Brian Boru
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Brian Boru | |
---|---|
High King of Ireland | |
Reign | 1002 – 1014 |
Predecessor | Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill |
Successor | Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill (restored) |
King of Munster | |
Reign | 978–1014 |
Predecessor | Máel Muad mac Brain |
Successor | Dúngal mac Máelfothartaig Hua Donnchada |
Born | ca. 941 Kincora, Killaloe, County Clare, Munster |
Died | 23 April 1014 Clontarf, Dublin, Leinster |
Consort | Mór Echrad Gormflaith Dub Choblaig |
Issue | Murchad Conchobar Flann Tadc Donnchad Domhnall Kerthialfad (adopted) Sadb Bé Binn Sláine |
Father | Cennétig mac Lorcáin |
Mother | Bé Binn inion Urchadh |
Brian Boru (Template:Lang-sga; Template:Lang-mga; modern Template:Lang-ga; c. 941 – 23 April 1014) was an Irish king who ended the domination of the High Kingship of Ireland by the Uí Néill. Brian built on the achievements of his father, Cennétig mac Lorcain, and especially his elder brother, Mathgamain, Brian first made himself King of Munster, then subjugated Leinster, eventually becoming High King of Ireland. He was the founder of the O'Brien dynasty, and is widely regarded as one of the most successful and unifying monarchs in medieval Ireland.
With a population of under 500,000 people, Ireland had over 150 kings, with greater or lesser domains.[2] The Uí Néill king Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill, abandoned by his northern kinsmen of the Cenél nEógain and Cenél Conaill, acknowledged Brian as High King at Athlone in 1002. In the decade that followed, Brian campaigned against the northern Uí Néill, who refused to accept his claims, against Leinster, where resistance was frequent, and against the Norse-Gaelic Kingdom of Dublin.
Brian's hard-won authority was seriously challenged in 1013 when his ally Máel Sechnaill was attacked by the Cenél nEógain king Flaithbertach Ua Néill, with the Ulstermen as his allies. This was followed by further attacks on Máel Sechnaill by the Dubliners under their king Sihtric Silkbeard and the Leinstermen led by Máel Mórda mac Murchada. Brian campaigned against these enemies in 1013. In 1014, Brian's armies confronted the armies of Leinster and Dublin. The resulting Battle of Clontarf saw Brian killed, his army nonetheless victorious against the Leinstermen and Norsemen. The battle is widely lauded as an instrumental moment in Irish history, and is well known in popular memory.
Brian was well regarded by contemporary chroniclers. The Norse-Gaels and Scandinavians also produced works mentioning Brian, including Njal's Saga, the Orkneyinga Saga, and the now-lost Brian's Saga. Brian's war against Máel Mórda and Sihtric was to be inextricably connected with his complicated marital relations, in particular his marriage to Gormlaith, Máel Mórda's sister and Sihtric's mother, who had been in turn the wife of Amlaíb Cuarán, king of Dublin and York, then of Máel Sechnaill, and finally of Brian.
Family Background
He was one of the 12 sons of Cennétig mac Lorcáin (d. 951), king of Dál gCais and king of Tuadmumu (Thomond), modern County Clare, then a sub-kingdom in the north of Munster. Cennétig was described as rígdamna Caisil, meaning that he was either heir or candidate ("king material") to the kingship of Cashel or Munster,[3] although this might be a later interpolation. Brian's mother was Bé Binn inion Urchadh, daughter of Urchadh mac Murchadh (d. 945), king of Maigh Seóla in west Connacht.[4][3] That they belonged to the Uí Briúin Seóla may explain why he received the name Brian, which was rare among the Dál gCais.[3]
Brian's family were descended from the Ui Tairdelbach branch of the Dal gCais (or Deis Tuisceart). This branch had recently taken power from the more powerful Ui Óengusso branch which had traditionally supplied the Kings of the Dal gCais. This power shift occurred after the death of Ui Óengusso King Rebechan Mac Mothla who died as King of the Dal gCais in 934. The sons of Brian's grandfather Lorcan seized the opportunity and took power from the rival branch, with Brian's father Cennétig being the most successful of these. His father was the first King of the Dal gCais to lead an army beyond his own territory and lead an expedition as far north as Athlone. By his death in 951 had been acknowledged as "King of Tuadmumu".[5] His brother Mathgamain built on these achievements and was the first to capture Cashel and become King of Munster.
