RHUN ap ARTHGAL and HIS FAMILY
By Dr J White-Phillip
In the 10th century manuscript,
Harleian 3859, pedigree 5 describes the descent of the “men of Stathclyde”. Rhun ap Arthgal ap Dyfnwal is presented
as the last-born of the lineage descended from the 5th century Ceretic Wledig, shown in the pedigree. [1]
The paucity of data regarding the Kings of Strathclyde begins with the grandfather of Rhun
ap Arthgal, a man named Dyfnwal ap Rhydderch, whose only attestation is the Harl pedigree. History records few citations that
provide scant details regarding the generations of Rhun, his father Arthgal, and Rhun's son Eochaid, this latter not included
in the Harl manuscript of 975.
ARTHGAL
ap DYFNWAL ap RHYDDERCH:
Perhaps the first event we could reasonably attribute to Arthgal ap Dyfnwal is the
record of an event during the reign of Cinaid (Kenneth) Mac Alpin in which “the Britons burned Dunblane”,
dated between 850 and 858. [2] This event was likely orchestrated by Arthgal (b ca 810), but would almost certainly occur
at a date too late for his father, Dyfnwal ap Rhydderch. We would date this Dyfnwal to ca 780, and provide him with an estimated
obit of 840/5, certainly prior to the burning of Dunblane. We suggest that this foray into Pictish territory may have been
a military display relatively early in the reign of Arthgal ap Dyfnwal, and further, that Arthgal may have agreed to wed his
son Rhun to a daughter of Cinaed as part of a “peace treaty” or other alliance agreements resulting from this
event. We date the birth of Rhun ap Arthgal to c. 838 using the marriage to this daughter of Cinaed, which likely occurred
in 860/2, at the time of his son Constantine's accession to the kingship.
The next attested event in Strathclyde is the four month long Viking siege of the fortress
at Alt Clud which occurred in 870/1 and appears in the Annals of Ulster, Chronicon Scotorum, and the Fragmentary Annals of
Ireland. A large number of prisoners including “Angles, Britons and Picts” were transported to Ireland,
[3] likely to ransom the elites and sell the rest on the slave market. It is likely that these prisoners included King Arthgal,
as well as many of those who lived at Alt Clud.
The next entry for Arthgal is his 872 obit, in which he is reported killed "at the behest of Constantine".
[4] One doubts Arthgal's captors were intent on providing any favors for Constantine; this entry could simply be “eliminating
a hostage with no ransom value”. The “Behest” of Constantine could be interpreted as his refusal to pay
any ransom to ensure the safe return of Arthgal. This refusal would equate to tacit approval "it's okay with me if you kill
this hostage", but does not necessarily indicate a “request” made by Constantine “Please kill Arthgal for
me”. One notes that the “hostages taken” do not appear to include Constantine's brother-in-law, Rhun ap
Arthgal, who would have been about 30 years of age, and may not have resided at Alt Clud. It certainly suited Constantine
for his political ally Rhun to become the new king of Strathclyde.
EOCHAID
ap RHUN ap ARTHGAL:
Additional sources [5, 6, 7] state that Rhun had a son named Eochaid who was living c.
878-889 and seems to be the lynch pin in an Alban coup that occurred in 878, after which, Eochaid is reported to be the new
king in Alba. No sources mention Eochaid's “contemporary” in Strathclyde during this time, and it may be that
Eochaid held both the kingdoms of Alba and Strathclyde while still a youth.
The reports [5-7] state that a "Giric" or “Ciric” (also called Greg) installed
himself and Eochaid ap Rhun as “joint” kings, which supports the suggestion of an 877 or 878 obit for Rhun. We
date the marriage of Rhun and the daughter of Cinaed Mac Alpin to ca 862, and an estimated birth for Eochaid ap Rhun
can occur no earlier than 863. Thus in 878, Eochaid would have been a scant 15 years old. This Giric/Greg is described as
some type of "guardian" for the boy, which supports the suggested minority of Eochaid at the time of the coup.
Furthermore, both men are cited together in chronicles describing their reign, wherein Giric's
ward, Eochaid, is clearly named as son of the late king of Strathclyde (filiis Run regis brittanorum),
and as a maternal grandson of Kenneth mac Alpin (nepos Cinadei ex filia). [Chronicles of the Picts] If there were
no males in the next generation of the extended Alpinid family who were yet teens after the death of Aed, then Eochaid had
the “best” claim to the Alban throne. Interestingly, Eochaid ap Rhun is never cited as a sole king of Alba, which
distinction is reserved for Giric. [8]
This same passage in the Pictish Chronicles [5] informs us that Eochaid and Greg were "driven
from the kingship" (expulsus) in 889 after a reign of 11 years, while Fordun provides a reign of 18 years ending
in 892. The next citations in both the Chronicles of Alba and the Pictish Chronicles state that Domnall (Dyfnwal or Donald),
son of Constantine I, assumed the kingship in Alba, corroborated by obits in the Annals of Ulster. [5-9] It may be that this
Donald, born perhaps a few years after Eochaid, attained his majority and having a stronger claim to the kingship, was able
to gain enough support to force his cousin out of Alba. Eochaid's obit is unknown, and it may be that he continued to rule
in Strathclyde for some time even after he lost the throne of Alba to his cousin Donald I (Mac Constantine).
