sailed southwards the Norwegian king received only lukewarm support from many of his Norse Gaelic vassals in fact Magnus was one of the few who came out whole heartedly for Hakon At one point during the campaign Hakon sent Magnus and some other vassals raiding deep into Lennox Meanwhile the main Norwegian force was occupied with the Battle of Largs a famous but inconclusive series of skirmishes against the Scots Following this action Hakon s demoralised fleet returned home having accomplished little Not long after Hakon s departure and death Alexander launched a punitive expedition into the Hebrides and threatened Mann with the same Magnus subsequent submission to the Scottish king and the homage rendered for his lands symbolises the failure of Hakon s campaign and marks the complete collapse of Norwegian influence in the Isles Magnus the last reigning king of his dynasty died at Castle Rushen in 1265 and was buried at the Abbey of St Mary of Rushen At the time of his death he was married to Eoghan s daughter Maire In the year after his death the Hebrides and Mann were formally ceded by King of Norway to the King of Scots Ten years after Magnus death Gudrodr a bastard son of his attempted to establish himself as king on Mann Gudrodr s revolt was quickly and brutally crushed by Scottish forces and the island remained part of the Kingdom of Scotland By the 1290s the Hebridean portion of Magnus former island kingdom had been incorporated into a newly created Scottish sheriffdom Contents 1 Background 2 Eoghan of Argyll and the invasion of Mann 3 Scottish aggression 4 Norwegian retaliation 5 Hebridean Manx subjugation 6 Acta and honours 7 Death 8 Dismantled kingdom 9 Ancestry 10 Notes 11 Citations 12 References 13 External linksBackground Edit Map of the Kingdom of the Isles circa 1200 2 The lands of the Crovan dynasty bordering those of Clann Somhairle Magnus was a member of the Crovan dynasty a line of Norse Gaelic sea kings whose kingdom encompassed the Isle of Man Mann and the northern parts of the Hebrides from the late eleventh century to the mid thirteenth century Although the kingdom originally encompassed the entirety of the Hebrides much of the Inner Hebrides was permanently lost in the mid twelfth century but the dynasty retained control of the largest Hebridean islands of Lewis and Harris and Skye Magnus was the son of olafr Gudrodarson King of the Isles died 1237 Although olafr is known to have had two wives and no contemporaneous source names the mother of his children Magnus mother may have been olafr s second wife Cairistiona daughter of Fearchar Earl of Ross died c 1251 3 note 1 olafr was a younger son of Gudrodr olafsson King of Dublin and the Isles died 1187 Before his death in 1187 Gudrodr instructed that olafr should succeed to the kingship However Gudrodr was instead succeeded by his elder son Rǫgnvaldr died 1229 who had popular support 4 Rǫgnvaldr and olafr who are thought to have had different mothers subsequently warred over the dynasty s kingdom in the early thirteenth century until Rǫgnvaldr was slain battling olafr in 1229 5 Rǫgnvaldr s son Gudrodr died 1231 who was also in conflict with olafr took up his father s claim to the throne and at his height co ruled the kingdom with olafr in 1231 Gudrodr was slain in 1231 and olafr ruled the entire kingdom without internal opposition until his own death in 1237 6 olafr was succeeded by his son Haraldr who later travelled to Norway and married a daughter of Hakon Hakonarson King of Norway died 1263 but lost his life at sea on his return voyage in 1248 In May 1249 Haraldr s brother Rǫgnvaldr died 1249 formally succeeded to the kingship of the Crovan dynasty s kingdom 7 Rǫgnvaldr olafsson s reign was an extremely short one only weeks after his accession he was slain on Mann His killer is identified by a contemporary source as a knight named Ivarr who may have been an ally of Rǫgnvaldr olafsson s second cousin once removed Haraldr Gudrodarson fl 1249 who seized the kingship immediately following the killing 8 Although at first Haraldr was recognised as a legitimate ruler of the kingdom by Henry III King of England died 1272 9 Haraldr was later regarded as a usurper by his Norwegian overlord Hakon In 1250 Hakon summoned Haraldr to Norway to answer for his seizure of the kingship and Haraldr was kept from returning to the Isles 10 Eoghan of Argyll and the invasion of Mann EditSimplified pedigree illustrating Magnus kinship to his wife Maire Nic Dubhghaill and his rival Haraldr Gudrodarson Women are italicised 11 olafr died 1153 Gudrodr died 1187 RagnhildrSomhairle died 1164 Rǫgnvaldr died 1229 Ivarrolafr died 1237 Dubhghall died 1175 Gudrodr died 1231 Haraldr died 1248 Rǫgnvaldr died 1249 Magnus died 1265 Donnchadh died 1244 1248 Haraldr fl 1249 Gudrodr fl 1275 Eoghan died c 1268 1275 Maire died 1302 Eoghan Mac Dubhghaill Lord of Argyll died c 1268 1275 was a prominent member of Clann Somhairle the descendants of Somhairle mac Giolla Brighde King of the Isles died 1164 12 Through Somhairle s wife Ragnhildr daughter of olafr Gudrodarson King of the Isles died 1153 several leading members of Clann Somhairle claimed kingship in the Hebrides 13 In 1248 Eoghan and his second cousin Dubhghall mac Ruaidhri died 1268 travelled to Hakon in Norway and requested the title of king in the Hebrides Hakon subsequently bestowed the title upon Eoghan and the following year upon learning of Haraldr olafsson s death Hakon sent