Early life
Brian was born at Kincora, Killaloe, a town in the region of Tuadmumu.[3] Brian's posthumous cognomen "Bóruma" (anglicised as Boru) may have referred to "Béal Bóruma", a fort north of Killaloe, where the Dál gCais held sway.[4][3][6] Another explanation, though possibly a late (re-)interpretation, is that the nickname represented Old Irish bóruma "of the cattle tribute", referring to his capacity as a powerful overlord.[4]
As the youngest of 12 brothers Brian was highly unlikely to be heir to his father's throne. When he was young he was sent to a monastery to study Latin and the history of Ireland. However when he was 10 years old, he received news that his father had been killed in battle with the Vikings of Limerick, and he was brought home.[7]
According to a biography of Brian, he once witnessed a raid on a Dal gCáis fort by the Vikings of Limerick. The fort was located on the banks of the River Shannon, allowing the vikings to sail up the river from Limerick to attack it. According to the story, Brian Mathgamain and another older brother were up on a hill or high ground nearby the fort tending to a herd of cattle. While they were there, they saw the raid from the mountainside after hearing screams and seeing smoke in the sky. They rushed down to the town, only to find the Vikings had already left. The settlement was burnt and looted. Brian's mother was killed as were several of Brian's brothers who were defending the town, along with many of townspeople. This event horrified Brian and would have a lasting impact on him.[7]
The River Shannon served as an easy route by which raids could be made against the provinces of Connacht and Meath. Both Brian's father, Cennétig mac Lorcáin, and his older brother Mathgamain conducted river-borne raids, in which the young Brian would undoubtedly have participated. This was probably the root of his appreciation for naval forces in his later career. Thus an important influence upon the Dalcassians was the presence of the Hiberno-Norse city of Limerick on an isthmus around which the Shannon River winds (known today as King's Island or the Island Field). The Norse had made many a raid themselves from the Shannon, and the Dalcassians likely benefited from some interaction with them, from which they would have been exposed to innovations such as superior weapons and ship design, all factors that may have contributed to their growing power.
When their father died, the kingship of Tuadmumu passed to Brian's older brother, Mathgamain, and, when Mathgamain was killed in 976, Brian replaced him. Subsequently, he became the king of the entire kingdom of Munster.[8]
Reign of Mathgamain
In 964, Brian's older brother, Mathgamain, claimed control over the entire province of Munster by capturing the Rock of Cashel, capital of the ancient Eóganachta, the hereditary overlords or High Kings of Munster, but who in dynastic strife and with multiple assassinations had weakened themselves to the point they were now impotent. Earlier attacks from both the Uí Néill and Vikings were also factors. This situation allowed the illegitimate (from the Eóganacht perspective) but militarized Dál Cais to attempt to seize the provincial kingship. Mathgamain was never fully recognized and was opposed throughout his career in the 960s and 970s by Máel Muad mac Brain, a semi-outsider from the Cashel perspective but still a legitimate Eóganacht claimant from far south Munster.
In addition to Máel Muad, the Norse king Ivar of Limerick was a threat and may have been attempting to establish some overlordship in the province or a region of it himself, with the Cogad Gaedel re Gallaib even asserting he actually achieved this until routed by Mathgamain and Brian in the celebrated Battle of Sulcoit in 967.
Initially, Mathgamain had made peace with the Norse of Limerick. However Brian was eager to avenge the deaths of his family members at the hands of the Vikings, and deserted with a band of his followers and launched a guerilla campaign against the Vikings from the mountains of Munster. They attacked Viking forts and patrols and survived with whatever food and weapons they found. Their attacks were successful in weakening the Vikings, but casualties began to mount and according to writings by Brian's scribe, just 15 men remained. However, at this point Mathgamain, inspired by the courage of his younger brother, decided to attack the Vikings with Brian and drive them from Limerick and Munster once and for all.[7]
They gathered an army of kings from all over Munster, including their former enemy Maél Muad. They ambushed and routed the Norse at the Battle of Sulcoit. They followed up their victory by looting and burning Limerick. They killed every man of fighting age and enslaved the rest of the population.
This was the first of three battles which highlighting Brian's career. This victory was not decisive and eventually there grew up a brief alliance of sorts between Mathgamain, Máel Muad and others to drive the Norse "soldiers" or "officials" out of Munster and destroy their Limerick fortress in 972.[9] The two Gaelic claimants were soon back to fighting and the fortuitous capture of Mathgamain in 976 by Donnubán mac Cathail allowed him to be effortlessly dispatched or murdered by Máel Muad, who would now rule as king of Cashel for two years.
Early Reign in Munster
The Dál Cais remained a powerful force and Brian quickly proved to be as fine a commander of armies as his brother. After first dispatching the already much weakened Ivar in 977, he challenged Máel Muad in 978 and defeated him in the fateful Battle of Belach Lechta, after which all the Eóganachta were no longer viable at the provincial level and Brian and the Dál Cais now enjoyed the overlordship, although not the traditional kingship of the province, which was based on lineage. Either soon before or soon after his victory over Máel Muad, Brian routed Donnubán and the remainder of the Norse army in the Battle of Cathair Cuan, there probably slaying the last of Ivar's sons and successor Aralt.
Following the battle, Imar, rule of governor of the city of Limerick who was loyal to Ivar, fled the city by ship down the River Shannon towards the estuary, relentlessly pursued by Brian. Also with Imar were his two sons, Donnuban and hundreds of other Vikings. They hid in a monastery on Scattery Island, not expecting Brian to attack on sacred ground.[10]
However Brian, still in a rage over the death of his brother, landed on the island, massacred every Viking in the monastery and desecrated the church. This marked the end of any chance of further successful Norse attacks on Munster as most of the Viking leadership and army had been slaughtered.[10]
However, he then allowed some of the Norse to remain in their settlement, but they were wealthy and now central to trade in the region, particularly the slave trade, and possessed a fleet of great value, which Brian would utilise in his later naval expeditions.[10]
Cian, the son of his brother Mathgamain's sworn enemy Máel Muad, later became a loyal ally of Brian and served under him in a number of campaigns. According to some accounts Cian later married one of Brian's daughters, Sadbh (died 1048).[11]
Clashes with High King
Having established unchallenged rule over his home Province of Munster, Brian turned to extending his authority over the neighboring provinces of Leinster to the east and Connacht to the north. By doing so, he came into conflict with High King Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill whose power base was the Province of Meath.
