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Sigtrygg Silkbeard

Sigtrygg II Silkbeard Olafsson (also Sihtric, Sitric[1] and Sitrick in Irish texts; or Sigtryg[2] and Sigtryggr[3] in Scandinavian texts) was a Hiberno-Norse king of Dublin (possibly AD 989–994; restored or began 995–1000; restored 1000 and abdicated 1036) of the Uí Ímair dynasty. He was caught up in the abortive Leinster revolt of 999–1000, after which he was forced to submit to the King of Munster, Brian Boru. His family also conducted a double marriage alliance with Boru, although he later realigned himself with the main leaders of the Leinster revolt of 1012–1014. He has a prominent role in the 12th-century Irish Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh and the 13th-century Icelandic Njal's Saga, as the main Norse leader at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014.

Sigtrygg Silkbeard
King of Dublin
Reign989/995–1036
PredecessorGlúniairn / Ivar of Waterford
SuccessorEchmarcach mac Ragnaill
Bornc. 970
Dublin
Died1042 (aged 72)
Dublin
SpouseSláine
DynastyUí Ímair
FatherOlaf Cuarán
MotherGormflaith ingen Murchada

Sigtrygg's long reign spanned 46 years, until his abdication in 1036.[4] During that period, his armies saw action in four of the five Irish provinces of the time. In particular, he conducted a long series of raids into territories such as Meath, Wicklow, Ulster, and perhaps even the coast of Wales. He also came into conflict with rival Norse kings, especially in Cork and Waterford.

He went on a pilgrimage to Rome in 1028 and is associated with the foundation of Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin. Although Dublin underwent several reversals of fortune during his reign, on the whole trade in the city flourished. He died in 1042.[4]

Life Edit

Family Edit

Sigtrygg was of Norse and Irish ancestry.[2] He was a son of Olaf Cuarán (also called Kváran), King of York and of Dublin, and Gormflaith ingen Murchada.[3] Gormflaith was the daughter of the King of Leinster, Murchad mac Finn,[5] and the sister of his successor, King Máel Mórda of Leinster.[3] She had previously been married to the King of Meath and High King of Ireland, Máel Sechnaill[3] — the first of her three husbands. She was a beautiful, powerful and intriguing Irish woman,[3] who according to the 13th-century Icelandic Njál's saga, was "the fairest of all women, and best gifted in everything that was not in her own power, but it was the talk of men that she did all things ill over which she had any power".[3][6] Sigtrygg's paternal half-brother was Glúniairn, "Iron-knee", who ruled as King of Dublin from 980 to 989.

An incident involving the ransom of one of Sigtrygg's sons late in his reign, in which "seven score British horse" were mentioned in the list of demands,[7] suggests that Dublin was one of the main ports for importing horses into 11th century Ireland, and that Sigtrygg and his family may have been personally involved in animal husbandry.[8]

King of Dublin Edit

 
A posthumous "Sihtric" coin from the British Museum, minted at Dublin c. 1050

Sigtrygg may have succeeded his paternal half-brother Glúniairn as king of Dublin in 989,[4] but it is just as likely his rival Ivar of Waterford came to power in the city then.[9] The Irish annals record little information about Sigtrygg, his family or Dublin during these first five years of his reign.[10] Benjamin Hudson claims this was because of the arrival of the future King of Norway, Olaf Tryggvason, who took up residence in Dublin for a few years after marrying Sigtrygg's sister Gytha.[10] Tryggvason had met Gytha while raiding along the coasts of the Irish Sea.[10] The presence of a powerful Viking leader in Dublin was a deterrent to Irish raids, and Trygvason may have weakened Sigtrygg's foes by plundering them.[11]

Hudson argues that Tryggvason's return to Norway in 994 coincided with the temporary expulsion of Sigtrygg from Dublin by his rival Ivar of Waterford.[12] Ivar may have already ruled there from 989 until forced out by Sigtrygg in 993. Much depends on the interpretation. Either way, Sigtrygg was back within a year. In 995, he and his nephew, Muirchertach Ua Congalaich, attacked the church at Donaghpatrick in County Meath.[12] In retaliation, Máel Sechnaill entered Dublin and took the ring of Thor and the sword of Carlus.[12] Sigtrygg then attacked Kells and Clonard in 997.[12] In 998, Máel Sechnaill and the King of Munster, Brian Boru, forced Sigtrygg to recognise their lordship by giving hostages.[12]

Sigtrygg realised that Dublin's wealth made him a target, and that his city needed powerful allies and walls.[12] The Dublin countryside did not provide sufficient resources for competition against powerful Irish princes.[12] Sigtrygg first allied with his maternal uncle, Máel Mórda mac Murchada, King of the Uí Fáeláin of north Leinster.[12] In 999, they defeated their cousin the King of Leinster Donnchad mac Domhnaill, and imprisoned him in Dublin.[12]