Eoghan westward to take control of the Isles at least temporarily on his behalf 14 Up until this point Eoghan had two overlords the King of Norway who claimed the Hebrides and the King of Scots who claimed Argyll and coveted the Hebrides Unfortunately for Eoghan soon after his return from Norway Alexander II King of Scots died 1249 led an expedition deep into Argyll and demanded that Eoghan renounce his allegiance to Hakon Eoghan refused to do so and was subsequently driven from his Scottish lordship 15 Map of Mann and the location of St Michael s Isle and Castle Rushen A photograph with a view looking south west from St Michael s Isle across the tidal causeway to mainland Mann In 1250 following Haraldr Gudrodarson s summons to Norway the Chronicle of Mann records that Magnus and Eoghan arrived on Mann with a force of Norwegians 16 The exact intentions of the invaders are unknown it is possible that they may have intended to install Magnus as king 17 At the very least Eoghan was likely looking for some form of compensation for his dispossession from his mainland Scottish lordship 18 The chronicle states that the invaders made landfall at Ronaldsway and entered into negotiations with the Manx people although when it was learned that Eoghan styled himself King of the Isles the Manxmen took offence and broke off all dialogue 19 The chronicle indicates that Eoghan had his men form up on St Michael s Isle 16 an island that was attached to Mann by a tidal causeway 17 As evening drew near the chronicle records that an accomplice of the knight Ivarr led a Manx assault on the island and routed the invading forces The next day the chronicle states that the invading forces left the shores of Mann 16 Ivarr s connection to the Manx attack on the invading forces of Eoghan and Magnus suggests that there was still considerable opposition on Mann by adherents of Haraldr to the prospect of Magnus kingship there 20 The following year Henry III commanded the Justiciar of Ireland John fitz Geoffrey died 1258 to prohibit Magnus from raising military forces in Ireland for an invasion of Mann 21 A year later Magnus succeeded to the kingship as the chronicle records that he returned to Mann and with the consent of the people began his reign 22 There are indications that opposition to Magnus and thus possibly support of Haraldr continued into the mid 1250s 23 For example the chronicle records that when Hakon bestowed upon Magnus the title of king in 1254 it further notes that when Magnus opponents heard of this they became dismayed and that their hopes of overthrowing him gradually faded away 24 Furthermore a letter of protection written on behalf of Henry to Magnus in 1256 orders Henry s men not to receive Haraldr and Ivarr which may thus indicate that these two men were still alive and active 23 Although Magnus eldest brother Haraldr olafsson appears to have ruled over the entirety of the dynasty s thirteenth century sea realm as did Magnus from 1252 onwards the situation during the years between Haraldr olafsson s death and Magnus accession is uncertain and it is possible that the kingdom was partitioned between feuding dynasts as it had been during the bitter inter dynastic strife of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries 25 note 2 Clearly the situation in the Isles was unsettled in the 1250s For example Henry is known to have written letters to Alexander Hakon and Llywelyn ap Gruffudd died 1282 the co ruler of Gwynedd ordering them not allow their men invade Mann in Magnus absence there in 1254 26 Scottish aggression Edit Castle Rushen where Magnus died in 1265 By the mid thirteenth century the castle had become the power centre on Mann The castle dates to the late twelfth or early thirteenth century 27 In 1244 Alexander made the first of several attempts by Scottish monarchs to purchase the Hebrides from the Kingdom of Norway It was following this unsuccessful bid that Hakon sent Eoghan into the Isles in 1249 which in turn led to Eoghan s expulsion from the Scottish mainland when Alexander launched a full scale summer invasion into Argyll Alexander s sudden death in the Hebrides brought an abrupt end to his westward invasion and it was not until the 1260s that a Scottish king again attempted to impose his authority into the Isles 28 In 1261 Alexander III King of Scots died 1286 sent an emissary to Norway to discuss the Isles Negotiations proved fruitless and the following year William I Earl of Ross died 1274 is recorded to have launched a vicious attack on Skye 29 note 3 The assault was likely carried out on behalf of Alexander in response to the failure of Scottish mission to Norway the year previous 29 note 4 In response Hakon organised a massive military force to re assert Norwegian control along the western seaboard of Scotland At this time the Norwegian king was at the height of his power and his only son had just recently been recognised as heir to the throne 32 Norwegian retaliation Edit The Norwegian led expedition along the south western seaboard of Scotland Late in the summer of 1263 Hakon s fleet reached the northern seaboard of Scotland Although the precise size of the fleet is unknown the Icelandic Annals remark that so great a host that an equally great army is not known ever to have gone from Norway 33 Upon reaching the Scottish mainland the late thirteenth century Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar 34 The Saga of Hakon Hakonarson 35 