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Origins of the Kingdom of Alba

The origins of the Kingdom of Alba pertain to the origins of the Kingdom of Alba, or the Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland, either as a mythological event or a historical process, during the Early Middle Ages.

The Stone of Scone in the Coronation Chair at Westminster Abbey, 1855, was the ceremonial coronation stone of Scotland's Gaelic kings, similar to the Irish Lia Fáil.

Origin paradigms edit

Medieval version edit

The origins of the Scots have been the subject of numerous speculations over the centuries, including some extravagant ones, like the one made by Walter Bower, abbot of Inchcolm Abbey, in his Scotichronicon, in which he argued that the Scots were descended from an Egyptian pharaoh via the legendary princess Scota, who arrived in Scotland after traveling to Iberia and Ireland.[1] The traditional origin legends in Scotland were influenced by the Historia Regum Britanniae, the Lebor Gabála Érenn and the Historia Brittonum. Ultimately, such conceptualizations can be derived from Virgil's Aeneid and the Bible.

In the Life of St Cathróe of Metz, the hagiographer recounts the mythological origin of the saint's people, the Gaels. The hagiographer recounts that they landed in the vicinity of Cruachan Feli - called the Mountain of Ireland. He recounts that the Gaels conquered Ireland after a series of battles with the Picts (here Pictanes). They followed up their conquest of Ireland by invading Britain, conquering Iona before conquering the cities of Rigmonath (=Cennrigmonaid; i.e. St Andrews) and Bellathor (=Cinnbelathoir; an unidentified Scoto-Pictish palace). Afterwards, their commander - a Spartan called Nel (=Niall) - named the land and people after his Egyptian wife Scota. The tale is astonishingly important, because it dates to about 980, an extremely early date, and has Scottish sources. Indeed, the saint himself is Scottish, born into the nobility. According to the Life, he was educated in Armagh, before returning to Scotland and entering the service of King Constantine II (Causantín mac Áeda). Constantine gave Cathróe conduct to the court of King Dyfnwal of Strathclyde, and from there made his way to Viking England, and finally, the continent.[1]

Medieval Scottish genealogies trace the origin of the Scots to Fergus Mór mac Eirc, the legendary founder of Dál Riata. The Senchus fer n-Alban also contains the myth of Fergus. This is an older document, perhaps dating to the seventh century, that has been heavily interpolated with later material, probably including the mythological parts. Appended to the Míniugud Senchasa Fher nAlba in many manuscripts is the Genelaig Albanensium, a list of genealogies relating to Gaelic rulers of Scotland going up to at least Constantine III (995–7) (it goes later in some of the manuscripts). It is likely that this material was inserted into the Míniugud in the early eleventh century.[2]

In the Duan Albanach, this tradition is re-enforced. It is known to have been written in the reign of King Malcolm III (Máel Coluim mac Donnchada) (one line reads "Maelcoluim is now the king"). It recounts the earliest histories of the Picts, and then celebrates the conquest of the Picts by the Gaedhil. It calls the Scottish Gaels the children of Conaire and the traces the descent of the Scottish kings from Fergus mac Eirc. It does not trace their descent any further, because in the manuscript the Duan Albanach follows from a companion piece, the Duan Eireannach (i.e. Irish Poem), which had already recounted the history of the Gaels from Scythia via Egypt to Ireland.[3]

These mythical traditions are incorporated into the Declaration of Arbroath, and in that document origins from Ireland are omitted for the first time. They were believed in the early modern period and beyond, and even King James VI traced his origin to Fergus, saying, in his own words, that he was a "Monarch sprunge of Ferguse race".[4]

Goth versus Gael edit

The Goth versus Gael model was developed in the context of a vast cultural and linguistic chasm which existed in Scotland in the early modern era, and was invented in the context of the Anglo-Scottish Union and the Jacobite risings in the eighteenth century. The model originates ultimately in the later Middle Ages, when the Germanic-speaking subjects of the Scottish king began to think of themselves as Scots, and began the ethnic and cultural disassociation of Scottish and Gaelic, previously two identical concepts, by calling their own brand of English Scottis and renaming Scottis as Erse. Also important was the impact of the Reformation and the Union. Scots imported English prejudices about the Irish Gaels, and in turn adapted them for the Scottish Gaels.[5]