First Leinster revolt against Brian Boru Edit

Late in 999, the Leinstermen, historically hostile to domination by either the Uí Néill overkings or the king of Munster, allied themselves with the Norse of Dublin and revolted against Brian Boru.[1] This provided the opportunity for Sigtrygg's second alliance with Máel Mórda mac Murchada.[12] Brian's forces inflicted a crushing defeat on the united Leinster-Dublin army at the Battle of Glenmama, and followed the victory with an attack on the city of Dublin.[1] The 12th-century Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh gives two accounts of the occupation: Brian remained in Dublin from Christmas Day until Epiphany (6 January), or from Christmas Day until St. Brigid's Day (1 February).[12] The later Annals of Ulster date the Battle of Glenmama to 30 December 999,[13] while the Annals of Inisfallen date Brian's capture of the city to 1 January 1000.[14] In any case, in 1000 Brian plundered the city, burned the Norse fortress and expelled Sigtrygg.[1]

According to the Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh, Sigtrygg's flight from the city took him north, first to the Ulaid and then to Aéd of Cenél nEógain.[15] Both tribes refused to help him.[15] As Sigtrygg could find no refuge in Ireland, he eventually returned, submitted to Brian, gave hostages and was restored to Dublin three months after Brian ended his occupation in February.[1][12] In the meantime, Sigtrygg may have temporarily "turned pirate" and been responsible for a raid on St David's in Wales.[15]

Brian's daughter by his first wife was married to Sigtrygg,[3] and Brian in turn took Sigtrygg's mother, the now three-times-married Gormflaith, as his second wife.[3]

Years between the revolts Edit

 
Inch Abbey (Inis Cumhscraigh), plundered by Sigtrygg in 1002

Dublin enjoyed a sustained period of peace while Sigtrygg's men served in the armies of Brian.[16] Sigtrygg never forgot the Ulaid's refusal of aid when he fled from Dublin, and in 1002 he had his revenge when his soldiers served in Brian's campaign against the Ulaid and ravaged their lands.[12][16] His fleet raided Ulster, and he plundered Kilclief and Inis Cumhscraigh, taking many prisoners from both.[17] They served under Brian against the Ulaid again in 1005, and against the Northern Uí Néill in 1006 and 1007.[16] Cenél Conaill, the last of the Northern Uí Néill Kingdoms, submitted in 1011, and Brian was formally recognised as High King throughout Ireland.[16]

A remembrance of Sigtrygg's reign during these years is preserved in the late medieval Icelandic Saga of Gunnlaug Serpent's Tongue.[18] Only fragments survive of the verses in the Sigtryggsdrápa, a drápa composed by the skald Gunnlaug Illugason while visiting Sigtrygg's court.[18] The verses praise Sigtrygg for his royal ancestry, and describe Dublin as a busy, thriving port.[18] Archaeological excavations of ships, gold, clothing, and pieces for games from around this time seem to confirm the description.[18] According to the prose, Sigtrygg considered rewarding the poet with ships and gold, but instead granted him a new suit of clothes.[18]

Second Leinster revolt against Brian Boru Edit

 
  The Viking settlements of Cork, Limerick, Waterford and Wexford
(Part of the Kingdom of Munster, under the control of Boru)
  The Kingdom of Dublin, under the control of Sigtrygg

Sometime during the 1010s, Brian Boru divorced Queen Gormflaith, and she began to engineer opposition to the High King.[19] Around 1012, relations between Brian and Leinster had become so strained that revolt broke out among the Leinstermen.[20] Sigtrygg aligned himself with the forces of Máel Mórda, leader of the revolt, and the chiefs Ua Ruairc, Ua Néill, and others.[21] Together, they defeated Brian's ally Máel Sechnaill near the town of Swords, and Brian for the moment was unable to render assistance.[21]

Sigtrygg sent his son Oleif to lead a fleet south to Munster to burn the Viking settlement of Cork.[16] The fleet also attacked Cape Clear, crippling Brian's naval power, which was concentrated in Cork.[16]

According to Njál's saga, Gormflaith "egged on her son Sigtrygg very much to kill King Brian",[6] sending him to win the support of Earl Sigurd of Orkney, and Bróðir and Óspak of Man at any price.[21] Sigtrygg arrived in Orkney for Sigurd's Yule feast, where he sat in a high seat between the two brothers-in-law, Earl Sigurd of Orkney and Earl Gilli of the Southern Isles.[6] The saga also records that Sigtrygg was very interested in the Burning of Njáll Þorgeirsson at Bergþórshvoll and what had happened since.[6] Afterwards, Sigtrygg bade Sigurd to go to war with him against Brian.[22] Despite Sigurd's initial hesitance and against the advice of his men, he eventually agreed to arrive in Dublin by Palm Sunday with all his men, on the condition that if Brian was slain, Sigurd would marry Gormflaith and become King of Ireland.[22][23]

Sigtrygg went next to Man, where he also persuaded Bróðir to be in Dublin by Palm Sunday,[20][24] and he promised Bróðir too that, if successful, he would be allowed marry Gormflaith and become King of Ireland; the terms of this agreement were kept secret.[25] Óspak was dissatisfied with the arrangement,[23] and refused to "fight against so good a king".[22]