states that Hakon levied a tax upon Caithness and considered plundering into the Moray Firth 34 It is possible that he intended these acts as a form of retribution for the Earl of Ross savage attack on Skye 36 The fleet then made its way south along the western seaboard to Skye where the saga records that Hakon was met by Magnus 34 The saga states that Hakon s fleet then sailed south to Kerrera where Dubhghall and Magnus amongst others were sent to lead fifty ships towards Kintyre while a smaller group was sent to Bute 37 The fleet sent to Kintyre was likely tasked with obtaining the allegiance of Aonghus Mor mac Domhnaill Lord of Islay died c 1293 and a certain Murchadh 38 both who are stated by the saga to have afterwards submitted to Hakon 39 note 5 The saga records that several castles were secured by Hakon s forces Rothesay Castle on Bute and an unnamed castle in southern Kintyre 44 which was more than likely Dunaverty Castle 45 At Gigha the saga relates that Eoghan surrendered himself to Hakon and informed the Norwegian king that he had decided to side with the Scots from whom he held a larger grant of lands 46 At about the time when Hakon let Eoghan go free the saga records that the first messengers from the King of Scots arrived to parley 47 The saga indicates that negotiations started peacefully enough although as time drew on and the weather grew worse a time pressed Hakon broke off all dialogue 48 He sent a detachment of ships deep into Lennox through Loch Long different versions of the saga number the force at forty and sixty ships led by Magnus Dubhghall Dubhghall s brother Ailean mac Ruaidhri Aonghus Mor and Murchad The saga states that the ships were dragged across land to Loch Lomond 49 which indicates that the invaders would have beached their ships and made portage across the isthmus between the two lochs between what are today the settlements of Arrochar and Tarbet 50 note 6 The saga vividly describes how the invaders wasted the well inhabited islands of the loch and the dwellings surrounding the loch 52 The fact that Hakon tasked his Norse Gaelic magnates with leading this foray likely indicates that their boats were lighter than those of the Norwegians and thus easier to portage from one loch to another it could also indicate that the undertaking was meant to test their faithfulness to the Norwegian cause 53 Looking south east from Tarbet harbour on the north western shores of Loch Lomond After dragging their vessels overland from Loch Long Magnus and his Hebredian comrades launched their ships from what is today Tarbet and plundered the islands and shores of Loch Lomond While Lennox was being plundered 54 Hakon and his main force stationed between the Cumbraes and the Scottish mainland 55 were occupied with the events surrounding the Battle of Largs between 30 September and 3 October 56 Although claimed by later Scottish chroniclers as a great victory in reality the so called battle was nothing more than a series of disorderly skirmishes with relatively few casualties that achieved little for either side 56 Following the encounter Hakon led his fleet northward up through the Hebrides At Mull he parted with his Norse Gaelic lords Dubhghall was rewarded with Eoghan s former island domain Murchad was given Arran and a certain Ruaidri was given Bute 57 note 7 The Norwegian fleet left the Hebrides and reached Orkney by the end of October where an ill Hakon died in mid December 61 Despite the saga s claim that Hakon had been triumphant 62 in reality the campaign was a failure Alexander s kingdom had successfully defended itself from Norwegian might and many of Hakon s Norse Gaelic supporters had been reluctant to support his cause 61 Hebridean Manx subjugation EditWithin months of Hakon s abortive campaign embassies were sent forth from Norway to discuss terms of peace Meanwhile Alexander seized the initiative and made ready to punish the magnates who had supported Hakon In 1264 Alexander assembled a fleet and made ready to invade Mann Without any protection from his Norwegian overlord 63 or from Henry III who was held captive at the time 64 note 8 Magnus had no choice but to submit to the demands of the powerful King of Scots The two monarchs met at Dumfries where Magnus swore oaths to Alexander rendered homage and surrendered hostages In return for Alexander s promise of protection against Norwegian retribution Magnus was forced to provide Alexander s navy with several pirate type galleys five of twenty oars and five of twelve oars 63 Alexander then ordered an invasion of the Western Isles led by Uilleam Earl of Mar died 1281 Alexander Comyn Earl of Buchan died 1289 and Alan Durward died 1275 66 According to the thirteenth century Gesta Annalia I the Scots invaders plundered and killed throughout the islands 67 the expedition itself is corroborated by the late thirteenth century Magnuss saga lagabœtis 68 The Saga of Magnus the Lawmender 35 which indicates that Scottish forces went into the Hebrides and secured the submission of Aonghus Mor amongst others 68 Another punitive expedition possibly led by the Earl of Ross was launched into Caithness and Ross 69 The submission forced upon the island magnates particularly that of Magnus marked the complete collapse of Norwegian influence in the Isles 70 Acta and honours Edit Magnus surviving 1256 charter Only twenty originals copies or abstract versions of royal charters of the kings of the Crovan dynasty are