The Goth versus Gael debate centred on which part of Scotland's past is the more important, the Germanic or the Celtic. Germanicists, or Gothicists as they are sometimes called, attempted to disassociate Gaels and Gaelic from the Scottish past. One extreme example was John Pinkerton, who believed passionately that the people and language of lowland Scotland derived from a Gothic dialect spoken by the Picts. John Pinkerton even invented ancient tales to give substance to this fictional ancient people. The main thrust of the Germanicist model was destroyed in the nineteenth century when William Forbes Skene and others brought medieval Scotland into the frame of serious, recognisably modern scholarship. Nevertheless, this model has had a lot of impact on popular understandings of medieval Scottish history. It explains, for instance, why some popular historians believe that English became the language of Lowland Scotland in the reign of Malcolm III, owing to the influence of his wife, the Anglo-Hungarian Saint Margaret, when in fact no such thing happened for another few centuries.[6][dubious ]

Origins edit

Gaelic and Pictish kings edit

That Pictland had Gaelic kings is not in question. One of the earliest, if not the earliest, was Nechtan mac Derile, the son of a Gaelic lord named Dargart and the Pictish princess Derile.[7] Pictish kings, moreover, were probably Gaelic-speaking poets. There exists a Gaelic elegy to the Pictish king, Bridei, Bili's son. The poem is attributed to his contemporary, Adomnán of Iona, but this is tenuous. It is however probably contemporary, dating to the late 7th or early eighth century. Another poem, attributed to Riagail of Bangor, celebrates the same ruler's victory over the Northumbrians, at the Battle of Dun Nechtain on 20 May 685.[8]

In the early eighth century, the great King of the Picts was Óengus mac Fergusa, conqueror of Dalriada. It is possible, as has been pointed out by some linguists and historians, that Óengus and Fergus are just Gaelic versions of native Pictish names, namely, Onuist and Urguist, the names recorded in one strand of the Pictish king lists.[9] However, these names are rare in the larger P-Celtic world, and largely out of place in the context of previous Pictish kings. Furthermore, an inscription relating to Causantín son of Fergus reads:

CV[…]NTIN/FILIUSFIRCU/S.
(Constantine son of Fergus).[10]

This inscription is from the Dupplin Cross, and was found in the heart of southern Pictland, near Forteviot. It dates from the late 8th or early ninth century. If the name in question really were the Pictish Urguist, then it is odd that a contemporary Pictish description gave the Gaelic form, form beginning with the unmistakably Goidelic F.[11] It is thus likely that several of the later Pictish Kings spoke Gaelic as their first language.

Fortriu to Moray edit

 
Sueno's Stone, located in Forres, in the old kingdom of Fortriu. This gigantic, probably post-Pictish monument, marks some kind of military triumph.

The St Andrews historian Alex Woolf has recently put forward a case for relocating the Kingdom of Fortriu north of the Mounth (the Grampians). Previously, it had been located in the vicinity of Strathearn; but as Woolf pointed out, this is based on one passage saying that the Men of Fortriu fought a battle in Strathearn. This is an unconvincing reason, because there are two Strathearns - one in the south, and one in the north - and, moreover, every battle has to be fought outside the territory of one of the combatants. By contrast, a northern recension of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle makes it clear that Fortriu was north of the Mounth, in the area visited by Columba. The case has to be accepted, and there can be little doubt that the core of Fortriu lay to the north of the Grampian Mountains - in Moray, Ross and perhaps Mar and Buchan too.[12]

Relocating Fortriu north of the Mounth increases the importance of the Vikings. After all, the Viking impact on the north was greater than in the south, and in the north, the Vikings actually conquered and made permanent territorial gains.