For the next fifteen years, from 982 to 997, High King Máel Sechnaill repeatedly led armies into Leinster and Munster, while Brian, like his father and brother before him, led his naval forces up the Shannon to attack Connacht and Meath on either side of the river. He suffered quite a few reverses in this struggle, but appears to have learned from his setbacks. He developed a military strategy that would serve him well throughout his career: the coordinated use of forces on both land and water, including on rivers and along Ireland's coast. Brian's naval forces, which included contingents supplied by the Hiberno-Norse cities that he brought under his control, provided both indirect and direct support for his forces on land. Indirect support involved a fleet making a diversionary attack on an enemy in a location far away from where Brian planned to strike with his army. Direct support involved naval forces acting as one arm in a strategic pincer, the army forming the other arm.[13]
The war began in 982, when Brian was campaigning against the Kingdom of Osraige. With Munster undefended, Maél Sechnaill attacked the Dál gCáis, destroying the sacred tree of Adair, under which many of the chiefs of the Dál gCáis had been crowned, including Brian's father Cénnetig, his brother Mathgamain and Brian himself. In response Brian led an army into Westmeath where he plundered the land.[14]
Mael Sechnaill launched a counteroffensive into Munster and defeated the Dál gCáis, killing around 600 men, including Brian's uncle. There was a period of relative peace between the two afterwards for about nine years, with Brian continuing to campaign elsewhere as he attempted to expand his power in the south.[14]
Then in 993, Brian, now in control of much of Munster and gaining ground in Leinster, and unable to make significant progress against the High King on land, decided to utilise his naval superiority to attack Mael Sechnaill. His fleet sailed up the Shannon and invaded the Kingdom of Breifne, in what is now counties Leitrim and Cavan. In doing this, he put pressure on the High King as he was now open to attack from both north and south.[14]
In 996 Brian finally managed to control the province of Leinster, which may have been what led Máel Sechnaill to reach a compromise with him in the following year. Brian sailed to Bleanphuttoge, on the shores of Lough Ree in County Westmeath where the agreement was signed between the two kings.[15] By recognising Brian's authority over Leth Moga, that is, the Southern Half, which included the Provinces of Munster and Leinster (and the Hiberno-Norse cities within them), Máel Sechnaill was simply accepting the reality that confronted him and retained control over Leth Cuinn, that is, the Northern Half, which consisted of the Provinces of Meath, Connacht, and Ulster.
Precisely because he had submitted to Brian's authority, the King of Leinster was overthrown in 998 and replaced by Máel Mórda mac Murchada. Given the circumstances under which Máel Mórda had been appointed, it is not surprising that he launched an open rebellion against Brian's authority. With Leinster in rebellion, the kingdoms of both Brian and Mael Sechnaill were threatened, and thus they decided to briefly sideline their own conflict to defeat Leinster.
Brian assembled the forces of Munster and Sechnaill the forces of Meath. Meanwhile, Mael Morda received support from the Viking king of Dublin, Sigtrygg Silkbeard, and their combined forces marched against the High King in Meath. They met the combined forces of Brian and Mael Sechnaill at Glenmama. All accounts agree it was a particularly fierce and bloody encounter, with Brian's forces emerging victorious. Just like after the Battle of Sulcoit decades later, Brian's forces followed up their victory by capturing and sacking the enemy's city.[16]
Brian assembled the forces of the Province of Munster with the intention of laying siege to the Hiberno-Norse city of Dublin, which was ruled by Máel Mórda's ally and cousin, Sigtrygg Silkbeard. Together Máel Mórda and Sigtrygg determined to meet Brian's army in battle rather than risk a siege. Thus, in 999, the opposing armies fought the Battle of Glenmama. The Irish annals all agree that this was a particularly fierce and bloody engagement, although claims that it lasted from morning until midnight, or that the combined Leinster-Dublin force lost 4,000 killed are open to question. In any case, Brian followed up his victory, as he and his brother had in the aftermath of the Battle of Sulcoit thirty-two years before, by capturing and sacking the enemy's city.
Once again Brian opted for reconciliation; he requested Sigtrygg to return and resume his position as ruler of Dublin, giving Sigtrygg the hand of one of his daughters in marriage, just as he had with the Eoganacht King, Cian. It may have been on this occasion that Brian married Sigtrygg's mother and Máel Mórda's sister Gormflaith, the former wife of Máel Sechnaill.
Struggle for Ireland
Brian made it clear that his ambitions had not been satisfied by the compromise of 997 when, in the year 1000, he led a combined Munster-Leinster-Dublin army in an attack on High King Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill's home province of Meath. The struggle over who would control all of Ireland was renewed. Máel Sechnaill's most important ally was the King of Connacht, Cathal mac Conchobar mac Taidg (O'Connor), but this presented a number of problems. The provinces of Meath and Connacht were separated by the Shannon River, which served as both a route by which Brian's naval forces could attack the shores of either province and as a barrier to the two rulers providing mutual support for each other. Máel Sechnaill came up with an ingenious solution; two bridges would be erected across the Shannon. These bridges would serve as both obstacles preventing Brian's fleet from traveling up the Shannon and a means by which the armies of the provinces of Meath and Connacht could cross over into each other's kingdoms.
