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2012, The March in the Islands of the Medieval West, eds. J. Ní Ghradaigh & E. O'Byrne
This contribution was written to provide an overview of medieval Irish written sources to scholars from other fields. It was submitted for publication in 2007 but as a result of publisher's delays it did not appear until almost a decade later. In 2012 the bibliography was updated and the version uploaded here is the revised version submitted to the publisher in April 2012. After further delays, it was finally published in 2012. Changes to the format of referencing introduced at the typesetting stage mean that it may be easy to locate references in this typescript. The published version should be cited.
This paper explores some evidence for links between Ireland and England, focussing in particular on the Fragmentary Annals of Ireland. Note: Proofs are uploaded here: to cite please refer to the final published version of the article.
2014, Medieval Dublin XIV
Perhaps the most enduring contribution which vikings made to Ireland was through their foundation of major coastal towns, most notably those at Dublin, Limerick, and Waterford. However, vikings also established smaller settlements which have generally received less attention.
See also Chapter 11 of my Ph.D thesis (available here) for more and updated information.
The identity, geography, and politics of the Gall-Ghàidheil have been re-visited by scholars in recent decades, principally through close contextual analyses of the Irish Annals. However, this scholarship has tended to steer clear of their literary representation, however sparse that is. This paper looks at the implications of their characterisation in the Middle Irish Airec Menman Airard Mac Coisse, and suggests that their association with merchants in that text may give an indication of their social status and economic role, and the possible prejudices of the author of that text.
Using word choice in medieval annals, it is possible to discern changes in native Irish attitudes towards Scandinavian raiders as they gradually settled in Ireland. In the early medieval Annals of the Four Masters and the Annals of Ulster, among others, references to the Vikings clearly shift from the Latin gentilibus to the Gaelic finn/dubhgallaibh, and for a single referent there is a clear change from 'heathen' and 'marauder' to the simple 'foreigner' in both languages. An examination of two different groups of Scandinavians in Dublin affirms the intentionality in these changes: historically, one was less violent and more easily assimilated than the other, which the wording reflects.
2017
2014
Please see THE VIKING ATTACK ON TOURS in 903 [found on this site] and Chapter 11 of my 2021 Ph.D thesis for a fuller assessment of some of these issues. This paper was written a decade ago and if I were to rewrite it now I would change a lot because I now have different opinions on several key issues. But I still hope that it is of some minimal interest. See: http://thewildpeak.wordpress.com/2014/11/06/ottars-story-a-dublin-viking-in-brittany-england-and-ireland-a-d-902-918/
2017, https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01943605
2016
Published in the 'Saga-Book' 40 of the VSNR 2016.
2015
The kings of East Anglia and Northumbria both died at the hands of the Great Heathen Army in the late 860s; one became a renowned martyr saint and one a villain. The latter, the Northumbrian Ælla, also became the antagonist in legends concerning the ancestors of the Uí Ímair, principal successors of the northern Great Army and leaders of the tenth-century Insular Norse. According to a previously neglected text, 'De Northumbria post Britannos', another of northern England’s great dynasties claimed descent from Ælla. The Eadwulfings of Bamburgh were based in northern Northumbria, and appear to have gained leadership of their political community in the late ninth or early tenth century. With the rival position held by the Uí Ímair in the south, it is possible that Ælla’s later reputation and associated legends arose as a bi-product of tenth-century political conflict.
2013, Literacy and Identity in Early Medieval Ireland
This chapter examines the role of the Church in helping to create and sustain an infrastructure of literacy in early medieval Ireland. It makes particular use of the early medieval Irish chronicles to identify literate ecclesiastics as well as their social and political contexts. Note that the appendices in the printed volume contain the informational database underlying the chapter.
2015, Limina: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies
The wide-ranging interests of the Scandinavians who controlled Dublin from 851, known as the dubh gall (and later the Uí Ímair), have been noted by some scholars. At various times they are thought to have controlled or exercised some form of over-lordship over the Kingdom of Northumbria, northern Wales, and southern Scotland, including the Kingdom of Strathclyde. Although evidence from present-day northern England and southern Scotland are often assessed separately, it is important to note that much of southern Scotland was part of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Northumbria up to c. 950 CE. It is argued in this paper that the political interests of Scandinavian kings of York (members of the dubh gall/Uí Ímair), often aligned with the Archbishop of York and the Community of St Cuthbert, explains much of the evidence for Scandinavian burial and settlement.
Albanus, an eponymous ancestor for the kingdom of Alba, provides an example of the extent to which the creation of an ethnic identity was accompanied by new ideas about origins, which replaced previous accounts. Through an analysis of the Historia Brittonum’s textual tradition and Welsh knowledge of early Roman history and medieval ethnic groups, this article establishes that Albanus was added to the Historia Brittonum in the late ninth or early tenth century as an ancestral figure for the new kingdom of Alba in northern Britain. This was potentially a result of shared political situations in Gwynedd, Alba (formerly Pictland) and Strathclyde in relation to Scandinavian power at this time, which encouraged contacts and the spread of Alba-based ideology to Gwynedd. The later development of this idea and its significance in Alba itself, Geoffrey of Monmouth's account and English claims to supremacy over Scotland are also traced.
