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LIST OF KINGS OF DáL RIATA

(Redirected from King of Dál Riata)
This is a 'List of the Kings of Dál Riata', a kingdom of uncertain origins which was located in Scotland and Ireland. Most kings of Dál Riata, along with later rulers of Alba and of Scotland, traced their descent from Fergus Mór mac Eirc, and even in the 16th century, James VI of Scotland called himself the "happie monarch sprung of Ferguse race".

Contents
Background
Kings of Dál Riata
Kings before the Battle of Mag Rath
Kings from Mag Rath to 741
Kings from the 740s onwards
Sources
References
External links
See also

Background


It is not until the middle of the 6th century that Irish annals plausibly report the deaths of kings of Dál Riata, with the death of Comgall mac Domangairt, c. 538-545, and of his brother Gabrán, c. 558-560. The last attested kings of Dál Riata are Fergus mac Echdach, brother and successor to Áed Find, whose death is reported in the Annals of Ulster in 781. It is thought that the original king-lists from which the High Medieval accounts were derived ended with Fergus. After Fergus the history of Dál Riata is very uncertain, althouhgh there is a report of the death in 792 of Donncoirce ("Dorm Corci, king of Dál Riata"), but of whom nothing more is known.
Dál Riata was divided into a number of kingroups or dynasties, called ''cenéla'', of which the Cenél nGabráin of Kintyre, who claimed descent from Gabrán mac Domangairt, and the Cenél Loairn, who claimed descent from Fergus Mór's son Loarn, dominated the kingship. Given the nature of early medieval genealogies, and the doubts expressed even by contemporary writers, such as the compiler of the Senchus fer n-Alban, it would be unwise to place too much reliance on such claims.
The annals are not entirely consistent in naming kings. For example, is there a real difference between a "king of Dál Riata" and a "lord of Dál Riata"? A possible source of confusion is that the neighbouring cruithne kingdom of Dál nAraide in Ulster was similar in name when latinised as 'Dalaradia', while Dál Riata became 'Dalriada', so that it is possible that some of the more obscure rulers may have been misattributed to Dál Riata. It has been proposed, but with little support, that the Irish part of Dál Riata had a separate existence from the Scottish part after the middle of the 7th century, so that one king ruled in Ireland while another ruled in Scotland.

Kings of Dál Riata


Kings before the Battle of Mag Rath

ReignRulerNameFamilyRemarks
Unknown'Loarn'Loarn mac EircSupposedly a son of ErcEponymous founder of the Cenél Loairn; claimed ancestry probable spurious
Unknown'Fergus Mór'Fergus Mór mac Eirc
Mac Nisse Mór
Son of ErcMac Nisse Mór is likely spurious; Annals of Tigernach report his death c. 501
Unknown'Domangart'Domangart mac Ferguso
Domangart Mac Nissi
Son of Fergus MórThe Annals of Innisfallen report the death of Domangart of Cenn Tíre c. 507; the patronymic Mac Nissi is probably a textual error
Died c. 540'Comgall'Comgall mac DomangairtSon of DomangartSaid to have reigned 35 years; multiple obits in the Annals of Ulster; eponymous ancestor of the Cenél Comgaill
Died c. 560'Gabrán'Gabrán mac DomangairtSon of DomangartHis death may be associated with Bridei son of Maelchon; duplicate obits in the Annals of Ulster; eponymous ancestor of the Cenél nGabráin
Died c. 574'Conall'Conall mac ComgaillCenél Comgaill; son of ComgallSaid to have given Iona to Saint Columba; the first king to have an entry in the Annals of Ulster other than an obit
Died c. 606'Áedán'Áedán mac GabráinCenél nGabráin; son of GabránKnown from Adomnán of Iona's ''Life of Saint Columba'' and from many entries in the Annals
Died c. 629 (after Connad Cerr)'Eochaid Buide'Eochaid Buide
Eochaid mac Áedáin
Cenél nGabráin; son of ÁedánKnown from Adomnán of Iona's ''Life of Saint Columba''
Died c. 629 (before Eochaid Buide)'Connad Cerr'Connad mac ConaillCenél Comgaill; son of ConallCo-ruler with Eochaid Buide whom he predeceased; defeated and killed in battle at Fid Eóin by Congal Cáech, king of the Ulaid
Died c. 642'Domnall Brecc'Domnall Brecc
Domnall mac Echdach
Cenél nGabráin; son of Eochaid BuideDefeated and killed in battle at Strathcarron by Eugein map Beli, king of Alt Clut
Unknown'Ferchar'Ferchar mac ConnaidCenél Comgaill; son of Connad CerrHis obit in the Annals of Ulster for 694 appears misplaced; according to the Duan Albanach he was king after his father, presumably jointly with Domnall Brecc