The two forces met at the Battle of Clontarf, on Good Friday in 1014, a battle that claimed the lives of the main commanders on both sides: Brian and his son Murchad on the Munster side; and Máel Mórda, Sigurd and Bróðir on the Leinster-Norse side.[26] According to Irish sources, Sigtrygg did not take part in the battle, but held his garrison in reserve in Dublin.[27] The Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh records that Sigtrygg was able to observe the progress of the battle and the movement of the battle standards from the ramparts of his fortress.[28] As the modern Irish medievalist historian Donnchadh Ó Corráin notes, Sigtrygg "wisely kept within the city and lived to tell the tale".[26]

Earlier Scandinavian sources (the Orkneyinga saga, Njál's saga and the Darraðarljóð, composed soon after the battle) contend that he did actually fight valiantly at Clontarf.[28] The Darraðarljóð, showing the persistence of paganism among the Vikings of Dublin, describes the Valkyries as following the "young king" Sigtrygg into battle.[29] Njal's Saga records that Sigtrygg was on the wing opposite Óspak of Man for the whole battle, and that Óspak eventually put the king to flight.[30]

Reign after Clontarf Edit

Immediately after Clontarf, Sigtrygg's fortunes appear to have declined, even though he emerged with his kingdom intact.[31] Máel Sechnaill, now again recognised as high king, was undoubtedly the battle's main beneficiary.[31] In 1015, plague struck Dublin and Leinster, and Máel Sechnaill seized the opportunity to march south to burn Dublin's suburbs.[31] While Sigtrygg was able to ally with Leinster for another attack on Meath in 1017, the alliance was dissolved when Sigtrygg blinded his cousin Bróen, Máel Morda's son and heir, in Dublin.[31]

In 1018, Sigtrygg plundered Kells; he "carried off innumerable spoils and prisoners, and slew many persons in the middle of the church".[32] These captives would either have been ransomed or sold off into Dublin's lucrative slave trade.[33] When Sigtrygg raided south in 1021, he was defeated at Delgany in County Wicklow[33] where the new King of Leinster, Augaire mac Dúnlainge, "made a dreadful slaughter of the foreigners" in the Kingdom of Breifne.[34] In 1022, the Dublin fleet sailed north against the Ulaid, only to be destroyed in a naval battle against Niall mac Eochaid, after which the Norse crews and ships were taken prisoner.[33]

According to the American medievalist historian Benjamin Hudson, "matters went from bad to worse" for Sigtrygg after the death of Máel Sechnaill in 1022.[35] The great Irish princes began to compete for the High Kingship, and the political situation in Ireland became chaotic as there was no clear choice for supremacy.[35] Accordingly, "Dublin became a prize for those who would rule Ireland and wanted the town's wealth to finance their ambitions."[35]

 
The medieval tower of the stone church of Ardbraccan, County Meath, in which Sigtrygg burned over 200 men

Hostages were taken from Sigtrygg by Flaithbertach Ua Néill, King of Cenél nEógain and the Uí Néill, and Donnchad mac Briain of Munster in 1025 and 1026 respectively, in support of their bids for the high kingship.[35] These hostages brought no security, and Dublin was raided in 1026 by Niall mac Eocada of the Ulaid in revenge for the naval attack of 1022.[36] Sigtrygg formed a new alliance with the men of Brega.[37] In 1027, Sigtrygg's son Olaf joined Donnchad of Brega in a raid on Staholmock, County Meath.[37] Sigtrygg and Donnchad's army was defeated by the men of Meath under their king, Roen Ua Mael Sechlainn.[37][38] Sigtrygg rallied to the fight again at Lickblaw (near Castlepollard, Westmeath) where Donnchad and Roen were slain.[37][38]

In 1029, Sigtrygg's son Olaf was taken prisoner by the new lord of Brega, Mathghamhain Ua Riagain.[7] Sigtrygg was forced to pay a ransom of 1,200 cows, 140 British horses, 60 ounces of gold and of silver, "the sword of Carlus", the Irish hostages of Leinster and Leath Cuinn, "four hostages to Ua Riagain as a security for peace, and the full value of the life of the third hostage".[7] An additional 80 cows "for word and supplication"[7] were to be paid to the man who entreated for Olaf's release.[8] The incident illustrates the importance of ransoming noble captives, as a means of political manipulation, increasing one's own revenues and exhausting the resources of one's foes.[8]

Sigtrygg's fortunes improved in the 1030s. In 1030, he allied with the North Sea Emperor, Cnut the Great, and together their fleets raided Wales.[39] A Dublin colony was established in Gwynedd, and for the following years Sigtrygg was at the height of his power.[39] In 1032, without allies, Sigtrygg won a victory on the Boyne estuary of a type previously unseen by his dynasty for two decades, against a coalition of three kingdoms:[37] over 300 members of the Conailli, the Ui Tortain, and the Ui Meith were captured or killed at the Battle of Inbher Boinne.[40] In 1035, he plundered the celebrated stone church of Ardbraccan in Meath, burned 200 men inside, and carried another 200 off into captivity.[37] In revenge, the church at Swords was plundered and burned by Conchobhar Ua Maeleachlainn,[41] who took away cattle and captives.[37]