known Of these only three date to the reign of Magnus one of which a grant to Conishead Priory in 1256 is the only original royal charter of the dynasty in existence 71 note 9 Important devices attached to royal charters were double sided waxen seals used to authenticate such instruments Although no seals of the dynasty now survive there exists several seventeenth and eighteenth century descriptions and depictions of ones believed to have belonged to Magnus uncle Rǫgnvaldr and brother Haraldr This limited evidence suggests that in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the kings of the dynasty bore a sailing ship upon their seals which would have likely represented the clinker built galley utilised in the Isles at the time 73 Borne by men whose strength lay in the power of armed galley fleets such a symbol would have represented their authority in the Isles 74 Magnus name as it appears on folio 122r of AM 45 fol Codex Frisianus Magnus konvngr or Man 75 The Chronicle of Mann the only narrative source for the dynasty s realm was compiled on Mann during Magnus reign 76 Analysis of the document reveals that the main scribe s last entry dates to 1257 in an account which records the dedication of the Abbey of St Mary of Rushen in the presence of Magnus and Richard Bishop of the Isles The chronicle thus appears to have been commissioned by or on behalf of Magnus himself 77 The chronicle is somewhat biased in favour of one line of the dynasty over another the line of Magnus s father olafr over that of olafr s rival half brother Rǫgnvaldr For example Haraldr Gudrodarson is depicted as a usurper and tyrant in contrast to the legitimate kingship of his cousin Magnus 76 In fact one reason for the chronicle s composition may have been to legitimise the line of olafr which at the time of the chronicle s compilation was then represented by Magnus himself 77 Like his father and his brother Haraldr Magnus is recorded within the Chronicle of Mann as having been knighted by Henry III 78 The knighthoods of Haraldr in 1247 and Magnus in 1256 appear to be confirmed by independent English sources For example within Henry s letter to Magnus in 1256 Magnus is described to have been invested with a military belt by the English king 79 Several of the leading members of the Crovan dynasty styled themselves in Latin rex insularum King of the Isles Magnus and his aforesaid brother Haraldr styled themselves in Latin rex manniae et insularum King of Mann and the Isles 80 note 10 Death Edit Thirteenth century coffin lid which may be that of either Magnus his brother Rǫgnvaldr or their father olafr 82 Following his submission to Alexander Magnus the last reigning king of the Crovan dynasty ruled peacefully until his death in 1265 83 According to the Chronicle of Mann the king died at Castle Rushen on 24 November and was buried at the Abbey of St Mary of Rushen 84 note 11 There is a possibility that a coffin lid found at Rushen may be associated with the tomb of one of the three kings of the dynasty known to have been buried there 82 note 12 At the time of his death 86 Magnus is known to have been married to Eoghan s daughter Maire died 1302 12 note 13 As the last of a long line of Norse Gaelic rulers of Mann his death ended the island s so called golden age of Scandinavian sea kings 88 The continuation of Historia rerum Anglicarum records simply that on his death kings ceased to reign on Mann 89 Dismantled kingdom EditThree years after the inconclusive skirmish at Largs terms of peace were finally agreed upon between the kingdoms of Norway and Scotland On 2 July 1266 with the conclusion of the Treaty of Perth the centuries old territorial dispute over Scotland s western seaboard was at last settled 90 Within the treaty Magnus Hakonarson King of Norway died 1280 ceded the Hebrides and Mann to Alexander who in turn agreed to pay 4 000 merks sterling over four years and in addition to pay 100 merks sterling in perpetuity Other conditions stipulated that the inhabitants of the islands would be subject to laws of Scotland that they were not to be punished for their actions previous to the treaty and that they were free to remain or leave their possessions peacefully 91 In 1266 the Chronicle of Lanercost records that Alexander ruled Mann through appointed bailiffs Scottish exchequer accounts record that the Sheriff of Dumfries was given allowance for maintaining seven Manx hostages 92 In 1275 Magnus olafsson s illegitimate son Gudrodr led a revolt on Mann and attempted to establish himself as king 93 According to the Chronicle of Mann and the Chronicle of Lanercost a Scottish fleet landed on Mann on 7 October and early the next morning the revolt was crushed as the Scots routed the rebels at the Battle of Ronaldsway 94 note 14 Gudrodr may very well have been slain in the defeat 97 although one source the continuation of Historia rerum Anglicarum states that he his wife and his followers escaped the carnage to Wales 98 note 15 By the end of the thirteenth century the islands once ruled by Magnus and his fellow members of the Crovan dynasty before him were incorporated into the Scottish realm In 1293 the parliament of John King of Scots died 1314 established three new sheriffdoms within his kingdom One of these three the Sheriffdom of Skye was granted to William I Earl of Ross died 1323 This sheriffdom included the seaboard north of Ardnamurchan Wester Ross and Kintail and the islands of Skye Lewis