Pictland to Alba edit

There remains the possibility that Alba is simply a Gaelic translation of the Pictish name for Pictland. Both the Welsh and the Irish use archaic words for Briton to describe the Picts. It is very likely therefore that the Picts did so themselves; or if they did not originally, they came to do so. In which case the Pictish for Pictland would have been either the same as their word for Britain, or an obsolete term. Alba was exactly this kind of word in Old Irish. It is therefore plausible that Alba is simply a Gaelic translation. The name change is first registered at the very beginning of the tenth century,[13] not long before Constantine II is alleged to have Scotticised the "Pictish" Church,[14] and at the height of Viking raids. Later records, especially the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba and other documents in the Poppleton Manuscript, tell us that the Picts were simply conquered and annihilated by king Kenneth MacAlpin (Cináed mac Ailpín). This is the traditional explanation, and the one repeated by many historians. The only thing which is certain is that before 900, the Cruithentuath (Gaelic for Pictland), and perhaps Fortriu, became Gaelic-speaking Alba.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 January 2016.

References edit

  1. ^ Dumville, "St Cathróe of Metz", pp. 172–6; text translated on A.O. Anderson, Early Sources, vol. i, pp. 431–443
  2. ^ for text and commentary, see Bannerman, Studies (1974) & Dumville "Ireland and North Britain", (2002).
  3. ^ M. Anderson, Kings and Kingship (1973), p. 79, n. 11; for text, "Irish" Nennius at CELT.
  4. ^ Pittock, Celtic Identity, (1999), p. 18.
  5. ^ Accounts of the "Goth versus Gael debate" and this early modern invention of Lowland Saxon identity can be found in Ferguson, Identity (1998), pp. 250–73, and in Pittock, Celtic Identity, pp. 54–60.
  6. ^ ibid.
  7. ^ examples of this approach are becoming legion; e.g. Lynch, Scotland: A New History, (1992), p. 53
  8. ^ See Clancy, "Philosopher-King: Nechtan mac Der-Ilei".
  9. ^ Clancyen (ed.), The Triumph Tree, p. 115; ibid. pp. 15–6 for suggestion as contemporary praise poetry.
  10. ^ Jackson, "The Pictish language", followed by others, such as Forsyth, Language in Pictland, (1997).
  11. ^ Foster, Sally, Picts, Gaels and Scots (1996).
  12. ^ Watson, Celtic Place-Names (1926/2004), pp. 68–9.
  13. ^ Woolf, "Geography of the Picts", (forthcoming).
  14. ^ AU, s.a. 900; A.O. Anderson, Early Sources, vol. i, p. 395
  15. ^ Chronicle of the Kings of Alba; A.O. Anderson, Early Sources, vol. i, p. 445.

Bibliography edit

Primary sources edit

  • Anderson, Alan Orr, Early Sources of Scottish History: AD 500-1286, 2 Vols, (Edinburgh, 1922)
  • Skene, William F. (ed.), Chronicles of the Picts and Scots: And Other Memorials of Scottish History, (Edinburgh, 1867)