Meanwhile, in a renewal of ancient feuds that same year, Sigtrygg executed Ragnall King of Waterford, in Dublin.[41] Ragnall was the grandson of the Ivar, Sigtrygg's earliest rival, who had contested for Dublin decades before.[37] Echmarcach mac Ragnaill, King of the Isles forced Sigtrygg to abdicate in 1036.[39] Sigtrygg died in exile, at an unknown place, in 1042.[39]

Issue and legacy Edit

 
Christ Church Cathedral, founded by Sigtrygg c.1028

Sigtrygg married Brian Boru's daughter, Sláine, and they had one son: Olaf (d. 1034).[4] According to the Annals of the Four Masters, Olaf "was slain by the Saxons" on his way on a pilgrimage to Rome.[41] Olaf was survived by a daughter, Ragnhild, who was the mother of Gruffudd ap Cynan and from whom the Kings of Gwynedd were descended.[4]

Separately from Sláine, Sigtrygg had five children: Artalach (d. 999), Oleif (d. 1013), Godfrey (d. 1036), Glúniairn (d. 1031) and Cellach (d. 1042).[4][39] The annals record the death of Oleif—"son of the lord of the foreigners"—who was killed in revenge for the burning of Cork.[42] Glúniairn was killed by the people of South Brega in 1031.[43] Godfrey was killed in Wales in 1036 by one Sitric, "son of Glúniairn"—as factionalism was common among Viking settlers, this could have been the same Glúniairn as Sigtrygg's half-brother, thus making Godfrey and his killer cousins.[44] Sigtrygg's daughter Cellach died in the same month as her father.[45]

Sigtrygg was also, according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, "a patron of the arts, a benefactor of the church, and an economic innovator".[39] In the 990s, he established Ireland's first mint, in Dublin.[39] He established a bishopric at Dublin and in 1028 he made a pilgrimage to Rome.[39][46] It is thus possible to attribute the origins of the establishment of territorial bishoprics in Ireland on the Roman model, one of the most important results of 11th-century Irish Church Reform, to Sigtrygg.[47] He went on to found Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin, which today is the oldest building in Dublin, but relatively young in comparison to the many monastic cathedrals in the rest of Ireland. Like many of the other coastal cathedrals in Ireland, it is of Hiberno-Norse origin. The cathedral, initially a wooden building, was rebuilt in stone in the 1180s following the arrival of the Anglo-Normans to Ireland, led by Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke.[2]

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Ó Corráin, p. 123
  2. ^ a b c Winn, p. 46
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Mac Manus, p. 278
  4. ^ a b c d e f Hudson, p. 83
  5. ^ "Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 821. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d "Chapter 153 – Kari goes abroad". Njal's Saga. sagadb.org. Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  7. ^ a b c d "Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 819. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  8. ^ a b c Hudson, p. 111
  9. ^ Etchingham, p. 181
  10. ^ a b c Hudson, p. 84
  11. ^ Hudson, p. 85
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hudson, p. 86
  13. ^ "Entry for AD 999 of the Annals of Ulster". Annals of Ulster. University College Cork. p. 745. Retrieved 16 March 2009.
  14. ^ Hudson, pp. 86–87
  15. ^ a b c Hudson, p. 87
  16. ^ a b c d e f Hudson, p. 95
  17. ^ "Part 10 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 745. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  18. ^ a b c d e Hudson, p. 94
  19. ^ MacManus, pp. 278–79
  20. ^ a b Ó Corráin, p. 129
  21. ^ a b c MacManus, p. 279
  22. ^ a b c "Chapter 154 – Gunnar Lambi's son's slaying". Njal's Saga. sagadb.org. Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  23. ^ a b MacManus, p280
  24. ^ "Chapter 155 – Of signs and wonders". Njal's Saga. sagadb.org. Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  25. ^ MacManus, pp. 279–80
  26. ^ a b Ó Corráin, p. 130
  27. ^ MacManus, p. 281
  28. ^ a b Hudson, p. 101
  29. ^ Hudson, p. 103
  30. ^ "Chapter 156 – Brian's battle". Njal's Saga. sagadb.org. Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  31. ^ a b c d Hudson, p. 104
  32. ^ "Part 12 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 793. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  33. ^ a b c Hudson, p. 108
  34. ^ . Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 799. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  35. ^ a b c d Hudson, p. 109
  36. ^ Hudson, pp. 109–10
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h Hudson, p. 110
  38. ^ a b "Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 815. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h Hudson, Benjamin T. "Sihtric (Sigtryggr Óláfsson, Sigtryggr Silkiskegg) (d. 1042)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25545. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  40. ^ "Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 825. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  41. ^ a b c "Part 14 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 831. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  42. ^ "Part 11 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 769. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  43. ^ "Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 823. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  44. ^ Hudson, p. 82
  45. ^ "Part 14 of the Annals of the Four Masters". Annals of the Four Masters. University College Cork. p. 843. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  46. ^ Richter, pp. 124–25
  47. ^ Richter, p. 125