Uist Barra Eigg and Rum It is possible that parts of the sheriffdom may have been taken over earlier sometime after the dismantling of the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles 100 Ancestry EditAncestors of Magnus olafsson16 Gudrodr Crovan King of Dublin and the Isles died 1095 103 8 olafr Gudrodarson King of the Isles died 1153 4 Gudrodr olafsson King of Dublin and the Isles died 1187 18 Fearghus Lord of Galloway died 1161 104 9 Affraic inghean Fearghusa 102 19 unknown 104 2 olafr Gudrodarson King of the Isles died 1237 20 Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn High King of Ireland died 1166 105 10 Niall Mac Lochlainn King of Cineal Eoghain died 1176 101 5 Fionnghuala Nic Lochlainn 101 1 Magnus olafsson King of Mann and the Isles died 1265 6 Fearchar mac an tSagairt Earl of Ross died c 1251 3 Cairistiona inghean FearchairNotes Edit On olafr s death in 1237 he was succeeded by his son Haraldr died 1248 According to the Chronicle of Mann Haraldr was only fourteen years old at the time of his father s death This dates Haraldr s birth to about the time of the marriage of olafr and Cairistiona 3 For example the permanent partitioning between brothers in law Somhairle and Gudrodr olafsson in the mid twelfth century when the dynasty lost control of the Inner Hebrides the partitioning between half brothers Rǫgnvaldr and olafr Gudrodarson in the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries and the partitioning between the same olafr and his nephew Gudrodr Rognvaldsson in 1230 25 For example the Scots who took part in the attack are said to have taken the little children and laid them on their spear points and shook their spears until they brought the children down to their hands and so threw them away dead 30 When the embassy attempted to leave Norway without permission Hakon held the Scots against their will for a time 31 The Mediaeval Gaelic personal name Murchad is rendered in Old Norse as Margadr 40 Although several scholars have identified Murchadh as an otherwise unknown brother of Aonghus Mor he is more likely to have been a member of Clann Suibhne 41 a recently dispossessed kindred descended from Murchadh s grandfather Suibhne died thirteenth century 42 In 1262 Skipness and parts of Knapdale Kintyre and Cowal belonging to Dubhghall mac Suibhne Murchadh s uncle passed into the hands of Walter Stewart Earl of Menteith died c 1293 under uncertain circumstances Members of Clann Suibhne sought to reacquire their ancestral lands as late as the first decade in the fourteenth century before settling in Ireland for good 43 Although the placename Tarbet is popularly stated to translate as place of portage on account of the saga s account it actually means isthmus 51 The saga states that Ruaidri claimed Bute as his birthright and that he slaughtered the garrison of the island s castle who had surrendered under truce and afterwards viciously harried the surrounding district 58 Ruaidri may have been a son of ospakr Ǫgmundarson King of the Isles died 1230 a supposed member of Clann Somhairle whom Hakon had recognised as king in the Isles 59 In 1230 Hakon supplied ospakr with an invasion fleet which sailed down through the Hebrides to Bute Although the force seized Rothesay Castle from the Scots ospakr died soon after from wounds suffered in the assault 60 Henry was captured following the disastrous Battle of Lewes fought on 14 May 1264 during a period of open rebellion in England 65 If Henry had not been captured he may not have allowed Alexander to gain Magnus submission 64 Magnus is known to have made several grants during his reign One such transaction concerned his grant of commercial privileges to the monastery of Holm Cultram 72 It is unknown how the royal descendants of Rǫgnvaldr Gudrodarson styled themselves 80 Contradicting contemporary sources may indicate that olafr Gudrodarson died 1237 had a fourth son named Gudrodr 81 This record is the earliest mention of the castle in the chronicle 85 The three kings are Magnus Magnus brother Rǫgnvaldr and their father olafr 82 After becoming a widow Maire had three successive husbands Maol Iosa II Earl of Strathearn died 1271 Hugh Lord of Abernethy died 1291 1292 and William Fitzwarin died 1299 87 The accounts of the revolt s suppression in both chronicles are thought to be derived from the same original source 95 One of the Scots magnates present at the battle was Alasdair Mac Dubhghaill Lord of Argyll died 1310 son of Magnus father in law 96 The annals date to about 1290 when they were copied from contemporary notes 99 Citations Edit Munch Goss 1874 pp 108 109 Cotton MS Julius A VII n d McDonald 2007 p 25 a b McDonald 2007 p 79 fn 48 McDonald 2007 pp 70 71 Duffy 2004c See also McNamee 2004 McNamee 2004 McDonald 2007 pp 87 88 151 152 McDonald 2007 p 88 Anderson 1922 p 567 fn 2 McDonald 2007 pp 88 89 McDonald 2007 p 27 See also Sellar 2004b See also Sellar 2000 pp 192 194 See also Duncan Brown 1956 1957 pp 196 197 200 a b Sellar 2004b Beuermann 2010 p 102 Beuermann 2010 p 108 See also Sellar 2004b See also Anderson 1922 pp 554 555 Sellar 2004b See also Stringer 2004 a b c McDonald 2007 p 89 See also Anderson 1922 pp 567 569 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 104 109 a b McDonald 2007 p 89 Sellar 2004b See also Stringer 2004 See also Brown 2004 p 81 See also McDonald 1997 p 104 McDonald 1997 p 104 See also Anderson 1922 pp 567 569 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 