Secondary sources edit

  • Anderson, Marjorie O., Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1973)
  • Bannerman, John, Studies in the History of Dalriada, (Edinburgh, 1974)
  • Broun, Dauvit "Defining Scotland and the Scots Before the Wars of Independence," in Image and Identity: the Making and Remaking of Scotland through the Ages, in. D. Broun, R. Finlay & M. Lynch (eds.), (Edinburgh 1998), pp. 4–17
  • Broun, Dauvit, "Dunkeld and the origin of Scottish identity", in Innes Review 48 (1997), pp. 112–24, reprinted in Spes Scotorum: Hope of Scots, eds. Broun and Clancy (1999), pp. 95–111
  • Broun, Dauvit & Clancy, Thomas Owen (eds.),Spes Scottorum: Hope of the Scots, (Edinburgh, 1999)
  • Clancy, Thomas Owen, "Philosopher-King: Nechtan mac Der-Ilei", in the Scottish Historical Review, 83, 2004, pp. 125–49.
  • Clancy, Thomas Owen, "The real St Ninian", in The Innes Review, 52 (2001).
  • Clancy, Thomas Owen, "Scotland, the 'Nennian' recension of the Historia Brittonum, and the Lebor Bretnach", in Simon Taylor (ed.) Kings, Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland, 500-1297, (Dublin/Portland, 2000), pp. 87–107.
  • Clancy, Thomas Owen (ed.), The Triumph Tree: Scotland's Earliest Poetry, 550-1350, (Edinburgh, 1998)
  • Driscoll, Steven, Alba: The Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland AD 800-1124, (Edinburgh, 1996)
  • Dumville, David N., "Ireland and North Britain in the Earlier Middle Ages: Contexts for the Míniugud Senchasa Fher nAlban", in Colm Ó Baoill & Nancy R. McGuire (eds.) Rannsachadh Na Gáidhlig, (Aberdeen, 2002)
  • Dumville, David N., "St Cathróe of Metz and the Hagiography of Exoticism," in Irish Hagiography: Saints and Scholars, ed. John Carey et al. (Dublin, 2001), pp. 172–6
  • Ferguson, William, The Identity of the Scottish Nation: An Historic Enquiry, (Edinburgh, 1998)
  • Foster, Sally, Picts, Gaels and Scots: Early Historic Scotland, (London, 1996)
  • Forsyth, Katherine, Language in Pictland, (Utrecht 1997)
  • Jackson, Kenneth H. (ed), The Gaelic Notes in the Book of Deer (The Osborn Bergin Memorial Lecture 1970), (Cambridge (1972)
  • Jackson, Kenneth H. "The Pictish language", in F.T. Wainwright (ed.), The Problem of the Picts, (Edinburgh, 1955), pp. 129–66
  • Hudson, Benjamin T., Kings of Celtic Scotland, (Westport, 1994)
  • Pittock, Murray G.H., Celtic Identity and the British Image, (Manchester, 1999)
  • Watson, W.J., The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1926) reprinted, with an Introduction, full Watson bibliography and corrigenda by Simon Taylor (Edinburgh, 2004)
  • Woolf, Alex, "Dun Nechtain, Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts", (forthcoming)

External links edit

  • Annals of Tigernach
  • Annals of Ulster
  • Chronicon Scotorum
  • Gaelic Notes on the Book of Deer
  • Genelaig Albanensium in the Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502
  • Text of the Lebor Bretnach and the Duan Albanach