The Annals state that, in the year 1002, Máel Sechnaill surrendered his title to Brian, although they do not say anything about how or why this came about. The Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh provides a story in which Brian challenges High King Máel Sechnaill to a battle at the Hill of Tara in the province of Meath, but the High King requests a month-long truce so that he can mobilise his forces, which Brian grants him. Máel Sechnaill fails to rally the regional rulers who are nominally his subordinates by the time the deadline arrives, and he is forced to surrender his title to Brian.
There have been some doubts expressed about this explanation, given Brian's style of engaging in war; if he had found his opponent at a disadvantage it is most likely he would have taken full advantage of it rather than allowing his enemy the time to even the odds. Also, given the length and intensity of the struggle between Máel Sechnaill and Brian, it seems unlikely that the High King would surrender his title without a fight. It is generally accepted that in 1002 Brian became the new High King of Ireland.
High Kingship
Brian, now in his 60s, would spend the next decade or so of his life subjugating and accepting the submissions of the last of the lesser kingdoms and regions who had not already submitted to him. These campaigns included two full circuits of the island in 1005 and 1006, demonstrating his determination and energy despite his age.[17]
Unlike some who had previously held the title, Brian intended to be High King in more than name. To accomplish this he needed to impose his will upon the regional rulers of the only province that did not already recognise his authority, Ulster. The kingdoms of the Northern Uí Néill and Ulaid were some of the most powerful in Ireland, and it took Brian considerable time and resources to subdue them.[18]
Ulster Campaigns
Ulster's geography presented a formidable challenge. There were three main routes by which an invading army could enter the province, and all three favoured the defenders. Brian first had to find a means of getting through or around these defensive choke points and then he had to subdue the fiercely independent regional Kings of Ulster. It took Brian ten years of campaigning to achieve his goal, which, considering that he could and did call on all of the military forces of the rest of Ireland, indicates how formidable the Kings of Ulster were. [18]
Brian received naval support throughout his northern campaigns from Sigtryyg Silkbeard as he was eager to gain revenge against the Ulaid for when they refused to assist him after he was forced out of his kingdom of Dublin by Brian, forcing Sigtrygg to return to Dublin and submit to him.[18]
Brian was also greatly helped by the fact that two years before his first campaign in Ulster, in the year 1003, the brutal battle of Craeb Telcha had taken place between the Northern Uí Néill and the Ulaid, in which the King of the Cenél Eoghain and the Uí Neill was killed and most of the Ulaid royal bloodline was wiped out, with the Uí Néill gaining victory. This then led to a bloody war of succession within and between the clans of the Ulaid, and together with further attacks from the Uí Néill, led to the kingdom being severely weakened. Brian accepted the submission of the Cenel Eoghain king in 1005 and later Brian accepted the submission of many of the Ulaid clans at a sacred Ulaid site, Emain Macha.[18]
However Flaithbertaigh Ua Néill, King of the Northern Uí Néill and of the Cenél Eoghan, although having already submitted to Brian, seemed to have his own agenda. He was known for his continued agression against his neigbours despite having already submitted to Brian. In 1005 , after Brian had departed, he attempted to exert his over lordship over the Ulaid, and seemingly wanted to punish them for submitting to Brian, to which the Uí Néill were vehemently opposed. He attacked the kingdom, killing several kings and princes of the Ulaid. He also took several hostages.[18]
This caused Brian to return in 1006 and again in 1007 to deal with Flaithbertach. On the latter occasion he removed the hostages of the Ulaid from Flaithbertach's custody and took them into his own custody (according to the Annals of Inisfallen, Brian had to forcefully take the hostages).[19] Flaithbertaigh again submitted, and also married one of Brian's daughters, Bé Binn. But he was not finished with his aggressive campaigns.[18]
In the year 1009, Flaithbertaigh blinded and then executed the King of the Cenél Chonaill. Later that year he would also launch raids in the Midlands going as far south as the River Boyne. This led to Brian returning yet again, this time taking hostages from the Cenél Eoghain back to his home in Kincora, finally gaining the proper submission of Flaithbertaigh.[18]
Flaithbertaigh would then take part in campaigns against the Cenél Chonaill in 1011 alongside Brian's sons Murchad and Domnall. However they were unsuccessful in gaining the submission of the Cenél Chonaill. Brian proceeded to then personally lead a second invasion later that year, this time successfully subjugating and receiving the submission of the Cenél Chonaill. While Flaithbertaigh would continue attacking the Ulaid and Cenél Chonaill in late 1011 and in 1012, he was no longer of any threat to Brian.[18]
Once again, it was his coordinated use of forces on land and at sea that allowed him to triumph; while the rulers of Ulster could bring the advance of Brian's army to a halt, they could not prevent his fleet from attacking the shores of their kingdoms. Once Brian entered the province of Ulster, he systematically defeated each of the regional rulers who defied him, forcing them to recognise him as their overlord.