References Edit

External links Edit

    Regnal titles
    Preceded by King of Dublin Succeeded by

    sigtrygg, silkbeard, sigtrygg, silkbeard, olafsson, also, sihtric, sitric, sitrick, irish, texts, sigtryg, sigtryggr, scandinavian, texts, hiberno, norse, king, dublin, possibly, restored, began, 1000, restored, 1000, abdicated, 1036, Ímair, dynasty, caught, a. Sigtrygg II Silkbeard Olafsson also Sihtric Sitric 1 and Sitrick in Irish texts or Sigtryg 2 and Sigtryggr 3 in Scandinavian texts was a Hiberno Norse king of Dublin possibly AD 989 994 restored or began 995 1000 restored 1000 and abdicated 1036 of the Ui Imair dynasty He was caught up in the abortive Leinster revolt of 999 1000 after which he was forced to submit to the King of Munster Brian Boru His family also conducted a double marriage alliance with Boru although he later realigned himself with the main leaders of the Leinster revolt of 1012 1014 He has a prominent role in the 12th century Irish Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh and the 13th century Icelandic Njal s Saga as the main Norse leader at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014 Sigtrygg SilkbeardKing of DublinReign989 995 1036PredecessorGluniairn Ivar of WaterfordSuccessorEchmarcach mac RagnaillBornc 970 DublinDied1042 aged 72 DublinSpouseSlaineDynastyUi ImairFatherOlaf CuaranMotherGormflaith ingen MurchadaSigtrygg s long reign spanned 46 years until his abdication in 1036 4 During that period his armies saw action in four of the five Irish provinces of the time In particular he conducted a long series of raids into territories such as Meath Wicklow Ulster and perhaps even the coast of Wales He also came into conflict with rival Norse kings especially in Cork and Waterford He went on a pilgrimage to Rome in 1028 and is associated with the foundation of Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin Although Dublin underwent several reversals of fortune during his reign on the whole trade in the city flourished He died in 1042 4 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Family 1 2 King of Dublin 1 2 1 First Leinster revolt against Brian Boru 1 2 2 Years between the revolts 1 2 3 Second Leinster revolt against Brian Boru 1 2 4 Reign after Clontarf 2 Issue and legacy 3 See also 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 External linksLife EditFamily Edit Sigtrygg was of Norse and Irish ancestry 2 He was a son of Olaf Cuaran also called Kvaran King of York and of Dublin and Gormflaith ingen Murchada 3 Gormflaith was the daughter of the King of Leinster Murchad mac Finn 5 and the sister of his successor King Mael Morda of Leinster 3 She had previously been married to the King of Meath and High King of Ireland Mael Sechnaill 3 the first of her three husbands She was a beautiful powerful and intriguing Irish woman 3 who according to the 13th century Icelandic Njal s saga was the fairest of all women and best gifted in everything that was not in her own power but it was the talk of men that she did all things ill over which she had any power 3 6 Sigtrygg s paternal half brother was Gluniairn Iron knee who ruled as King of Dublin from 980 to 989 An incident involving the ransom of one of Sigtrygg s sons late in his reign in which seven score British horse were mentioned in the list of demands 7 suggests that Dublin was one of the main ports for importing horses into 11th century Ireland and that Sigtrygg and his family may have been personally involved in animal husbandry 8 King of Dublin Edit nbsp A posthumous Sihtric coin from the British Museum minted at Dublin c 1050Sigtrygg may have succeeded his paternal half brother Gluniairn as king of Dublin in 989 4 but it is just as likely his rival Ivar of Waterford came to power in the city then 9 The Irish annals record little information about Sigtrygg his family or Dublin during these first five years of his reign 10 Benjamin Hudson claims this was because of the arrival of the future King of Norway Olaf Tryggvason who took up residence in Dublin for a few years after marrying Sigtrygg s sister Gytha 10 Tryggvason had met Gytha while raiding along the coasts of the Irish Sea 10 The presence of a powerful Viking leader in Dublin was a deterrent to Irish raids and Trygvason may have weakened Sigtrygg s foes by plundering them 11 Hudson argues that Tryggvason s return to Norway in 994 coincided with the temporary expulsion of Sigtrygg from Dublin by his rival Ivar of Waterford 12 Ivar may have already ruled there from 989 until forced out by Sigtrygg in 993 Much depends on the interpretation Either way Sigtrygg was back within a year In 995 he and his nephew Muirchertach Ua Congalaich attacked the church at Donaghpatrick in County Meath 12 In retaliation Mael Sechnaill entered Dublin and took the ring of Thor and the sword of Carlus 12 Sigtrygg then attacked Kells and Clonard in 997 12 In 998 Mael Sechnaill and the King of Munster Brian Boru forced Sigtrygg to recognise their lordship by giving hostages 12 Sigtrygg realised that Dublin s wealth made him a target and that his city needed powerful allies and walls 12 The Dublin countryside did not provide sufficient resources for competition against powerful Irish princes 12 Sigtrygg first allied with his maternal uncle Mael Morda mac Murchada King of the Ui Faelain of north Leinster 12 In 999 they defeated their cousin the King of Leinster Donnchad mac Domhnaill and imprisoned him in Dublin 12 First