104 109 McDonald 2007 p 89 See also Munch Goss 1874 p 206 fn 49 Duffy 2007 p 21 See also McDonald 2007 p 89 See also Close rolls of the reign of Henry III Preserved in the Public Record Office 1970 p 177 See also Sweetman 1875 p 478 3206 See also Cooper 1832 pp 425 426 McDonald 2007 p 89 See also Anderson 1922 p 573 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 108 109 a b McDonald 2007 pp 89 90 McDonald 2007 pp 89 90 See also Anderson 1922 p 578 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 108 109 a b McDonald 2007 p 92 McDonald 1997 p 104 fn 4 McDonald 2007 pp 40 84 210 Stringer 2004 a b Munro Munro 2004 See also Reid 2004 See also McDonald 1997 pp 106 107 See also Cowan 1990 pp 117 118 See also Duncan Brown 1956 1957 p 212 McDonald 1997 p 106 See also Anderson 1922 pp 605 606 Power 2005 p 50 See also Anderson 1922 pp 601 602 Power 2005 pp 50 53 McDonald 1997 p 107 See also Anderson 1922 p 607 a b c McDonald 1997 p 108 See also Anderson 1922 pp 615 616 a b Clunies Ross 2010 pp 59 91 92 See also Cowan 1990 pp 103 106 McDonald 1997 p 108 McDonald 1997 p 109 See also Anderson 1922 p 617 McDonald 1997 p 109 McDonald 1997 p 109 See also Anderson 1922 p 618 o Cuiv 1988 p 80 Sellar 2000 pp 206 207 Woolf 2005 See also Ewart Triscott 1996 p 518 McDonald 2005 p 189 fn 36 See also Brown 2004 p 82 See also Ewart Triscott 1996 p 518 See also Barrow 1973 p 373 McDonald 1997 p 110 See also Anderson 1922 pp 619 620 McDonald 1997 p 110 McDonald 1997 pp 111 112 See also Anderson 1922 p 617 McDonald 1997 pp 111 112 See also Anderson 1922 pp 622 623 McDonald 1997 p 112 See also Anderson 1922 pp 622 625 McDonald 1997 p 112 See also Anderson 1922 pp 625 626 625 fn 7 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 258 See also Barrow 1981 p 117 Cox 2010 pp 53 54 McDonald 1997 p 112 See also Anderson 1922 pp 625 626 McDonald 1997 p 112 See also Rixson 1998 p 73 Sellar 2000 p 206 Barrow 1981 p 117 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 258 260 a b McDonald 1997 pp 113 114 McDonald 1997 p 114 See also Anderson 1922 pp 634 635 McDonald 1997 pp 110 111 See also Anderson 1922 pp 620 622 McDonald 1997 pp 110 111 See also Cowan 1990 pp 120 121 See also Duncan Brown 1956 1957 p 203 fn 5 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 250 252 258 See also McDonald 1997 p 90 See also Anderson 1922 pp 473 477 a b Barrow 1981 pp 118 119 Anderson 1922 p 635 a b McDonald 2007 pp 53 207 222 See also Brown 2004 pp 83 85 See also McDonald 1997 p 115 See also Skene 1872b p 296 a b Duncan 1996 p 581 581 fn 30 Ridgeway 2004 Paton Reid 2004 See also Young 2004a See also Young 2004b McDonald 1997 p 116 See also Skene 1872a pp 300 301 See also Skene 1872b p 296 a b McDonald 1997 p 116 See also Anderson 1922 pp 648 649 See also Vigfusson 1887 pp 363 364 Brown 2004 p 84 See also McDonald 1997 p 116 Brown 2004 p 84 McDonald 2007 p 202 Jamroziak 2008 pp 32 33 Grainger Collingwood 1929 pp 94 95 266a PoMS H1 18 2 n d PoMS Transaction Factoid No 7707 n d McDonald 2007 pp 204 206 McDonald 2007 p 206 See also McDonald 1995 p 143 Unger 1871 p 572 AM 45 Fol n d a b Oram Adderley 2010 p 128 See also Woolf 2008 pp 113 116 See also McDonald 2007 pp 37 38 99 100 a b McDonald 2007 pp 76 99 100 McDonald 2007 p 215 See also McDonald 2005 p 193 fn 50 See also Anderson 1922 pp 587 587 fn 1 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 108 109 McDonald 2005 p 193 fn 50 See also Oliver 1861 p 86 See also Rymer Sanderson Holmes 1739 pt 2 p 12 a b Sellar 2000 pp 192 193 McDonald 2007 pp 106 107 a b c McDonald 2007 p 201 See also Kermode 2005 p 6 See also Kermode Herdman 1904 p 86 McDonald 2007 pp 89 90 100 See also Sellar 2000 p 210 McDonald 2007 pp 89 90 See also Sellar 2000 p 210 See also Anderson 1922 pp 653 653 fn 1 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 94 95 McDonald 2007 p 211 Munch Goss 1874 p 206 Sellar 2004b See also Higgitt 2000 p 19 See also Henderson 1898 pp 35 36 See also Bain 1884 p 285 1117 McDonald 2007 p 100 McDonald 2007 p 90 See also Howlett 1895 p 549 McDonald 1997 pp 119 121 Lustig 1979 pp 44 45 Duncan Brown 1956 1957 p 214 See also Anderson 1922 p 657 McDonald 2007 pp 54 See also Sellar 2000 p 210 McDonald 2007 pp 54 See also Anderson 1922 pp 672 673 See also Munch Goss 1874 pp 110 111 Anderson 1922 p 673 fn 1 Sellar 2004a Sellar 2000 p 210 McDonald 2007 p 107 See also Anderson 1908 pp 382 383 See also Howlett 1895 p 570 Anderson 1908 p 382 fn 1 See also Howlett 1895 p lxxxviii Brown 2004 p 85 See also Munro Munro 2004 See also McDonald 1997 p 131 See also Duncan Brown 1956 1957 p 216 a b McDonald 2007 p 71 Duffy 2004a McDonald 2007 p 64 See also Duffy 2004a See also Sellar 2000 p 192 a b Oram 2004 Duffy 2004b References EditPrimary sources AM 45 Fol Handrit is n d Retrieved 15 January 2016 Anderson Alan Orr ed 1908 Scottish annals from English chroniclers a d 500 to 1286 David Nutt Anderson Alan Orr ed 1922 Early sources of Scottish history a d 500 to 1286 vol 2 Oliver and Boyd Bain Joseph ed 1884 Calendar of documents relating to Scotland vol 2 H M General Register House Close rolls of the reign of Henry III Preserved in the Public Record Office vol 7 Kraus Reprint 1970 1927 Cooper C P ed 1832 An account of the most important records of Great Britain and the publications of the record commissioners together with other miscellaneous historical and antiquarian information Compiled from various printed books and manuscripts vol 1 Baldwin