It was during this process that Brian pursued an alternative means of consolidating his control, not merely over the province of Ulster, but over Ireland as a whole. In contrast to its structure elsewhere, the Church in Ireland was centred, not around the bishops of dioceses and archbishops of archdioceses, but rather around monasteries headed by powerful abbots who were members of the royal dynasties of the lands in which their monasteries resided. Among the most important monasteries was Armagh, located in the Province of Ulster.
Brian's advisor, Maelsuthain O'Carroll, documented in the 'Book of Armagh' that, in the year 1005, Brian donated 22 ounces of gold to this monastery and declared that Armagh was the religious capital of Ireland, to which all other monasteries should send the funds they collected. This was a clever move, for the supremacy of the monastery of Armagh would last only so long as Brian remained the High King. Therefore, it was in the interest of Armagh to support Brian with all their wealth and power.
Brian is not referred to in the passage from the 'Book of Armagh' as the 'Ard Rí' —that is, High-King— but rather he is declared "Imperator Scottorum," or "Emperor of the Gaels".
Though it is only speculation, it has been suggested that Brian and the Church in Ireland were together seeking to establish a new form of kingship in Ireland, one that was modelled after the kingships of England and France, in which there were no lesser ranks of regional kings – simply one king who had (or sought to have) power over all in a unitary state. In any case, whether as High King or Emperor, by 1011 all of the regional rulers in Ireland acknowledged Brian's authority. No sooner had this been achieved than it was lost again.
Rebellion in Leinster
Máel Mórda mac Murchada of Leinster had only accepted Brian's authority grudgingly, and in 1012 he rose in rebellion. The Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh relates a story in which one of Brian's sons insults Máel Mórda, which leads him to declare his independence from Brian's authority and attack his neighbours.
Another possible reason was that the Kings of Leinster and Dublin believed Maél Sechnaill was weak and that the Kingdom of Meath was vulnerable. This was because of Flaithbertaigh Uí Néill, King of the Cenél Eoghain and the Northern Uí Néill, was again becoming troublesome for Brian. In 1013, he raided the Midlands, bringing him into direct conflict with Maél Sechnaill who was the King of Meath. The two armies met near Kells, but Maél Sechnaill retreated for unknown reasons. This led to the belief in Leinster that Meath was weak and vulnerable and was open to attack, which would also weaken Brian if they could knock one of his allies out of the conflict.[18]
Whatever the actual reason was, Máel Mórda sought allies with which to defy the High King. He found one in Flaithbertach Uí Neill in Ulster who had only recently submitted to Brian. Together they attacked the province of Meath (again), where the former High King Máel Sechnaill sought Brian's help to defend his kingdom.[18]
In 1013 Brian led a force from his own province of Munster and from southern Connacht into Leinster; a detachment under his son, the Prince Murchad ravaged the southern half of the province of Leinster for three months. The forces under Murchad and Brian were reunited on 9 September outside the walls of Dublin. The city was blockaded by Brian's fleet, but it was the High King's army that ran out of supplies first, so that Brian was forced to abandon the siege and return to Munster around Christmas.
Battle of Clontarf
Máel Mórda was aware that the High King would return to Dublin in 1014 to try once more to defeat him. He may have hoped that by defying Brian, he could enlist the aid of all the other regional rulers. If so, he was sorely disappointed. The province of Connacht and most of the province of Ulster failed to support either side of the conflict, with the exception of a Flaithbertach Ua Néill of the Northern Uí Néill who sent troops to Máel Mórda. His inability to obtain troops from any rulers in Ireland, may explain why Máel Mórda sought support from rulers outside Ireland. He instructed his subordinate and nephew, Sigtrygg, the ruler of Dublin, to travel overseas to enlist aid.[18]
Sigtrygg sailed to Orkney, and on his return stopped at the Isle of Man. These islands had been occupied by the Vikings long before and the Hiberno-Norse had close ties with Orkney and the Isle of Man. There was even a precedent for employing Norsemen from the isles; they had been used by Sigtrygg's father, Amlaíb Cuarán, in 980, and by Sigtrygg himself in 990. Their incentive was loot, not land.
Contrary to the assertions made in the Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh, this was not an attempt by the Vikings to reconquer Ireland. All of the Norsemen, both the Norse-Gaels of Dublin and the Norsemen from the Isles, were in the service of Máel Mórda. The High King had 'Vikings' in his army as well: the Hiberno-Norse of Limerick and probably those of Waterford, Wexford, and Cork as well. Some sources include a rival gang of Norse mercenaries from the Isle of Man, led by Brodir's own brother, Óspak. The two brothers would go on to fight on opposite sides in the battle. Essentially this conflict was an Irish civil war with minor foreign participation.[20]
Along with whatever troops he obtained from abroad, Brian mustered troops from his home province of Munster, southern Connacht, and the province of Meath, commanded by his old rival Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill. Brian's army may have outnumbered Máel Mórda's, since Brian felt secure enough to dispatch a mounted detachment under the command of his youngest son, Donnchad, to raid southern Leinster, presumably hoping to force Máel Mórda to release his contingents from there to return to defend their homes.