Leinster revolt against Brian Boru Edit Further information Battle of Glenmama Late in 999 the Leinstermen historically hostile to domination by either the Ui Neill overkings or the king of Munster allied themselves with the Norse of Dublin and revolted against Brian Boru 1 This provided the opportunity for Sigtrygg s second alliance with Mael Morda mac Murchada 12 Brian s forces inflicted a crushing defeat on the united Leinster Dublin army at the Battle of Glenmama and followed the victory with an attack on the city of Dublin 1 The 12th century Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh gives two accounts of the occupation Brian remained in Dublin from Christmas Day until Epiphany 6 January or from Christmas Day until St Brigid s Day 1 February 12 The later Annals of Ulster date the Battle of Glenmama to 30 December 999 13 while the Annals of Inisfallen date Brian s capture of the city to 1 January 1000 14 In any case in 1000 Brian plundered the city burned the Norse fortress and expelled Sigtrygg 1 According to the Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh Sigtrygg s flight from the city took him north first to the Ulaid and then to Aed of Cenel nEogain 15 Both tribes refused to help him 15 As Sigtrygg could find no refuge in Ireland he eventually returned submitted to Brian gave hostages and was restored to Dublin three months after Brian ended his occupation in February 1 12 In the meantime Sigtrygg may have temporarily turned pirate and been responsible for a raid on St David s in Wales 15 Brian s daughter by his first wife was married to Sigtrygg 3 and Brian in turn took Sigtrygg s mother the now three times married Gormflaith as his second wife 3 Years between the revolts Edit nbsp Inch Abbey Inis Cumhscraigh plundered by Sigtrygg in 1002Dublin enjoyed a sustained period of peace while Sigtrygg s men served in the armies of Brian 16 Sigtrygg never forgot the Ulaid s refusal of aid when he fled from Dublin and in 1002 he had his revenge when his soldiers served in Brian s campaign against the Ulaid and ravaged their lands 12 16 His fleet raided Ulster and he plundered Kilclief and Inis Cumhscraigh taking many prisoners from both 17 They served under Brian against the Ulaid again in 1005 and against the Northern Ui Neill in 1006 and 1007 16 Cenel Conaill the last of the Northern Ui Neill Kingdoms submitted in 1011 and Brian was formally recognised as High King throughout Ireland 16 A remembrance of Sigtrygg s reign during these years is preserved in the late medieval Icelandic Saga of Gunnlaug Serpent s Tongue 18 Only fragments survive of the verses in the Sigtryggsdrapa a drapa composed by the skald Gunnlaug Illugason while visiting Sigtrygg s court 18 The verses praise Sigtrygg for his royal ancestry and describe Dublin as a busy thriving port 18 Archaeological excavations of ships gold clothing and pieces for games from around this time seem to confirm the description 18 According to the prose Sigtrygg considered rewarding the poet with ships and gold but instead granted him a new suit of clothes 18 Second Leinster revolt against Brian Boru Edit Further information Battle of Clontarf nbsp The Viking settlements of Cork Limerick Waterford and Wexford Part of the Kingdom of Munster under the control of Boru The Kingdom of Dublin under the control of SigtryggSometime during the 1010s Brian Boru divorced Queen Gormflaith and she began to engineer opposition to the High King 19 Around 1012 relations between Brian and Leinster had become so strained that revolt broke out among the Leinstermen 20 Sigtrygg aligned himself with the forces of Mael Morda leader of the revolt and the chiefs Ua Ruairc Ua Neill and others 21 Together they defeated Brian s ally Mael Sechnaill near the town of Swords and Brian for the moment was unable to render assistance 21 Sigtrygg sent his son Oleif to lead a fleet south to Munster to burn the Viking settlement of Cork 16 The fleet also attacked Cape Clear crippling Brian s naval power which was concentrated in Cork 16 According to Njal s saga Gormflaith egged on her son Sigtrygg very much to kill King Brian 6 sending him to win the support of Earl Sigurd of Orkney and Brodir and ospak of Man at any price 21 Sigtrygg arrived in Orkney for Sigurd s Yule feast where he sat in a high seat between the two brothers in law Earl Sigurd of Orkney and Earl Gilli of the Southern Isles 6 The saga also records that Sigtrygg was very interested in the Burning of Njall THorgeirsson at Bergthorshvoll and what had happened since 6 Afterwards Sigtrygg bade Sigurd to go to war with him against Brian 22 Despite Sigurd s initial hesitance and against the advice of his men he eventually agreed to arrive in Dublin by Palm Sunday with all his men on the condition that if Brian was slain Sigurd would marry Gormflaith and become King of Ireland 22 23 Sigtrygg went next to Man where he also persuaded Brodir to be in Dublin by Palm Sunday 20 24 and he promised Brodir too that if successful he would be allowed marry Gormflaith and become King of Ireland the terms of this agreement were kept secret 25 ospak was dissatisfied with the arrangement 23 and refused to fight against so good a king 22 The two forces met at the Battle of Clontarf on Good Friday in 1014 a battle that claimed the lives of the main commanders on both sides Brian and his son Murchad on the Munster side and Mael Morda Sigurd and Brodir on the Leinster Norse side 26 According to