and Cradock Cotton MS Julius A VII British Library n d Retrieved 27 January 2017 Grainger F Collingwood WG eds 1929 The Register and Records of Holm Cultram Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Record Series series vol 7 Kendal T Wilson amp Son via British History Online Howlett Richard ed 1895 Chronicles of the reigns of Stephen Henry II and Richard I vol 2 Longman and Company Munch Peter Andreas Goss Alexander eds 1874 Chronica regvm Manniae et Insvlarvm the chronicle of Man and the Sudreys from the manuscript codex in the British Museum with historical notes vol 1 Printed for the Manx Society Oliver J R ed 1861 Monumenta de Insula Manniae vol 2 Printed for the Manx Society PoMS H1 18 2 People of Medieval Scotland 1093 1314 n d Retrieved 28 November 2016 PoMS Transaction Factoid No 7707 People of Medieval Scotland 1093 1314 n d Retrieved 28 November 2016 Rymer T Sanderson R Holmes G eds 1739 Fœdera Conventiones Litterae Et Cujuscunque Generis Acta Publica Inter Reges Angliae Et Alios Quosvis Imperatores Reges Pontifices Principes Vel Communitates Vol 1 pts 1 2 The Hague Joannem Neaulme via Internet Archive Skene William Forbes ed 1872a John of Fordun s chronicle of the Scottish nation vol 1 Edmonston and Douglas Skene William Forbes ed 1872b John of Fordun s chronicle of the Scottish nation vol 2 Edmonston and Douglas Sweetman Henry Savage ed 1875 Calendar of documents relating to Ireland Longman and Company Unger CR ed 1871 Codex Frisianus En Samling Af Norske Konge Sagaer Norske historiske kildeskriftfonds skrifter 9 Oslo P T Mallings Forlagsboghandel hdl 2027 hvd 32044084740760 Vigfusson Gudbrand ed 1887 Icelandic sagas and other historical documents relating to the settlements and descents of the northmen on the British Isles vol 2 Printed for Her Majesty s Stationery Office by Eyre and Spottiswoode Secondary sourcesAlexander Derek Neighbour Tim Oram Richard D 2000 Glorious victory The battle of Largs 2 October 1263 History Scotland vol 2 pp 17 22 Barrow Geoffrey Wallis Steuart 1973 The kingdom of the Scots government church and society from the eleventh to the fourteenth century St Martin s Press Barrow Geoffrey Wallis Steuart 1981 Kingship and unity Scotland 1000 1306 University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 6448 5 Brown Michael 2004 The wars of Scotland 1214 1371 The new Edinburgh history of Scotland Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1238 3 Beuermann Ian 2010 Norgesveldet south of Cape Wrath in Imsen Steinar ed The Norwegian domination and the Norse world c 1100 c 1400 Norgesveldt occasional papers Trondheim studies in history Tapir Academic Press pp 99 123 ISBN 978 82 519 2563 1 Clunies Ross Margaret 2010 The Cambridge introduction to the Old Norse Icelandic saga Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 73520 9 Cowan Edward J 1990 Norwegian sunset Scottish dawn Hakon IV and Alexander III in Reid Norman H ed Scotland in the reign of Alexander III 1249 1286 John Donald pp 103 131 ISBN 0 85976 218 1 Cox R 2010 Gaelic Place Names In Watson M Macleod M eds The Edinburgh Companion to the Gaelic Language Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 3708 9 Duffy Sean 2004a Godred Crovan Gudrodr Gofraid Meranach d 1095 king of Man and the Isles Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 50613 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Duffy Sean 2004b Mac Lochlainn Ua Lochlainn Muirchertach d 1166 high king of Ireland Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20745 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Duffy Sean 2004c Ragnvald Rognvaldr Reginald Ragnall d 1229 king of Man and the Isles Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 50617 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Duffy Sean 2007 The prehistory of the galloglass in Duffy Sean ed The world of the galloglass kings warlords and warriors in Ireland and Scotland 1200 1600 Four Courts Press pp 1 23 ISBN 9781851829460 via Google Books Duncan Archibald Alexander McBeth Brown A L 1956 1957 Argyll and the Isles in the earlier Middle Ages PDF Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 90 192 220 Duncan Archibald Alexander McBeth 1996 Scotland the making of the kingdom The Edinburgh history of Scotland Mercat Press ISBN 0 901824 83 6 Ewart Gordon Triscott Jon 1996 Archaeological excavations at Castle Sween Knapdale Argyll amp Bute 1989 90 PDF Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 126 517 557 Forte Angelo Oram Richard D Pedersen Frederik 2005 Viking empires Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82992 2 Henderson Thomas Finlayson 1898 Strathearn Malise In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 55 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 35 36 Higgitt John 2000 The murthly hours devotion literacy and luxury in Paris England and the Gaelic west University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 4759 5 Jamroziak E 2008 Holm Cultram Abbey A Story of Success Northern History 45 1 27 36 doi 10 1179 174587008X256593 eISSN 1745 8706 ISSN 0078 172X S2CID 159643490 Kermode Philip Moore Callow Herdman William Abbott 1904 Illustrated notes on Manks antiquities Liverpool Kermode Philip Moore Callow 2005 1907 Manx crosses or the inscribed and sculptured monuments of the Isle of Man from about the end of the fifth to the beginning of the thirteenth century Elibron classics vol 1 Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 