Brian was also joined by Óspak, a Norseman, brother of Brodir. Initially the two brothers sailed from the Isle of Man to fight against Brian with the Leinster forces. However after a disagreement, Brodir planned to kill Óspak and his men the next morning. However Óspak and his soldiers fled during the night with 10 ships and sailed around Ireland to Connacht, where Óspak converted to Christianity and swore allegiance to Brian. He fought on the opposite side to his brother at the battle.[21]
Brian sent his forces to torch and plunder much of the countryside and hinterland north of Clontarf as far as Howth.[16]
A disagreement with the King of Meath resulted in Máel Sechnaill withdrawing his support. Brian sent a messenger to find Donnchad and ask him to return with his detachment, but the call for help came too late. To compound Brian's problems, the Norse contingents, led by Sigurd Hlodvirsson, Earl of Orkney and Brodir of the Isle of Man, arrived on Palm Sunday, 18 April. The battle occurred five days later, on Good Friday, 23 April 1014 just north of the city of Dublin, at Clontarf.[22]
All of the accounts state that the Battle of Clontarf lasted all day. This may be an exaggeration, or it may suggest a long-drawn-out fight.[original research?]
The fighting was incredibly bloody by all accounts. The Irish, however, eventually broke the enemy line and the Vikings attempted the flee for their ships which were in the bay. However at this time the tide came in and many of them drowned attempting to swim for their ships as they were relentlessly pursued by the Irish.[23][24]
The Irish won partly through a small numerical advantage, and the use of small spears which they threw at the enemy. According to one account, Maél Seachnaill arrived after the death of Brian to lead the Irish army and completed the rout.[23]
Cost of victory
Apart from Brian himself, much of the Irish royal bloodline was wiped out in the battle. The King's son, the Prince Murchad and heir to the High Kingship was killed. According to one account he killed over 100 enemies, but the details of his own death are unknown. He died shortly after the Viking line broke.[23]
Brian's grandson and Murchad's son Toirdelbach was also killed. Aged 15, he led the Irish infantry pursuing the Vikings as they fled to the sea. He was knocked over by a wave, hitting his head and being knocked unconscious, and drowned.[23]
On the Leinster and Viking side, many were also killed. Maél Morda was killed in the fighting. Sigurd the Stout of Orkney was also killed, by the Prince Murchad, before Murchad himself was killed. Brodir, who likely killed Brian was captured and executed after the battle.[23]
Death
There are many accounts of how Brian was killed, from dying in heroic man-to-man combat to being killed by the fleeing Viking mercenary Brodir while praying in his tent at Clontarf.[10] After his death, his body was taken to Swords, Co. Dublin for the wake and then to Armagh to be buried. His tomb is said to be in the north wall of St Patrick's Cathedral in the city of Armagh.[25]
Brodir was later captured and brutally executed by Ulf the Quarrelsome, an ally and possibly a relative of Brian who was fiercely loyal to him. Brodir's stomach was slashed open with a sword, and he was made to walk around a tree resulting in his insides being spun round the tree.[26]
Historical view
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The popular image of Brian—the ruler who managed to unify the regional leaders of Ireland so as to free the land from a 'Danish' (Viking) occupation—originates from the powerful influence of a 12th-century book, Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh (The War of the Irish with the Foreigners) in which Brian takes the leading role. This work is thought to have been commissioned by Brian's great-grandson Muirchertach Ua Briain as a means of justifying the Ua Briain claim to the High-Kingship, a title upon which the Uí Neill had had a near-monopoly. Recent research has suggested that it might have been commissioned by Muirchertach's contemporary and cousin, Brian Glinne Maidhir, or at least someone favourable to the line descended from Brian's son, Donnchad.[27]
The influence of this book on both scholarly and popular authors cannot be exaggerated. Until the 1970s most scholarly writing concerning the Vikings' activities in Ireland, as well as the career of Brian Boru, accepted the claims of Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh at face value.
While Brian did not free Ireland from a Norse (Viking) occupation, simply because it was never entirely conquered by the Vikings, his rule saw consistent conflict against Vikings and Viking-founded settlements, the latter all having been founded to give raiders easier access to the interior of Ireland. In the last decade of the 8th century, Norse raiders began attacking targets in Ireland and, beginning in the mid-9th century, these raiders established the fortified camps that later grew into Ireland's first cities: Dublin, Limerick, Waterford, Wexford, and Cork. Within only a few generations, some Norse had converted to Christianity, intermarried with the Irish, and had often adopted the Irish language, dress and customs, thus becoming what historians refer to as the Hiberno-Norse.[28]
Such Hiberno-Norse cities occupied a tenuous position within Ireland's political scene long before the birth of Brian. They often suffered attacks from Irish rulers, and made alliances with others. The Norse, who initially attacked and subsequently settled in Ireland, were partially assimilated by the Irish.[17] However, Brian's father was likely slain by the Norse of Limerick and he himself died during a revolt that was supported by multiple Viking leaders, specifically the Norse of Mann.