DID EOCHAID HAVE A DAUGHTER?
Peter Bartram charts a daughter of
Eochaid ap Rhun as "Land" who married Niall Glundub mac Aedh, High King of Ireland, and cites his source as the Ban-Senchus
of 1147. She appears (with a ?) on Bartrum's chart #21 and is dated to his Generation 18 or c. 900. Some modern
websites call her "Lann".
In the source he listed, we find
a single mention of Niall Glundub and only as "son of Mael Mure", with no mention of any "Land" as his wife or mother of his
children. [10] We did find a "Land, daughter of Dungal mac Fergal of Osirage" immediately preceding the description
for Mael Mure, which is immediately followed by a citation which mentions the name "Eochaid". This lady is
cited as having married thrice, including one marriage to Aed, father of Niall Glundub. We found nothing which mentions
a daughter of Eochaid ap Rhun.
Niall Glundub was definitely married
to Gormlaith/Gormflaith daughter of Flann Sinna as recorded in his 919 obit. That wife is mentioned in other Irish sources,
but Land ferch Eochaid is not. We are unable to attribute any of Niall's three known children to a daughter of Eochaid
and we believe she is fictitious. Rather than mark her with a "?", we think Bartrum should have used an eraser.
SUCCESSION
IN STRATHCLYDE AFTER 900:
Our first hint about who might have succeeded Eochaid in Strathclyde is found in the Poppleton
manuscript (written no later than the 14th century), which is likely compounded from earlier components. These components
are variously presented in Skene as the “Pictish Chronicle” and elsewhere in English translation as the “Chronicle
of the Kings of Alba”. Among the entries, some contain the names of noteworthy individuals who died during the reigns
of these kings. The text provided in Skene [5] includes a "Dyfnwal, king of the Britons" (Doneualdus rex Brittanorum) and
provides an obit between 908 and 915 during the reign of Constantine II of Alba (900-943). [10] No ancestry is known for this
Dyfnwal, but he is generally assumed to have been the father of Owain ap Dyfnwal, King of Strathclyde, who took part in the
937 Battle of Brunanburh. Working backwards from the known kings who followed Owain, we would place the birth date of Dyfnwal
“rex Brittanorum” near 845 and his death when he was in his mid-to-late 60's.
We suggest that Dyfnwal of Strathclyde (Doneualdus rex Brittanorum) assumed
the kingship of Strathclyde after Eochaid (and Greg) were removed. We posit this man was a cousin of Rhun whose father had
been a younger brother of Arthgal. We reject the possibility that a single Dyfnwal reigned in both kingdoms, for chronological
reasons and the clear evidence from entries in CKA [10] naming two men (19) “Donivaldus filius Constantini”
and (28) “Doneualdus rex Brittanorum”. For further information on the family of Dyfnwal “rex
Brittanorum”, click the link below:
http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id275.html
750
Rhydderch
l
780
Dyfnwal
______________l____________
l
l
813 Owain Kenneth 810 Arthgal ?
l mac
Alpin _____l_______ Dyfnwal
l l
l
l l
845
Dyfnwal Dau=====Rhun 838 daughter==Giric/Greg
830
l l
875
Owain 863 Eochaid
CHART
COMMENTS: The Strathclyde family on the left apparently supplanted their royal cousins sometime between 889, when Eochaid
was ousted from Alba and the CKA obit (908x915). Any children fathered by either Eochaid or Giric/Greg would have been banished
from the royal court with their fathers. Since the Owain of 875 is known to have had a grandson named Owain ap Dyfnwal, we
have posited that there were 3 consecutive pairs of that name string in this family. If the Dyfnwal who fathered Giric/Greg
was also related to this family, he might represent a cousin line which branched off the royal line earlier than the men shown
in our chart. We suspect, however, he was a mere opportunist.