2016, Maths Meets Myths: Quantitative Approaches to Ancient Narratives
The medieval Irish chronicles are documentary sources of the highest importance. They provide contemporary records of major political events from the late sixth century AD. Each entry is anchored in a wealth of place-name references and, literally, thousands of death notices, providing a dataset whose scale is suitable for the application of network theory. This chapter will take one prominent group from the chronicles as a case study, the literate elite who produced most of our sources. It will explore how network theory can enhance our understanding of them, and will also consider the extent to which their networks are mirrored in the literary sources in which they feature. How are their social networks depicted in narrative texts? Do these appear to be realistic or are they idealized? By considering one definable group, the literate elite, this chapter aims to provide a framework through which network theory can be more widely and usefully employed.
2018, The Cambridge History of Ireland
A discussion of the vikings in Ireland c.800-1050 focusing on non-narraive aspects.
The ‘Viking Age’ is well established in popular perception as a period of dramatic change in European history. The range of viking activities from North America to the Middle East has excited the interest of many commentators. Vikings are variously regarded as blood thirsty barbarians or civilised entrepreneurs; founders of nations or anarchic enemies. But how cohesive was the identity of the ‘Vikings’ and how did they see themselves? In recent years the answer to this question has been evaluated from a range of perspectives. Established paradigms (often situated within a nationalist framework of thought) have come under greater scrutiny and new ideas have entered the debate. This paper will review some trends in the historiography of viking ethnicities and cultural identities in the period 800–1000 AD. This overview also highlights the value of comparative analysis of human migrations to the field of Viking Studies.
2018, Quaestio Insularis
This article examines the slave trade through the lens of cultural interactions between different population groups in Britain and Ireland; it investigates how the resultant tensions impacted on their viewpoints of each other and, in particular, how their writers reported the taking and trading of slaves. This study will confine itself to the eleventh and twelfth centuries, when these tensions were heightened by conquests and the process of Europeanisation. The influence of these medieval tensions and perceptions on the way our available written sources discuss slavery must be considered. Viewpoints on the slave trade, and those involved in it, are especially foregrounded in source references to the trade being brought to an end. This article will critique the 'Viking' and 'Celtic' stereotypes of our sources, which have sometimes seeped into scholarship on the matter too. It will challenge the notion of Scandinavian-imported slavery, foisted upon Britain and Ireland, and analyse the biases of Anglo-Norman writers in their portrayals of 'Celtic' barbarians, particularly of Scottish forces at the Battle of the Standard in 1138.
In and around the 870s, Britain was transformed dramatically by the campaigns and settlements of the Great Army and its allies. Some pre-existing political communities suffered less than others, and in hindsight the process helped Scotland and England achieve their later positions. By the twelfth century, the rulers of these countries had partitioned the former kingdom of Northumbria. This thesis is about what happened in the intervening period, the fate of Northumbria’s political structures, and how the settlement that defined Britain for the remainder of the Middle Ages came about. Modern reconstructions of the era have tended to be limited in scope and based on unreliable post-1100 sources. The aim is to use contemporary material to overcome such limitations, and reach positive conclusions that will make more sense of the evidence and make the region easier to understand for a wider audience, particularly in regard to its shadowy polities and ecclesiastical structures. After an overview of the most important evidence, two chapters will review Northumbria’s alleged dissolution, testing existing historiographic beliefs (based largely on Anglo-Norman-era evidence) about the fate of the monarchy, political community, and episcopate. The impact and nature of ‘Southenglish’ hegemony on the region’s political communities will be the focus of the fourth chapter, while the fifth will look at evidence for the expansion of Scottish political power. The sixth chapter will try to draw positive conclusions about the episcopate, leaving the final chapter to look in more detail at the institutions that produced the final settlement..
This paper represents a preliminary effort at contextualising Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh within eleventh-century historical saga writing in other European countries. Published in Medieval Dublin XV (2016), 119-140
No Horns on Their Helmets? Essays on the Insular Viking Age
This paper is aimed at mapping important traits in a Hiberno-Norse identity. This is the main focus of the essay, but another important part is to problematize this using several theoretical approaches of which the main are identity, creolization and hybridization. The Hiberno-Norse culture being primarily an urban phenomenon, the thesis is delimited to the Hiberno-Norse towns with occasional comparisons to Scandinavia to see how the native Irish population influenced the invaders and how they gradually evolved into the Hiberno-Norse. Early on the Norse show signs of creolization that would ultimately lead to the creation of the Hiberno-Norse hybrid culture known from history and archaeology – an urban culture that show blended Norse and Irish features.