Irish sources Sigtrygg did not take part in the battle but held his garrison in reserve in Dublin 27 The Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh records that Sigtrygg was able to observe the progress of the battle and the movement of the battle standards from the ramparts of his fortress 28 As the modern Irish medievalist historian Donnchadh o Corrain notes Sigtrygg wisely kept within the city and lived to tell the tale 26 Earlier Scandinavian sources the Orkneyinga saga Njal s saga and the Darradarljod composed soon after the battle contend that he did actually fight valiantly at Clontarf 28 The Darradarljod showing the persistence of paganism among the Vikings of Dublin describes the Valkyries as following the young king Sigtrygg into battle 29 Njal s Saga records that Sigtrygg was on the wing opposite ospak of Man for the whole battle and that ospak eventually put the king to flight 30 Reign after Clontarf Edit Immediately after Clontarf Sigtrygg s fortunes appear to have declined even though he emerged with his kingdom intact 31 Mael Sechnaill now again recognised as high king was undoubtedly the battle s main beneficiary 31 In 1015 plague struck Dublin and Leinster and Mael Sechnaill seized the opportunity to march south to burn Dublin s suburbs 31 While Sigtrygg was able to ally with Leinster for another attack on Meath in 1017 the alliance was dissolved when Sigtrygg blinded his cousin Broen Mael Morda s son and heir in Dublin 31 In 1018 Sigtrygg plundered Kells he carried off innumerable spoils and prisoners and slew many persons in the middle of the church 32 These captives would either have been ransomed or sold off into Dublin s lucrative slave trade 33 When Sigtrygg raided south in 1021 he was defeated at Delgany in County Wicklow 33 where the new King of Leinster Augaire mac Dunlainge made a dreadful slaughter of the foreigners in the Kingdom of Breifne 34 In 1022 the Dublin fleet sailed north against the Ulaid only to be destroyed in a naval battle against Niall mac Eochaid after which the Norse crews and ships were taken prisoner 33 According to the American medievalist historian Benjamin Hudson matters went from bad to worse for Sigtrygg after the death of Mael Sechnaill in 1022 35 The great Irish princes began to compete for the High Kingship and the political situation in Ireland became chaotic as there was no clear choice for supremacy 35 Accordingly Dublin became a prize for those who would rule Ireland and wanted the town s wealth to finance their ambitions 35 nbsp The medieval tower of the stone church of Ardbraccan County Meath in which Sigtrygg burned over 200 menHostages were taken from Sigtrygg by Flaithbertach Ua Neill King of Cenel nEogain and the Ui Neill and Donnchad mac Briain of Munster in 1025 and 1026 respectively in support of their bids for the high kingship 35 These hostages brought no security and Dublin was raided in 1026 by Niall mac Eocada of the Ulaid in revenge for the naval attack of 1022 36 Sigtrygg formed a new alliance with the men of Brega 37 In 1027 Sigtrygg s son Olaf joined Donnchad of Brega in a raid on Staholmock County Meath 37 Sigtrygg and Donnchad s army was defeated by the men of Meath under their king Roen Ua Mael Sechlainn 37 38 Sigtrygg rallied to the fight again at Lickblaw near Castlepollard Westmeath where Donnchad and Roen were slain 37 38 In 1029 Sigtrygg s son Olaf was taken prisoner by the new lord of Brega Mathghamhain Ua Riagain 7 Sigtrygg was forced to pay a ransom of 1 200 cows 140 British horses 60 ounces of gold and of silver the sword of Carlus the Irish hostages of Leinster and Leath Cuinn four hostages to Ua Riagain as a security for peace and the full value of the life of the third hostage 7 An additional 80 cows for word and supplication 7 were to be paid to the man who entreated for Olaf s release 8 The incident illustrates the importance of ransoming noble captives as a means of political manipulation increasing one s own revenues and exhausting the resources of one s foes 8 Sigtrygg s fortunes improved in the 1030s In 1030 he allied with the North Sea Emperor Cnut the Great and together their fleets raided Wales 39 A Dublin colony was established in Gwynedd and for the following years Sigtrygg was at the height of his power 39 In 1032 without allies Sigtrygg won a victory on the Boyne estuary of a type previously unseen by his dynasty for two decades against a coalition of three kingdoms 37 over 300 members of the Conailli the Ui Tortain and the Ui Meith were captured or killed at the Battle of Inbher Boinne 40 In 1035 he plundered the celebrated stone church of Ardbraccan in Meath burned 200 men inside and carried another 200 off into captivity 37 In revenge the church at Swords was plundered and burned by Conchobhar Ua Maeleachlainn 41 who took away cattle and captives 37 Meanwhile in a renewal of ancient feuds that same year Sigtrygg executed Ragnall King of Waterford in Dublin 41 Ragnall was the grandson of the Ivar Sigtrygg s earliest rival who had contested for Dublin decades before 37 Echmarcach mac Ragnaill King of the Isles forced Sigtrygg to abdicate in 1036 39 Sigtrygg died in exile at an unknown place in 1042 39 Issue and legacy Edit nbsp Christ Church Cathedral founded by Sigtrygg c 1028Sigtrygg married Brian Boru s daughter Slaine and they had one son Olaf d 1034 4 According to the Annals of the Four Masters Olaf was slain by the Saxons on his way on a pilgrimage to Rome 