Wives and children
Brian's first wife was Mór, daughter of the King of Uí Fiachrach Aidne of Connacht. She is said to have been the mother of his sons Murchad, Conchobar and Flann. Later genealogies claimed that these sons left no descendants, although in fact Murchad's son Tairrdelbach is recorded as being killed at Clontarf along with his father and grandfather.[29]
Another wife, Echrad, was a daughter of Carlus mac Ailella, King of Uí Áeda Odba, an obscure branch of the southern Uí Néill. She was the mother of Brian's son Tadc, whose son Toirdelbach and grandson Muirchertach rivalled Brian in power and fame.[30]
Brian's most famous marriage was with Gormflaith, sister of Máel Mórda of Leinster. Donnchad, who had his half-brother Tadc killed in 1023 and ruled Munster for 40 years thereafter, was the result of this union.[31]
Brian had a sixth son, Domnall. Although he predeceased his father, Domnall apparently had at least one surviving child, a son whose name is not recorded. Domnall may perhaps have been the son of Brian's fourth known wife, Dub Choblaig, who died in 1009. She was a daughter of King Cathal mac Conchobar mac Taidg of Connacht.[32]
Brian had at least three daughters, but their mothers are not recorded. Sadb, whose death in 1048 is recorded by the Annals of Innisfallen, was married to Cian, son of Máel Muad mac Brain. Bé Binn was married to the northern Uí Néill king Flaithbertach Ua Néill. A third daughter, Sláine, was married to Brian's stepson Sihtric of Dublin.[33]
According to Njal's Saga, he had a foster-son named Kerthialfad.[34]
Family heritage
The descendants of Brian were known as the Uí Briain (O'Brien) clan, hence the surnames Ó Briain, O'Brien, O'Brian etc. O was originally Ó which in turn came from Ua, which means 'grandson or descendant' (of a named person). The prefix is often anglicised to O', using an apostrophe instead of the Irish síneadh fada ( ´ ). The O'Briens subsequently ranked as one of the chief dynastic families of the country .
Brian's third great-granddaughter was Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd (c. 1097 – 1136), Princess consort of Deheubarth in Wales, leader of the patriotic revolt and battle that contributed to the Great Revolt of 1136. The Baron Inchiquin claim descent from Brian Boru as do Sir Donough O'Brien, 1st Baronet.
Ancestry
Ancestry of Brian Boru[35]
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Cultural heritage
Literature
The play Brian (1888) by Irish-American composer and dramatist Paul McSwiney depicts Brian Boru's life-story.
Finnegans Wake (1939), by James Joyce, makes multiple references to Brian Boru and Clontarf, in neologisms typical of that book ("clontarfminded") and obscure references (e.g. "as true as the Vernons have Brian's sword"—McHugh points out that the Vernons, an Italian family, had an ancient sword said to be Brian Boru's).[36]
Brian Boru appears in the 1931 series by Robert E. Howard's Turlogh Dubh O'Brien
In the 1949 novel Silverlock by John Myers Myers, the death of Brian Boru is described from the main character's viewpoint.
Morgan Llywelyn has written a novelization of Brian's life called Lion of Ireland (1980). The sequel, Pride of Lions (1996), tells the story of his sons, Donough and Teigue, as they vie for his crown.
Donal O'Neill's Sons of Death (1988), a historical novel about Brian Boru, is told from the point of view of MelPatrick, a young nobleman at Brian's court. It uses the fictional device of the long-lost Brjánssaga as its source. It is the third in a series based on Irish history, beginning c. 800 BC (vol. 1, Crucible; vol. 2 Of Gods and Men).
Edward Rutherfurd affords Brian Boru a chapter in his historical fiction The Princes of Ireland: The Dublin Saga (2004). His version supports the contention that Brian died while praying in his tent.
The story of Brian Boru's final battle and death is told in Frank Delaney's novel Ireland (2005).
The second volume of Brian Wood's Vertigo graphic novel series Northlanders (2007–2012) is set against a backdrop of Viking "occupation" of Ireland, including the Battle of Clontarf.
Music
His name is remembered in the title of one of the oldest tunes in Ireland's traditional repertoire: "Brian Boru's March". It is still widely played by traditional Irish musicians.
He was the subject of at least two operas: Brian Boroihme (1810) by Johann Bernhard Logier (1777–1846) and Brian Boru (1896) by Julian Edwards (1855–1910).
His burial in St Patrick's Cathedral is referenced in the song "Boys from the County Armagh" by Thomas P. Keenan (1866–1927).
Film and television
In the Disney film Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959), King Brian Conners of the Leprechauns shows Darby the sword Brian Boru used to drive out the Danes (Vikings).
The character of Miles O'Brien in the science fiction television show Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993–1999) says that he is a direct descendant of Brian Boru in the fourth season episode "Bar Association".
In an episode of the TV series Relic Hunter (1999–2002) a search is made for the missing crown of "the last king of Ireland", Brian Boru.
Sports
Top class racehorse Brian Boru was named in honour of the high king. The horse won two Group 1 races, the Racing Post Trophy as a two-year old and the St Leger as a three-year old.
Many Gaelic Athletic Association clubs have been named after Brian Boru.
Professional wrestler Sheamus has referenced Brian several times while cutting promos as part of his character, King Sheamus.
Other
The exhumation of Brian Boru's remains were the subject of a 'learned' article on 1 April 2014 - a well-constructed April Fools' Day hoax.[37]
See also
References
- ^ "Keating and the King in Print (1723)". Battle of Clontarf. Trinity College, Dublin.