978 1 4021 6402 6 Lustig Richard L 1979 The treaty of Perth a re examination The Scottish Historical Review 58 165 35 57 JSTOR 25529318 McDonald Russell Andrew 1997 The kingdom of the Isles Scotland s western seaboard c 1100 c 1336 Scottish historical monographs Tuckwell Press ISBN 1 898410 85 2 McDonald Russell Andrew 1995 Images of Hebridean lordship in the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries the seal of Raonall Mac Sorley The Scottish Historical Review Edinburgh University Press 74 198 129 143 doi 10 3366 shr 1995 74 2 129 JSTOR 25530679 McDonald Russell Andrew 2005 Coming in from the margins the descendants of Somerled and cultural accommodation in the Hebrides 1164 1317 in Smith Brendan ed Britain and Ireland 900 1300 insular responses to medieval European change Cambridge University Press pp 179 198 ISBN 0 511 03855 0 McDonald Russell Andrew 2007 Manx kingship in its Irish sea setting 1187 1229 king Rǫgnvaldr and the Crovan dynasty Four Courts Press ISBN 978 1 84682 047 2 McNamee Colm 2004 Olaf Olaf the Black Olaf Godredsson 1173 4 1237 king of Man and the Isles Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography May 2005 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20672 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Munro Robert William Munro Jean 2004 Ross family per c 1215 c 1415 nobility Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online October 2008 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 75447 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required o Cuiv Brian 1988 Personal names as an indicator of relations between native Irish and settlers in the Viking period in Bradley John ed Settlement and society in medieval Ireland studies presented to F X Martin Boethius Press pp 79 88 ISBN 978 0 86314 143 0 Oram Richard D 2004 Fergus lord of Galloway d 1161 prince Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49360 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Oram Richard D Adderley W Paul 2010 Norgesveldet south of Cape Wrath in Imsen Steinar ed The Norwegian domination and the Norse world c 1100 c 1400 Norgesveldt occasional papers Trondheim studies in history Tapir Academic Press pp 125 148 ISBN 978 82 519 2563 1 Paton Henry Reid Norman H 2004 William fifth earl of Mar d in or before 1281 magnate Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography revised ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18023 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Power Rosemary 2005 Meeting in Norway Norse Gaelic relations in the kingdom of Man and the Isles 1090 1270 PDF Saga Book Viking Society for Northern Research 29 5 66 ISSN 0305 9219 archived from the original PDF on 12 April 2013 Reid Norman H 2004 Alexander III 1241 1286 king of Scots Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online May 2011 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 323 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Ridgeway Huw W 2004 Henry III 1207 1272 Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online September 2010 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12950 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Rixson Denis 1998 The west highland galley Birlinn ISBN 1 874744 86 6 Sellar William David Hamilton 2000 Hebridean sea kings The successors of Somerled 1164 1316 in Cowan Edward J McDonald Russell Andrew eds Alba Celtic Scotland in the Middle Ages Tuckwell Press pp 187 218 ISBN 1 86232 151 5 Sellar William David Hamilton 2004a MacDougall Alexander lord of Argyll d 1310 magnate Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49385 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Sellar William David Hamilton 2004b MacDougall Ewen lord of Argyll d in or after 1268 king in the Hebrides Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49384 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Stringer Keith John 2004 Alexander II 1198 1249 king of Scots Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 322 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Woolf Alex 2005 The origins and ancestry of Somerled Gofraid mac Fergusa and The Annals of the Four Masters Mediaeval Scandinavia 15 199 213 Woolf Alex 2008 R Andrew McDonald Manx kingship in its Irish Sea setting 1187 1229 king Rognvaldr and the Crovan dynasty Four Courts Press Dublin 2007 254 pp 55 hardback ISBN 978 1 84682 047 2 The Innes Review 59 1 113 116 doi 10 3366 E0020157X08000176 Young Alan 2004a Comyn Alexander sixth earl of Buchan d 1289 baron and administrator Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 6042 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required Young Alan 2004b Durward Alan d 1275 magnate Oxford dictionary of national biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online October 2006 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8328 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription or UK public library membership required External links EditMagnus king of the Isles d 1265 People of Medieval Scotland 1093 1314 Media related to Magnus olafsson at Wikimedia CommonsMagnus olafssonCrovan dynasty Died 1265Regnal titlesPreceded byHaraldr Gudrodarson King of Mann and the Isles1254 1265 Extinct Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magnus olafsson amp oldid 1130372776, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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