Scotland, *Kenneth Mac Alpin

Birth Name Scotland, *Kenneth Mac Alpin 1a 1b
Also Known As Scotland, Kenneth I “Macalpin” 1c
Also Known As SCOTLAND, KENNETH I MacAlpin Of 1d
Gramps ID I4265
Gender male
Age at Death unknown

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth [E10049] about 810 Scotland  
1e
Burial [E10050] 859 ,Iona,Argyllshire,Scotland  
1f
Death [E10051]   Iona, Argyll, Scotland  
1g 1h
Birth [E10052] 810 Of, , , Scotland  
1i
Death [E10053] 858/9-02-06 (Julian) ,Fortevoit,Perthshire,Scotland  
1j
Death [E10054] 858-02-13 Iona, Argyll, Scotland  
1k

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Eochaid, *Alpin Mac [I4409]UNKNOWN834-07-20
Mother *UNK [I4411]
         Scotland, *Kenneth Mac Alpin [I4265] about 810

Families

    Family of Scotland, *Kenneth Mac Alpin [F1444]
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage [E20998] UNKNOWN Iona, Argyll, Scotland  
1l
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Scotland, *Constantine I [I4260]UNKNOWN934
Scotland, Aedh [I4410]

Narrative

KENNETH I MAC ALPIN, KING OF SCOTLAND

Kenneth I Mac Alpin was also known as: King Daltiada, King Alba, Scotland King, King Dalbrida

Kenneth MacAlpin, King of Scots and *Picts

In 839, a fateful battle took place. Some Picts were fighting the rebellious Scots under Alpin of Gabhran's house, a large army of Norsemen happened upon their rear. Though Alpin was killed, and his head impaled by the Picts -- the Pictish army now turned to face the Norsemen and were destroyed in a wild pitched battle. The Picts not only lost to the Norsemen, they were utterly destroyed. Eoghann, the last King of Picts, died with them and now there was no Pictish leader to oppose the Scots.

Why the Norsemen took part in a battle between Scots and Picts that did not concern them, is easily explained. The Norsemen believed to die in battle was a sure way of entering Valhalla, the great warriors reward in "Asgaard", and because of this pagan belief, the Vikings had no fear of dying in combat. They happened upon the battle between the Picts and Scots, which the Scots were losing, and promptly attacked the winners -- the Picts. Besides the last of the Pictish Kings dying in the battle, so did the Scots' King Alpin. Kenneth the Hardy, son of Alpin, avenged his fathers death by taking the remaining territory of the Picts. His ascendancy to 'King of Scots and Picts,' was not a peaceful one though.

The first king of Scots and Picts, (southern Picts), MacAlpin, it is said, murdered seven Earls of Dalriada, kinsmen who might have disputed his claim to Kingship. All this took place during a celebration banquet at Scone. The ascendancy of Kings was a bloody and treacherous affair -- not for the faint of heart.

One would think that after a history making battle such as the one above-described would be a dramatic turning point and famous in all history books. Curiously this didn't happen, and the reason is, most likely, that it actually took another century, and more battles, before the union was a stable union of Pict and Scot. In time, however, it did become stable and the Scots gained tremendous lands, wealth, and access to expert horsemanship, as well as countless more Scottish subjects, from the fall of the Picts. The two peoples had been locked in ferocious combat for so long that the bonds of war had actually helped unite the people, as two metals in a great flame, they became fused and then were tempered by the cooling hand of Christianity.

Kenneth MacAlpin was the first Scottish King of Alba, (the Pict name for their Kingdom) although his mother was a Pict. The Picts pass from history as most unknown races but the memory of their culture would last for a thousand years among the western clans.

The Vikings were another story. In Scotland they invaded then settled. The Norsemen had easy pickings in early Scotland, which at the time was a confused collection of rival kinglets, prior to MacAlpin. It was not until 843 that the country was totally united under Kenneth.

When Kenneth MacAlpin died in the latter half of the 9th century, Scotland went through a series of mediocre kings who were kept very busy trying to hold the Norsemen out of Scotland and keep its borders fixed. Three kings died in battle, others had short reigns. The Scottish unity held, but barely. One hundred and sixty years of Norse invasions and counter attacks occurred, led by, only partially successful kings, (three of whom died in battle) and then, finally the Vikings began to settle more than invade.

