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The Rise of Brian Boru In 976 Mathgamain, Lord of the Dál Cais, was assassinated by the Vikings of Limerick. The Vikings, who had converted to Christianity, ruled a territory around this settlement at the mouth of the Shannon. Although it was in the centre of Munster (see map), they were tolerated because they made little trouble and brought trade. However, this political act changed this. When Mathgamain's brother, Brian Bóruma (Brian Boru) succeeded him to become Lord of the Dál Cais, he wasted little time. Motivated by a desire for revenge for his brother's death, and undoubtedly a healthy dose of ambition as well, Brian Boru set about gaining power. Brian Boru is seen in an engraving on the left. Brian Boru's first action was to attack the Vikings of Limerick. King Ímar of Limerick and his sons took refuge in the monastery of Scattery Island, but Brian Boru must have decided that he did not much care for sacred traditions. He broke into the sanctuary, slaughtered the Vikings and desecrated the church. Although only founded 50 years earlier, Limerick would remain in Munster's hands for the next two centuries. By 980 he had surpassed the Eóganacht and crowned himself King of Munster. Thirsty for more power, Brian Boru next formed a strategic alliance with the Vikings of Vadrefjord (Waterford) to penetrate his armies deep into Connacht and the relatively weak province of Leinster (Laigin) in the 980s. Meanwhile, the Uí Néill became increasingly alarmed at the rise and rise of King Brian Boru of Munster and sought to limit his growth. During the 980s, King Máel Sechnaill 2nd of the Uí Néill tried various tactics, but by 997 came to the conclusion that he could not be lord over Boru. Therefore the two Kings held a meeting at Clonfert, within the Viking Kingdom of Dubhlinn and agreed to divide Ireland between them. Máel Sechnaill II granted Brian Boru effective High Kingship over Munster, Leinster and Dubhlinn and retained the allegiance of Connaught and his own province for himself. However, not everyone accepted the arrangement. In 999, the Lords of Leinster and the Viking King of Dubhlinn revolted against his rule. Undeterred, Boru marched his armies back into Leinster and defeated them heavily at Glenn Máma. Descending on Dubhlinn at the height of winter, he attacked it, plundered the city and burned down its fortress. Eventually King Silkenbeard of Dubhlinn submitted to Brian Boru and, in the coming decade, was his supporter. In 1002, Máel Sechnaill II himself finally submitted to Boru. After this, Brian Boru set out to assert his control over the whole island. He made two circuits of the island in 1005 and 1006 when he penetrated the furthest reaches of the Kingdom of the Uí Néill. His power seemed almost complete. |
The Battle of Clontarf Brian Boru did indeed return, with his armies, in 1014. The two armies met at Clontarf, a fertile plain with a Monastery to the north-east of Dubhlinn. (Today the battle site is beneath the northern suburbs of Dublin city.) The battle was extremely bloody with several thousand men killed and, in the event, Brian Boru's army won and most of the Vikings took to their boats and retreated to the Isle of Man. However, Brian himself was killed (legends say he was hacked to death by an axe-wielding Viking who sneaked into his tent). In legend, the Battle of Clontarf has become one of the most famous in Irish history because it is seen as part of a national struggle, marking the expulsion of the Viking invader. However, it was probably not significant in that way: the power of the Vikings was already in decline after 980 and were being absorbed by the Irish. In reality, the battle actually marks the failed attempt by Leinster and Dubhlinn to assert their independence from Munster. Nevertheless, the power of the Vikings was broken for good at Clontarf, and the future of Dubhlinn was now definitely in Irish hands. Although the Vikings were allowed to rule Dubhlinn themselves for another 70 years, it had been becoming more hibernicised over the previous century. As a city it was large for its time, rich and important. Thus, during the 11th century Dublin became an important aquisition for any King with eyes on the High Kingship and, by the end of the 1000's it had overtaken Tara to become the de-facto capital of the island. Dublin thrived and remained a wealthy trading city. Excavations in the 1970s at Wood Quay in Dublin found incredibly well-preserved remains of a thriving Hiberno-Viking city. The picture on the left shows the remains of a house from this period uncovered at Wood Quay. (The site has since been largely destroyed by the construction of the widely- despised Dublin council headquarters, although key archaeology was completed in time.)
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Changes in Britain It is impossible to understand the next phase of Irish history without reference to events in Britain. In Britain, the period of history from 800 to 1100 was also a time of upheaval, death and warfare, and at least two successful invasions. The Vikings had invaded Anglo-Saxon Britain on a far greater scale than they ever had in Ireland, completely obliterating and colonising the Christian Kingdom of Northumbria as well as East Anglia and large parts of Mercia (see a map before the Viking invasion). This area was called the 'Danelaw'. Only under the leadership of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, did the English manage to stop the advance of the Vikings. It was Alfred who persuaded the individual kingdoms to unite and, in 927, his grandson Aethelstan was crowned "King of all the English" in the city of London, essentially England's first 'High King'. This was the foundation of the Kingdom of England. Over the next 150 years, the two regions merged to form a more coherent Anglo-Norse England, ruled mostly by Danish Kings. The Normans were the descendants of Vikings who had settled in an area of northern France known as Normandy to this day. In a complex interplay of lines to the throne and broken promises, Duke William of Normandy decided the English throne was his. He invaded England in 1066, and through a series of battles, most notably at Hastings, took the throne and was crowned King William 1st of England, although he is better known as William the Conqueror. This was the phase in European history when all kings were seeking to expand, and England was no exception. Bordered to the north by the newly-united kingdom of Scotland, the King of England instead penetrated into Celtic Wales and, though inter-marriage and other means, controlled half of France by the mid 1100s. It is no surprise, therefore, that when the opportunity arose to spread his royal rule across the sea to Ireland, the English king took it. |
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References / Sources:
[1] Various authors, "The Oxford Companion to Irish History", Oxford University
Press, 1998
[2] RF Foster: "The Oxford History of Ireland", Oxford University Press, 1989
[3] Simon Schama, "A History of Britain: At the Edge of the World?
3000BC-AD1603", BBC, 2000
[4] Seán Duffy, "Atlas of Irish History", Gill and Macmillan, 2000
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