NOTES: [1] Harl 3859, pedigree 5 [2] Chronicle of the Kings of Alba / De Situ Albanie “A Critical essay on the Ancient Inhabitants
of the Northern parts of Britain or Scotland”, Vols I & II, Innes, London 1729. (Early and Later “revised”
versions)
“And
he invaded England six times; and he seized and burned Dunbar and Melrose. But the Britons burned Dunblane, and the Danes
wasted Pictland to Clunie and Dunkeld.” [3] Fragmentary
Annals of Ireland (388); Annals of Ulster (870.6; 871.2); Chronicon Scottorum (871)
FA 388; 870 "In this year the Norwegian kings besieged Srath Cluada in Britain, camping against them for four
months; finally, having subdued the people inside by hunger and thirst—the well that they had inside having dried up
in a remarkable way—they attacked them. First they took all the goods that were inside. A great host was taken out into"
captivity. [Dubháltach Firbisigh wrote this, in 1643.] thus wrote the first transcriber.
U870.6: "The siege of Ail Cluaithe by the Norsemen: Amlaíb and Ímar, two kings of the Norsemen, laid siege to the
fortress and at the end of four months they destroyed and plundered it".
U871.2: "Amlaíb and Ímar returned to Áth Cliath from Alba with two hundred ships, bringing away
with them in captivity to Ireland a great prey of Angles and Britons and Picts".
CS871: "Amlaíb and Ímar returned to Áth Cliath from Alba with two hundred ships, bringing away
with them in captivity to Ireland a great prey of Saxons and Britons". [4] Annals
of Ulster (872.5); Chronicon Scottorum (872)
"Artgal, king of the Britons of Strathclyde, was killed at the instigation of Constantine son of Cinaed". [5]Annals of Ulster (878.2)
U878.2: "Aed son of Cinaed, king of the Picts, was killed by his own associates".
U876.1: "Constantine son of Cinaed, king of the Picts..... die". [6] 'Chronicles of the Picts, chronicles of the
Scots, and other early memorials of Scottish history' (Document Version B) by Skene, W. F. (William Forbes), 1809-1892,
ed.
“Eochodius autem filius Run regis Britannorum, nepos Cinadei ex filia, regnavit annis xi. Licet Ciricium filium
alii dicunt hie regnasse; eo quod alumpnus ordinatorque Eochodio fiebat. Cujus secundo anno Aed filius Neil moritur; ac in
ix. ejus anno, in ipso die Cirici, eclipsis solis facta est. Eochodius, cum alumpno suo, expulsus est nunc de regno.” “Donivaldus filius Constantini
tenuit regnum xi. annos.....”
"Et mortui sunt in tempore hujus, Doneualdus rex Britannorum, et Duuenaldus
filius Ede rex eligitur; et Flann filius Maelsethnaill, et Niall filius Ede, qui regnavit tribus annis post Flann."
[7] Chronicle
of the Kings of Alba / De Situ Albanie “A Critical essay on the Ancient Inhabitants of the Northern parts of Britain
or Scotland”, Vols I & II, Innes, London 1729.
16. "And Eochodius son of Run king of the Britons, grandson of Kenneth by his daughter, reigned
for 11 years [878-89]; although others say that Ciricium [Giric] son of another reigned at this time, because he became Eochaid's
foster-father and guardian"
. 17.
"And in his second year [879] Aed son of Neil died". 18. "And in his ninth year, on the very day of St. Cirici [Cyrus], an eclipse of the sun occurred. Eochaid
and his foster father was now expelled from the kingdom". 8] Historia Britonum of Nennius (31) " Girig mac Dungaile xi. vel. iii. annis regnavit". "Domhnall, fil. Constantini, xi. annis regnavit"
.
[9] Annals
of Ulster (900.6); Chronicon Scottorum (899)
U900.6: "Domnall son of Constantine, king of Scotland, dies". CS899: "Repose of Domnall son of Constantine, king
of Scotland"
. [10] Ban Senchus Original text and translation
by Dobbs, M. in Revue celtique / publiée avec le concours des principaux savants des îles britanniques et du continent, Vol
47. Paris, 1930
[11] Chronicle of the Kings of Alba / The Scottish Chronicle in the Poppleton Manuscript, English translation: entries
19, 28
19. "Donivaldus filius Constantini tenuit regnum xi. annos".
19. "Doniualdus son of Constantini held the kingdom for 11 years" [889-900].
28. "Et mortui sunt in tempore hujus, Doneualdus rex Britannorum, et Duuenaldus filius Ede rex eligitur;
et Flann filius Maelsethnaill, et Niall filius Ede, qui regnavit tribus annis post Flann".
28. "And in his time Doneualdus king of the Britons [of Strathclyde] died; and Duneualdus son of Ede [Aed] king of
Ailech [Tirconnel, Co. Donegel]; and F1ann son of Maelsechnaill and Niall son of Ede who reigned for three years after Flann".
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