The unity did not keep the Norsemen out. They took Dumbarton, on the River Clyde, and lorded it over the area, and they were the death of Scots' Kings, Constantine, Donald the Second and Indulf.

They were the kings in a time when not many Scottish kings died in their beds. Turbulence was never far from the surface, and a king was liable to be struggling against the Norsemen, new territorial aggression from England, as well as the incurablerebelliousness of the men of Moray in the north. It was not until MalcolmII arrived on the throne in 1005, that the country even acquired, atlast, a geographical unity with fixed borders. Malcolm II vainly triedto extend his borders to occupy parts of the north of England, but had his armies cut to pieces.

England also had trouble with the Vikings, who had been invading England and now began to thirst for England's land. They took nearly half of England by force and then demanded to be paid to stop further aggression. Actually, it was an English king's idea to pay the money, or "Danegeld" (Dane gold) as it came to be known, to halt the Viking attacks. This "ransom" or Danegeld was at first successful, and the Danes left the rest of England alone......for a while.

However, the idea of easy pickings, the Danegeld, was just too much for the Vikings to resist and they began to demand more and more payment of Danegeld from the English, at this point in time, England was in serious crisis. Plus the Danes were now settling large areas of England and marrying the locals. The villages in the north and east of England still have many Viking names. Eventually the Danes became so powerful in England, one of their own became King of England. This was King Canut who took the English throne in 1016.

King Canut of England (pronounced Kanewt) now began to eye Scotland, especially the Lothian area which he considered belonged to him by right. What right isn't clear. His forces went to repossess it in 1018, and the combined Britons and Scots massacred them on the banks of the River Tweed, at a battle called Carham in 1018, under the King of Scotland, Malcolm II, a descendent of Kenneth MacAlpin. The army they defeated was an Angle army from Northumbria, which brought the rich Lothians under Malcolm II's rule. Scotland,and her borders, were now stable, but not necessarily for long.

Meanwhile, in the farthest southwest corner of England, Alfred the Great and his descendants, made a stand against the Danes and won a series of victories, which led in time, to the Saxons reclaiming England. The Vikings, remained however, slowly mixing with Britain and in all of Europe with the native populations and eventually the "Age of the Vikings" came to a gradual end.

Source: http://members.tripod.com/~Hal_MacGregor/gregor/vikings.html

*Picts-
Scots and Picts - Ancient Scotland
The Picts were mighty warriors, holding off Romans, Angles, and early Vikings before their culture was absorbed by the Scots.

Iron Age Picts built great duns (stone hill fortresses), crannogs (forts and houses built on stilts in lochs), and, unique to Scotland, brochs. Brochs are round stone towers, tapering inward as they rise from the ground. Hundreds may be found all over the Highlands and the Isles.

The word Picti, means "painted" in Latin. Rather than painting themselves, as in popular myth, some historical records suggest they actually tattooed their faces and bodies.

Northern Ireland is "nae so far" from Scotland. About 500 AD, the sons of Erc, King of Dalriada (present-day county Antrim), established kingdoms in the Western Isles and Argyll, with their seat at Dunadd. These early Scots called their kingdom Dalriada.

There are a great many legends surrounding Kenneth MacAlpin, Scotland's first Scottish king (843 AD). They say he killed the members of all seven Pictish royal houses to secure the throne. Such ruthlessness paid off. While some future kings were styled "King of the Scots" or "King of the Picts", all were buried on Iona as Scottish kings and the name of the country became "Scotia".

Source: http://www.heartoglory.com/celtic/scots-picts.php

Pedigree

  1. Eochaid, *Alpin Mac [I4409]
    1. *UNK [I4411]
      1. Scotland, *Kenneth Mac Alpin
          1. Scotland, *Constantine I [I4260]
          2. Scotland, Aedh [I4410]

Ancestors

Source References

  1. Ancestry.com: Public Member Trees [S0075]
      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Constantine I Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth MacAlpin Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth I "Macalpin" Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for ALPIN Mac EOCHAID

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth I "Macalpin" Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth I "Macalpin" Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Constantine I Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth MacAlpin Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for ALPIN Mac EOCHAID

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth I "Macalpin" Scotland

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for ALPIN Mac EOCHAID

      • Page: Database online.
      • Source text:

        Record for Kenneth MacAlpin Scotland