origins, kingdom, alba, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states, wikipedia, editor, personal, feelings, presents, original, argument, about, topic, please, help, improve, rewriting, encyclopedic, . This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The origins of the Kingdom of Alba pertain to the origins of the Kingdom of Alba or the Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland either as a mythological event or a historical process during the Early Middle Ages The Stone of Scone in the Coronation Chair at Westminster Abbey 1855 was the ceremonial coronation stone of Scotland s Gaelic kings similar to the Irish Lia Fail Contents 1 Origin paradigms 1 1 Medieval version 1 2 Goth versus Gael 2 Origins 2 1 Gaelic and Pictish kings 2 2 Fortriu to Moray 2 3 Pictland to Alba 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 Primary sources 6 2 Secondary sources 7 External linksOrigin paradigms editMedieval version edit The origins of the Scots have been the subject of numerous speculations over the centuries including some extravagant ones like the one made by Walter Bower abbot of Inchcolm Abbey in his Scotichronicon in which he argued that the Scots were descended from an Egyptian pharaoh via the legendary princess Scota who arrived in Scotland after traveling to Iberia and Ireland 1 The traditional origin legends in Scotland were influenced by the Historia Regum Britanniae the Lebor Gabala Erenn and the Historia Brittonum Ultimately such conceptualizations can be derived from Virgil s Aeneid and the Bible In the Life of St Cathroe of Metz the hagiographer recounts the mythological origin of the saint s people the Gaels The hagiographer recounts that they landed in the vicinity of Cruachan Feli called the Mountain of Ireland He recounts that the Gaels conquered Ireland after a series of battles with the Picts here Pictanes They followed up their conquest of Ireland by invading Britain conquering Iona before conquering the cities of Rigmonath Cennrigmonaid i e St Andrews and Bellathor Cinnbelathoir an unidentified Scoto Pictish palace Afterwards their commander a Spartan called Nel Niall named the land and people after his Egyptian wife Scota The tale is astonishingly important because it dates to about 980 an extremely early date and has Scottish sources Indeed the saint himself is Scottish born into the nobility According to the Life he was educated in Armagh before returning to Scotland and entering the service of King Constantine II Causantin mac Aeda Constantine gave Cathroe conduct to the court of King Dyfnwal of Strathclyde and from there made his way to Viking England and finally the continent 1 Medieval Scottish genealogies trace the origin of the Scots to Fergus Mor mac Eirc the legendary founder of Dal Riata The Senchus fer n Alban also contains the myth of Fergus This is an older document perhaps dating to the seventh century that has been heavily interpolated with later material probably including the mythological parts Appended to the Miniugud Senchasa Fher nAlba in many manuscripts is the Genelaig Albanensium a list of genealogies relating to Gaelic rulers of Scotland going up to at least Constantine III 995 7 it goes later in some of the manuscripts It is likely that this material was inserted into the Miniugud in the early eleventh century 2 In the Duan Albanach this tradition is re enforced It is known to have been written in the reign of King Malcolm III Mael Coluim mac Donnchada one line reads Maelcoluim is now the king It recounts the earliest histories of the Picts and then celebrates the conquest of the Picts by the Gaedhil It calls the Scottish Gaels the children of Conaire and the traces the descent of the Scottish kings from Fergus mac Eirc It does not trace their descent any further because in the manuscript the Duan Albanach follows from a companion piece the Duan Eireannach i e Irish Poem which had already recounted the history of the Gaels from Scythia via Egypt to Ireland 3 These mythical traditions are incorporated into the Declaration of Arbroath and in that document origins from Ireland are omitted for the first time They were believed in the early modern period and beyond and even King James VI traced his origin to Fergus saying in his own words that he was a Monarch sprunge of Ferguse race 4 Goth versus Gael edit The Goth versus Gael model was developed in the context of a vast cultural and linguistic chasm which existed in Scotland in the early modern era and was invented in the context of the Anglo Scottish Union and the Jacobite risings in the eighteenth century The model originates ultimately in the later Middle Ages when the Germanic speaking subjects of the Scottish king began to think of themselves as Scots and began the ethnic and cultural disassociation of Scottish and Gaelic previously two identical concepts by calling their own brand of English