Kings from Mag Rath to 741

ReignRulerNameFamilyRemarks
Died c. 654'Dúnchad'Dúnchad mac Conaing
Dúnchad mac Dúbain
Cenél nGabráin; probably son of Conaing son of ÁedánPresumed descendants of Dúnchad appear frequently in the Annals
Died c. 660'Conall Crandomna'Conall Crandomna
Conall Crannamna
Conall mac Echdach
Cenél nGabráin; son of Eochaid Buide
Died c. 660 ?'Domangart'Domangart mac DomnaillCenél nGabráin; son of Domnall Brecc
Died c. 689'Máel Dúin'Máel Dúin mac ConaillCenél nGabráin; son of Conall
Died c. 696'Domnall Donn'Domnall Donn
Domnall mac Conaill
Cenél nGabráin; son of Conall
Died c. 697'Ferchar Fota'Ferchar the Tall
Ferchar mac Feredaig
Cenél Loairn ; a descendant in the seventh generation of LoarnKing of the Cenél Loairn and, for a short time, of Dál Riata
Unknown'Eochaid'Eochaid mac DomangairtCenél nGabráin; son of DomangartUnattested by the Annals and omitted from later genealogies but included in the Duan Albanach
Deposed c. 698'Ainbcellach'Ainbcellach mac FerchairCenél Loairn; son of Ferchar FotaDied 718 in battle against Selbach his brother
Died 700'Fiannamail'Fiannamail ua Dúnchado
Fiannamail mac h-ua Dúnchado
Cenél nGabráin ?; perhaps a grandson or great-grandson of the earlier Dúnchad son of ConaingIt is uncertain whether Fiannamail should be counted as a king of Dál Riata, or of Dál nAraidi; his possible sons Indrechtach and Conall died in battle in 741.
Died 707'Béc'Béc ua DúnchadoCenél nGabráin ?; probably a grandson or nephew of the earlier Dúnchad son of ConaingApparently king of the Cenél nGabráin
Died 721'Dúnchad'Dúnchad BecCenél nGabráin; unknown but a relationship with Fiannamail, Béc and the earlier Dúnchad mac Conaing is possibleKing of Kintyre, which is to say the Cenél nGabráin, from before 719 to 721
Abdicated 723'Selbach'Selbach mac FerchairCenél Loairn; son of Ferchar FotaAbdicated in favour of his son Dúngal and entered religion, died 730
Deposed as king of Dál Riata 726'Dúngal'Dúngal mac SelbaigCenél Loairn; son of SelbachProbably remained king of the Cenél Loairn until deposed in 733
726–733'Eochaid'Eochaid Angbad
Eochaid mac Echdach
Cenel nGabráin; son of EochaidA return to the Cenel nGabráin line
733–736'Muiredach'Muiredach mac AinbcellaigCenél Loairn; son of AinbcellachKing of the Cenél Loairn; Muiredach may have been the king of Dál Riata as well
Unknown'Alpín'Alpín mac EchdachUnknownAppears in the Duan Albanach; possibly a spurious intrusion
Unknown'Eógan'Eógan mac MuiredaigCenél Loairn; son of MuiredachKnown from some Scots chronicles; not named as king by the Duan Albanach; may have been king of the Cenél Loairn
Died 741'Indrechtach'Indrechtach mac FiannamailCenel nGabráin ?; presumably son of the earlier FiannamailIdenfication uncertain, killed at the battle of ''Forboros'', perhaps by the Picts of Óengus mac Fergusa; this may, however, have been a king of Dál nAraidi, but in this case his patronymic should be ''mac Lethlobair''