Reappraisal of the battle and its political and diplomatic consequences. Examination of the political and military crisis of 939-943.
2017, Melbourne Historical Journal
The 927 AD conquest of Scandinavian Northumbria by the ascendant Anglo-Saxon king, Æthelstan, seems a straightforward action of military annexation. Yet Æthelstan's actions, both leading into, and subsequent to, his annexation of York, demonstrate a nuanced strategy of assimilation of which military dominance formed only a part. Examining chronicle accounts of Æthelstan's reign, alongside a key royal diploma, numismatics, and archaeology, this paper argues that the Anglo-Saxon king's intent was not to establish hegemony over Viking York through force and subsequent occupation alone. Rather, Æthelstan wielded a combination of military power and strategies of social integration to bring the Scandinavian north into his developing English kingdom as a functionally homogenised territory.
In this essay, I examine the similarities between the Lake District in England and Iceland. Both places have tales of a Norse past and settlement, but these settlements were much more closely linked than has previously been discussed. Using place-name studies, I was able to compare almost identical names in both Iceland and the Lake District. I used some of the essential work of Gillian Fellows-Jensen, as well as newer scholarship by Ryan Mark Foster and Martina Domines Veliki to establish historical and onomastic links. Both locations share a distant Norse background with Ireland, the Hebrides, and the Isle of Man. Though the Lake District has very little documentary evidence, especially in comparison with Iceland, using place-names, contemporary sources and Landnámabók, I was able to connect activity in Irish Sea to the settlement period of Iceland. What first alerted me to these similarties was W.G. Collingwood’s nineteenth century work, A Pilgrimage to the Saga-steads of Iceland. Hailing from the Lake District, Collingwood visited Iceland to venture through the Icelandic landscape and to witness firsthand the farms and features the sagas described. In his account, he often compares parts of the Icelandic countryside to landscape features back in the Lake District. Literary tourism was originally born in the Lake District as people followed in the footsteps of Sir Walter Scott and William Wordsworth. This literary tourism that Collingwood brought to Iceland, however, was revolutionary in transforming how people interacted with the sagas and with the Icelandic landscape. This study aims at answering some questions as to why some Norse place-names went out of use in Iceland and how two very different places were eventually defined by their later literary output.
2023, Dark Age Arthurian Books
Notes to the second edition. This work has remained popular since it was first published in 2011, and so a decision was made to update and improve it. This current edition has been re-edited, and re-formatted, correcting the typography and layout. Extra discussions, analysis and research have been included to reflect and reference works published in the intervening years since 2011. Some large expansion and discussion to the text occurs in the chapters dealing with the material in the Lebor Bretnach, Ballymote version, concerning the ‘Miracles of Cairnech’, including more background material on Cairnech himself, and in the chapter on Aided Muirchertaig Meic Erca where further discussions on the threefold death and dating of the work occur. A major improvement is in the addition of the Irish language texts of both the above stories which are laid alongside the translations. This has meant that those translations have been improved, corrected and missing parts restored. Minor additions, editing and corrections occur in all the other chapters. Also included is a map of Ireland and extra images to supplement the work. This edition therefore contains nearly fifty extra pages compared to the first edition, with reference to several more academic works, and a brand-new cover design. Were the legends of King Arthur influenced by the Irish tales of the hero Mac Erca? After four years of research and the translation of ancient Irish manuscripts, the forgotten story of the Irish Arthur can now be introduced and revealed for the first time in hundreds of years. From long forgotten manuscripts this book has pieced together a tale that will astound those seeking further research on the origins of King Arthur. Most of this material has never been seen or read before, with much of it newly translated into English for the first time, both narrative prose and ancient poetry.
2012, Unpublished MPhil thesis, University of Cambridge
The paper compares and contrasts Kaupang and Dublin as two early Viking Age towns. While the importance of Kaupang as a permanent settlement and active trading partner throughout the Scandinavian trade network has only just begun to be understood, Dublin has primarily been understood as an Irish town founded by Scandinavians instead of as a Scandinavian town that gradually became an Irish city. Through the application of central place and network theory, I posit that both served as major nodal points within a well-connected intra- and inter-regional long-distance Scandinavian trade network. Using archaeological field reports, contemporary primary source material, and secondary interpretation, I will examine the two sites side-by-side in order to discuss the key aspects of each town, including chronological history, the physical layouts of the sites and the buildings that were present, the monetary systems in place, the nature of their imports and exports, and the different peoples who inhabited them. In this way, I will reach my conclusion as to why Kaupang failed and Dublin survived.
2013, D.M. Hadley and L. Ten Harkle (eds), Everyday Life in Viking 'Towns': Social Approaches to Viking Age Towns in Ireland and England c.850-1100.