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19 September 2014
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Kingdom of Dal Riata - Factsheet
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The Gaels
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  • The Gaels gave Scotland its name from ‘Scoti’, a racially derogatory term used by the Romans to describe the Gaelic-speaking ‘pirates’ who raided Britannia in the 3rd and 4th centuries. They called themselves ‘Goidi l’, modernised today as Gaels, and later called Scotland ‘Alba’.

  • For centuries historians have debated the Gaels’ origin. The earliest historical source we have comes from around the 10th century and held that the Gaels came from Ireland in around 500 AD, under King Fergus Mor, and conquered Argyll from the Picts (See Above).

  • Recently archaeologists have challenged this idea. If the Gaels did invade from Ireland then new objects and differing types of building style could be expected to appear. What archaeologists point to is the continuity in building styles of crannogs and forts found in Argyll and Ireland, suggesting the Gaels had lived in Argyll for many centuries before Fergus Mor and shared a common Gaelic culture with Ireland.

  • All this contradicts the historical sources, but other peoples had similar origin myths: The Picts claimed to come from Scythia; the Britons from the Roman Brutus - all quite absurd.
    Aedan mac Gabrann
The Kings of Dál Riata
  • From Dunadd kings like Aedan mac Gabrann (574-608 AD), set out on campaign. A successful warlord, he extended the power of Dál Riata from Orkney to the Isle of Man. In campaigns against Picts, Britons and fellow Gaels in Ireland he triumphed until he was finally stopped by the Angles at the Battle of Degsastan in 603 AD.
  • What Aedan had achieved his grandson Donald Brecc (Domnall Brecc, 629- 642) lost in a disastrous reign. He led the Gaels’ war band to defeat followed by defeat. He was forced to surrender Dál Riata’s Irish lands before he eventually suffered his final defeat at the hands of Owen of Dumbarton at the Battle of Strathcarron in 642 AD. Donald Brecc died on the field of battle with the bardic epitaph: ‘And crows pecked, at the head of Domnall Brecc.’

  • After Donald’s defeat his kindred faced challenges for the kingship. Civil war raged between the rival kindreds until Fercher Fota (c697 AD) established a new royal line. They didn't rule for long but it’s an interesting historical footnote that 450 years later Macbeth was supposed to be descended from Fercher Fota. The kindred of Aedan and Donald Brecc went on to reassert their control of Dál Riata founding a line Scottish kingship that stretched to Bonnie Prince Charlie.

The Smiting of Dál Riata
  • In the early 8th century, the Gaels were confronted with the rising power of the Picts. In 736 AD the Picts stormed Dunadd. Their leader, Unust, may have been of Gaelic parentage, but in 741 AD the annals record his ‘smiting of Dál Riata’. After his conquest Dál Riata became a back water, except for the prestige of the monastery of Iona, with its kings subservient to the Picts.
    Then from 794 AD a series of Viking raids finally dimmed even Iona’s light.

  • It was from this background of decline that Kenneth MacAlpine emerged. In 849 AD he conquered the Pictish kingship and restored the Gaels’ fortunes as they moved east to take over Pictland.

  • Kenneth’s triumph was Dunadd’s end as the Kingdom Dál Riata vanished from history and the lands of Argyll fell under Norse control. However, along with Pictland, Dal Riata became the essential ingredient in the new Kingdom of Alba.

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