Kings from the 740s onwards

ReignRulerNameFamilyRemarks
c. 736–750 or later'Unknown kings'Dál Riata was under the control of the Picts from around 736 until at least 750, and perhaps later; no kings are known from this period, but it is likely that the Picts ruled Dál Riata through subject kings
Before 768–778'Áed Find'Áed mac EchdachCenel nGabráin; presumably a son of Eochaid son of EochaidLater genealogies make Áed Find the son of Domangart son of Domnall Brecc which is chronologically improbable, others have one Eochaid rather than the expected two
778–781'Fergus'Fergus mac EchdachCenel nGabráin; brother of Áed Find
Unknown'Eochaid'Eochaid mac Áeda FindCenel nGabráin; son of Áed FindNot included in the Duan Albanach, or in the Annals; known from later genealogies; probably an error for Eochaid mac Echdach
Died 792'Donncoirce'None knownUnknownObit in the Annals of Ulster; not included in the Duan Albanach or later genealogies
Unknown'CaustantínCaustantín mac FergusaNot certainly known, perhaps a descendant of the first Óengus mac FergusaKing of the Picts c. 792–820; included in the Duan Albanach but not generally supposed to have been a king in Dál Riata
c. 792–805'Unknown kings'No kings are known from this period
c. 805–807'Conall'Conall mac TaidgUnknownDeath reported in battle in Kintyre, presumed to be the first of the Conalls included in the Duan Albanach; reign approximate
c. 807–811'Conall'Conall mac ÁedáinUnknownKilled Conall mac Taidg, "another Conall" reigned four years according to the Duan Albanach; reign approximate
c. 811–835'Domnall'Domnall mac CaustantínSon of Caustantín mac FergusaA king named Domnall reigned twenty-four years according to the Duan Albanach; reign approximate
Unknown'ÓengusÓengus mac FergusaBrother of CaustantínKing of the Picts c. 820–834; included in the Duan Albanach but not generally supposed to have been a king in Dál Riata
Unknown'EóganánEóganán mac ÓengusaSon of ÓengusKing of the Picts c. 837–839; included in the Duan Albanach but not generally supposed to have been a king in Dál Riata
c. 835–839'Áed'Áed mac BoantaNone knownKilled in battle against Vikings alongside Eóganán mac Óengusa; a king Áed is named by the Duan Albanach
Unknown'Alpín 'Alpín mac EchdachCenel nGabráin; son of Eochaid son of Áed FindNot listed in the Duan Albanach or the Annals; known from later genealogies; no evidence that he was a king in Dál Riata and he is fathered on the spurious Eochaid mac Áeda Find
Unknown'Cináed'Cináed mac AilpínCenel nGabráin; son of AlpínKing of the Picts c. 843–858; not generally supposed that he was a king in Dál Riata
Unknown'Gofraid'Gofraid mac FergusaA king or prince of the AirgíallaAn entry in the late and generally less reliable Annals of the Four Masters for 835 (probably 839 AD) states that Gofraid was invited to come to Dál Riata by Cináed mac Ailpín; he may be related to the later Uí Ímair or be completely spurious

Sources


The main sources for the kings of Dál Riata include:

★ The Annals of Ulster

★ The Annals of Tigernach

★ The Senchus Fer n-Alban

★ The Synchronisms of Flann Mainstreach of Monasterboice

★ The Duan Albanach

Adomnán of Iona's ''Life of Saint Columba''

★ A variety of genealogies for later kings of Alba.
Less reliable sources may include:

★ The Annals of Innisfallen

★ The Chronicon Scotorum

★ The Annals of the Four Masters

★ The Annals of Clonmacnoise
Interpretation of these sources remains problematic. Many entries which appear to refer to Dál Riata lack context, many persons named lack patronyms or other identifying bynames. There are many disagreements among sources. Some entries have been amended and expanded at a later time.

References


''For primary sources, see also the articles mentioned above and'' 'External links' ''below''


★ Adomnán, ''Life of St Columba'', tr. & ed. Richard Sharpe. Penguin, London, 1995. ISBN 0-14-044462-9

Anderson, Alan Orr, ''Early Sources of Scottish History A.D 500–1286'', volume 1. Reprinted with corrections. Paul Watkins, Stamford, 1990. ISBN 1-871615-03-8

★ Bannerman, John, ''Studies in the History of Dalriada.'' Scottish Academic Press, Edinburgh, 1974. ISBN 0-7011-2040-1

★ Bannerman, John, "The Scottish Takeover of Pictland" in Dauvit Broun & Thomas Owen Clancy (eds.) ''Spes Scotorum: Hope of Scots. Saint Columba, Iona and Scotland.'' T & T Clark, Edinburgh, 1999. ISBN 0-567-08682-2

Broun, Dauvit, ''The Irish Identity of the Kingdom of the Scots in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries.'' Boydell, Woodbridge, 1999. ISBN 0-85115-375-5

★ Broun, Dauvit, "Pictish Kings 761–839: Integration with Dál Riata or Separate Development" in Sally M. Foster (ed.), ''The St Andrews Sarcophagus: A Pictish masterpiece and its international connections.'' Four Courts, Dublin, 1998. ISBN 1-85182-414-6

★ Sharpe, Richard, "The thriving of Dalriada" in Simon Taylor (ed.), ''Kings, clerics and chronicles in Scotland 500–1297.'' Fourt Courts, Dublin, 2000. ISBN 1-85182-516-9

External links



CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork


★ The 'Corpus of Electronic Texts' includes the ''Annals of Ulster'', ''Tigernach'', ''the Four Masters'' and ''Innisfallen'', the ''Chronicon Scotorum'', the ''Lebor Bretnach'' (which includes the ''Duan Albanach''), Genealogies, and various Saints' Lives. Most are translated into English, or translations are in progress

''Annals of Clonmacnoise'' at Cornell

See also



Kings of the Picts

Kings of Strathclyde

Kings of Scots

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