Scottis and renaming Scottis as Erse Also important was the impact of the Reformation and the Union Scots imported English prejudices about the Irish Gaels and in turn adapted them for the Scottish Gaels 5 The Goth versus Gael debate centred on which part of Scotland s past is the more important the Germanic or the Celtic Germanicists or Gothicists as they are sometimes called attempted to disassociate Gaels and Gaelic from the Scottish past One extreme example was John Pinkerton who believed passionately that the people and language of lowland Scotland derived from a Gothic dialect spoken by the Picts John Pinkerton even invented ancient tales to give substance to this fictional ancient people The main thrust of the Germanicist model was destroyed in the nineteenth century when William Forbes Skene and others brought medieval Scotland into the frame of serious recognisably modern scholarship Nevertheless this model has had a lot of impact on popular understandings of medieval Scottish history It explains for instance why some popular historians believe that English became the language of Lowland Scotland in the reign of Malcolm III owing to the influence of his wife the Anglo Hungarian Saint Margaret when in fact no such thing happened for another few centuries 6 dubious discuss Origins editGaelic and Pictish kings edit That Pictland had Gaelic kings is not in question One of the earliest if not the earliest was Nechtan mac Derile the son of a Gaelic lord named Dargart and the Pictish princess Derile 7 Pictish kings moreover were probably Gaelic speaking poets There exists a Gaelic elegy to the Pictish king Bridei Bili s son The poem is attributed to his contemporary Adomnan of Iona but this is tenuous It is however probably contemporary dating to the late 7th or early eighth century Another poem attributed to Riagail of Bangor celebrates the same ruler s victory over the Northumbrians at the Battle of Dun Nechtain on 20 May 685 8 In the early eighth century the great King of the Picts was oengus mac Fergusa conqueror of Dalriada It is possible as has been pointed out by some linguists and historians that oengus and Fergus are just Gaelic versions of native Pictish names namely Onuist and Urguist the names recorded in one strand of the Pictish king lists 9 However these names are rare in the larger P Celtic world and largely out of place in the context of previous Pictish kings Furthermore an inscription relating to Causantin son of Fergus reads CV NTIN FILIUSFIRCU S Constantine son of Fergus 10 This inscription is from the Dupplin Cross and was found in the heart of southern Pictland near Forteviot It dates from the late 8th or early ninth century If the name in question really were the Pictish Urguist then it is odd that a contemporary Pictish description gave the Gaelic form form beginning with the unmistakably Goidelic F 11 It is thus likely that several of the later Pictish Kings spoke Gaelic as their first language Fortriu to Moray edit nbsp Sueno s Stone located in Forres in the old kingdom of Fortriu This gigantic probably post Pictish monument marks some kind of military triumph The St Andrews historian Alex Woolf has recently put forward a case for relocating the Kingdom of Fortriu north of the Mounth the Grampians Previously it had been located in the vicinity of Strathearn but as Woolf pointed out this is based on one passage saying that the Men of Fortriu fought a battle in Strathearn This is an unconvincing reason because there are two Strathearns one in the south and one in the north and moreover every battle has to be fought outside the territory of one of the combatants By contrast a northern recension of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle makes it clear that Fortriu was north of the Mounth in the area visited by Columba The case has to be accepted and there can be little doubt that the core of Fortriu lay to the north of the Grampian Mountains in Moray Ross and perhaps Mar and Buchan too 12 Relocating Fortriu north of the Mounth increases the importance of the Vikings After all the Viking impact on the north was greater than in the south and in the north the Vikings actually conquered and made permanent territorial gains Pictland to Alba edit There remains the possibility that Alba is simply a Gaelic translation of the Pictish name for Pictland Both the Welsh and the Irish use archaic words for Briton to describe the Picts It is very likely therefore that the Picts did so themselves or if they did not originally they came to do so In which case the Pictish for Pictland would have been either the same as their word for Britain or an obsolete term Alba was exactly this kind of word in Old Irish It is therefore plausible that Alba is simply a Gaelic translation The name change is first registered at the very beginning of the tenth century 13 not long before Constantine II is alleged to have