41 Olaf was survived by a daughter Ragnhild who was the mother of Gruffudd ap Cynan and from whom the Kings of Gwynedd were descended 4 Separately from Slaine Sigtrygg had five children Artalach d 999 Oleif d 1013 Godfrey d 1036 Gluniairn d 1031 and Cellach d 1042 4 39 The annals record the death of Oleif son of the lord of the foreigners who was killed in revenge for the burning of Cork 42 Gluniairn was killed by the people of South Brega in 1031 43 Godfrey was killed in Wales in 1036 by one Sitric son of Gluniairn as factionalism was common among Viking settlers this could have been the same Gluniairn as Sigtrygg s half brother thus making Godfrey and his killer cousins 44 Sigtrygg s daughter Cellach died in the same month as her father 45 Sigtrygg was also according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography a patron of the arts a benefactor of the church and an economic innovator 39 In the 990s he established Ireland s first mint in Dublin 39 He established a bishopric at Dublin and in 1028 he made a pilgrimage to Rome 39 46 It is thus possible to attribute the origins of the establishment of territorial bishoprics in Ireland on the Roman model one of the most important results of 11th century Irish Church Reform to Sigtrygg 47 He went on to found Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin which today is the oldest building in Dublin but relatively young in comparison to the many monastic cathedrals in the rest of Ireland Like many of the other coastal cathedrals in Ireland it is of Hiberno Norse origin The cathedral initially a wooden building was rebuilt in stone in the 1180s following the arrival of the Anglo Normans to Ireland led by Richard de Clare 2nd Earl of Pembroke 2 See also EditHistory of Ireland 800 1169 History of Dublin Church of IrelandFootnotes Edit a b c d e o Corrain p 123 a b c Winn p 46 a b c d e f g h Mac Manus p 278 a b c d e f Hudson p 83 Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 821 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c d Chapter 153 Kari goes abroad Njal s Saga sagadb org Retrieved 3 March 2009 a b c d Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 819 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c Hudson p 111 Etchingham p 181 a b c Hudson p 84 Hudson p 85 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hudson p 86 Entry for AD 999 of the Annals of Ulster Annals of Ulster University College Cork p 745 Retrieved 16 March 2009 Hudson pp 86 87 a b c Hudson p 87 a b c d e f Hudson p 95 Part 10 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 745 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c d e Hudson p 94 MacManus pp 278 79 a b o Corrain p 129 a b c MacManus p 279 a b c Chapter 154 Gunnar Lambi s son s slaying Njal s Saga sagadb org Retrieved 3 March 2009 a b MacManus p280 Chapter 155 Of signs and wonders Njal s Saga sagadb org Retrieved 3 March 2009 MacManus pp 279 80 a b o Corrain p 130 MacManus p 281 a b Hudson p 101 Hudson p 103 Chapter 156 Brian s battle Njal s Saga sagadb org Retrieved 3 March 2009 a b c d Hudson p 104 Part 12 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 793 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c Hudson p 108 Part 12 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 799 Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c d Hudson p 109 Hudson pp 109 10 a b c d e f g h Hudson p 110 a b Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 815 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c d e f g h Hudson Benjamin T Sihtric Sigtryggr olafsson Sigtryggr Silkiskegg d 1042 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25545 Subscription or UK public library membership required Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 825 Retrieved 10 March 2009 a b c Part 14 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 831 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Part 11 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 769 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Part 13 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 823 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Hudson p 82 Part 14 of the Annals of the Four Masters Annals of the Four Masters University College Cork p 843 Retrieved 10 March 2009 Richter pp 124 25 Richter p 125References EditEtchingham Colman North Wales Ireland and the Isles the Insular Viking zone in Peritia 15 2001 2002 145 187 Hudson Benjamin T 2005 Viking Pirates and Christian Princes Dynasty Religion and Empire in the North Atlantic Illustrated ed United States Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516237 0 MacManus Seumas 1921 The Story of the Irish Race A Popular History of Ireland Ireland The Irish Publishing Co ISBN 0 517 06408 1 o Corrain Donnchadh 1972 Ireland Before the Normans Ireland Gill and Macmillan Richter Michael 2005 Medieval Ireland The Enduring Tradition Revised illustrated ed Gill amp Macmillan ISBN 978 0 7171 3293 5 Winn Christopher 2007 I Never Knew that About Ireland Illustrated by Osawa Mai Illustrated ed Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 36880 7 External links EditNjal s SagaRegnal titlesPreceded byGluniairn Ivar of Waterford King of Dublin Succeeded byEchmarcach mac Ragnaill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sigtrygg Silkbeard amp oldid 1159277327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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