- ^ Donnchadh O Corrain, Ireland before the Normans (Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1972)
- ^ a b c d e Duffy, "Brian Bóruma"
- ^ a b c Jaski, "Brian Boru", p. 45.
- ^ Brian Boru and The Battle of Clontarf, Seán Duffy
- ^ Ní Mhaonaigh, p. 15, notes that Brian is associated with Béal Bóruma in a poem attributed to Cúán úa Lothcháin (d. 1024).
- ^ a b c Clare County Libraries
- ^ McCullough(2002), p.106
- ^ Annals of Inisfallen, 972
- ^ a b c d Grant, R. G.; Doughty, Robert (2011). 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of World History. Random House. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-7893-2233-3.
- ^ Annals of Inisfallen
- ^ Sir Lee MacMahon, ' Some Celtic Tribal Heraldry and Ancient Arms of Ireland, ' Irish-American Genealogist. The Augustan Society: Torrance, CA. Annual 1979. Pp. 256-259.
- ^ "Brian Boru–Irish Biography". www.irishlibraries.com.
{{cite web}}
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(help)CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b c Clarke, Howard B., editor. Johnson, Ruth (Ruth C.), editor. Hall, R. A. (Richard Andrew), 1949-2011, honouree. The Vikings in Ireland and beyond : before and after the Battle of Clontarf. ISBN 978-1-84682-495-1. OCLC 913441501.
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has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Brian Boru– Imperator Scottorum". www.historyireland.com.
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(help)CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Seán Duffy, History Ireland
- ^ a b Newman, Roger Chatterton (1983). Brian Boru: King of Ireland. Dublin: Anvil Books. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-85635-719-7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Duffy, Seán (2014). Brian Boru and the Battle of Clontarf. Gill & Macmillan. pp. 26–27, 151–154. ISBN 978-0-7171-6207-9. OCLC 911972485.
- ^ "Annals of Inisfallen". Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
- ^ McCullough(2002), p.109
- ^ Njals Saga, Chapter 144-145
- ^ McCullough(2002), p.111
- ^ a b c d e Duffy (2013)
- ^ McGettigan(2013)
- ^ "Brian Boru :: Saint Patrick's Cathedral Armagh - Church of Ireland". stpatricks-cathedral.org. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
- ^ Njal's Saga
- ^ Casey, Denis (2013). "A reconsideration of the authorship and transmission of Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh". Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section C. 113C: 139–61. JSTOR 42751271.
- ^ Campbell, Kenneth L. (5 December 2013). Ireland's History: Prehistory to the Present. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 46–51. ISBN 978-1-4725-6784-0.
- ^ Ní Mhaonaigh, p. 31; Duffy.
- ^ Ní Mhaonaigh, p. 32; Duffy.
- ^ Ní Mhaonaigh, pp. 31–32; Duffy.
- ^ Ní Mhaonaigh, pp. 31 & 32–33; Duffy.
- ^ Ní Mhaonaigh, p. 33; Duffy.
- ^ Njal's Saga. Trans. George DaSent. London, 1861. §§ 154–157.
- ^ ch: XXV pages 257,259 - author: Geoffrey Keating corpus of electronic texts edition, https://celt.ucc.ie/published/T100054.html,
- ^ McHugh, Roland. Annotations in Finnegans Wake. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991.
- ^ "High King in the Cathedral: Body of Brian Boru Uncovered?". vox hiberionacum. Retrieved 19 April 2014.
Secondary sources
- McCullough, David Willis (2002). Wars of the Irish Kings: A Thousand Years of Struggle, from the Age of Myth Through the Reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Random House. ISBN 978-0-609-80907-5.
- Jaski, Bart (2005). "Brian Boru (926[?]–1014)". In Seán Duffy (ed.). Medieval Ireland. An Encyclopedia. Abingdon and New York. pp. 45–47.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Duffy, Seán (2004). "Brian Bóruma (Brian Boru) (c.941–1014)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 24 February 2010.
- Ní Mhaonaigh, Máire (2007). Brian Boru. Ireland's greatest king?. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 978-0-7524-2921-2.
- Ó Corráin, Donncha (1972). Ireland before the Normans. The Gill History of Ireland. Vol. 2 (1st ed.). Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. ISBN 0-7171-0559-8.
- Duffy, Seán (2013). Brian Boru and the Battle of Clontarf. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. ISBN 978-0717162079.
Further reading
- MacShamhráin, Ailbhe (2001). "The Battle of Glenn Máma, Dublin and the High-Kingship of Ireland: A Millennial Commemoration". In Seán Duffy (ed.). Medieval Dublin II. Dublin: Four Courts Press. pp. 53–64.
- O'Brien, Donough (1949). History of the O'Briens from Brian Boroimhe, A.D. 1000 to A.D. 1945. B. T. Batsford.
- Ó Corráin, Donnchad (1972). Ireland before the Normans. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. pp. 111–131.
- Ryan, John (1967). "Brian Boruma, King of Ireland". In Etienne Rynne (ed.). North Munster Studies. Limerick: Thomond Archaeological Society. pp. 355–374.
- Article by the Clare County Library on Brian Boru
- Article in Irish Examiner