Scotticised the Pictish Church 14 and at the height of Viking raids Later records especially the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba and other documents in the Poppleton Manuscript tell us that the Picts were simply conquered and annihilated by king Kenneth MacAlpin Cinaed mac Ailpin This is the traditional explanation and the one repeated by many historians The only thing which is certain is that before 900 the Cruithentuath Gaelic for Pictland and perhaps Fortriu became Gaelic speaking Alba See also editFortriu Gille Coluim the Marischal MacAlpin s Treason Mormaer of Moray Scotland in the High Middle AgesNotes edit The pharaoh s daughter who was the mother of all Scots The Scotsman Archived from the original on 29 January 2016 References edit Dumville St Cathroe of Metz pp 172 6 text translated on A O Anderson Early Sources vol i pp 431 443 for text and commentary see Bannerman Studies 1974 amp Dumville Ireland and North Britain 2002 M Anderson Kings and Kingship 1973 p 79 n 11 for text Irish Nennius at CELT Pittock Celtic Identity 1999 p 18 Accounts of the Goth versus Gael debate and this early modern invention of Lowland Saxon identity can be found in Ferguson Identity 1998 pp 250 73 and in Pittock Celtic Identity pp 54 60 ibid examples of this approach are becoming legion e g Lynch Scotland A New History 1992 p 53 See Clancy Philosopher King Nechtan mac Der Ilei Clancyen ed The Triumph Tree p 115 ibid pp 15 6 for suggestion as contemporary praise poetry Jackson The Pictish language followed by others such as Forsyth Language in Pictland 1997 Foster Sally Picts Gaels and Scots 1996 Watson Celtic Place Names 1926 2004 pp 68 9 Woolf Geography of the Picts forthcoming AU s a 900 A O Anderson Early Sources vol i p 395 Chronicle of the Kings of Alba A O Anderson Early Sources vol i p 445 Bibliography editPrimary sources edit Anderson Alan Orr Early Sources of Scottish History AD 500 1286 2 Vols Edinburgh 1922 Skene William F ed Chronicles of the Picts and Scots And Other Memorials of Scottish History Edinburgh 1867 Secondary sources edit Anderson Marjorie O Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland Edinburgh 1973 Bannerman John Studies in the History of Dalriada Edinburgh 1974 Broun Dauvit Defining Scotland and the Scots Before the Wars of Independence in Image and Identity the Making and Remaking of Scotland through the Ages in D Broun R Finlay amp M Lynch eds Edinburgh 1998 pp 4 17 Broun Dauvit Dunkeld and the origin of Scottish identity in Innes Review 48 1997 pp 112 24 reprinted in Spes Scotorum Hope of Scots eds Broun and Clancy 1999 pp 95 111 Broun Dauvit amp Clancy Thomas Owen eds Spes Scottorum Hope of the Scots Edinburgh 1999 Clancy Thomas Owen Philosopher King Nechtan mac Der Ilei in the Scottish Historical Review 83 2004 pp 125 49 Clancy Thomas Owen The real St Ninian in The Innes Review 52 2001 Clancy Thomas Owen Scotland the Nennian recension of the Historia Brittonum and the Lebor Bretnach in Simon Taylor ed Kings Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland 500 1297 Dublin Portland 2000 pp 87 107 Clancy Thomas Owen ed The Triumph Tree Scotland s Earliest Poetry 550 1350 Edinburgh 1998 Driscoll Steven Alba The Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland AD 800 1124 Edinburgh 1996 Dumville David N Ireland and North Britain in the Earlier Middle Ages Contexts for the Miniugud Senchasa Fher nAlban in Colm o Baoill amp Nancy R McGuire eds Rannsachadh Na Gaidhlig Aberdeen 2002 Dumville David N St Cathroe of Metz and the Hagiography of Exoticism in Irish Hagiography Saints and Scholars ed John Carey et al Dublin 2001 pp 172 6 Ferguson William The Identity of the Scottish Nation An Historic Enquiry Edinburgh 1998 Foster Sally Picts Gaels and Scots Early Historic Scotland London 1996 Forsyth Katherine Language in Pictland Utrecht 1997 Jackson Kenneth H ed The Gaelic Notes in the Book of Deer The Osborn Bergin Memorial Lecture 1970 Cambridge 1972 Jackson Kenneth H The Pictish language in F T Wainwright ed The Problem of the Picts Edinburgh 1955 pp 129 66 Hudson Benjamin T Kings of Celtic Scotland Westport 1994 Pittock Murray G H Celtic Identity and the British Image Manchester 1999 Watson W J The Celtic Place Names of Scotland Edinburgh 1926 reprinted with an Introduction full Watson bibliography and corrigenda by Simon Taylor Edinburgh 2004 Woolf Alex Dun Nechtain Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts forthcoming External links editAnnals of Tigernach Annals of Ulster Chronicon Scotorum Gaelic Notes on the Book of Deer Genelaig Albanensium in the Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502 Text of the Lebor Bretnach and the Duan Albanach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Origins of the Kingdom of Alba amp oldid 1178036217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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