<h2>CHAPTER V<br/> THE VIKINGS IN IRELAND TO THE BATTLE<br/> OF CLONTARF (1014)</h2>
<p>In the history of the Vikings in Ireland we have
seen how the attempt made by Turges to bring all
Ireland under one ruler came to nought by his death
in 845. At first this seems to have thrown the
Norsemen into confusion and we hear of a series of
defeats. Then, in 849, the invasions developed a new
phase. Hitherto while the Irish had been weakened
by much internecine warfare, their enemies had
worked with one mind and heart. Now we read of
'a naval expedition of seven score of the Foreigners
coming to exercise power over the Foreigners who
were before them, so that they disturbed all Ireland
afterwards.' This means that the Danes were now
taking an active part in the invasions of Ireland, and
we soon find them disputing the supremacy with the
earlier Norse settlers. A full and picturesque account
of the struggle is preserved for us in the second of
the <i>Three Fragments of Irish Annals</i> copied by
Dugald MacFirbis. Unfortunately the chronology
of these annals is in a highly confused state and it is
often difficult to trace the exact sequence of events.</p>
<p>When the Norsemen first saw the approaching<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
fleet they were much alarmed. Some said it was
reinforcements from Norway, but others, with keener
insight, said they were Danes who were coming to
harry and plunder. A swift vessel was dispatched
to find out who they were, and when the steersman
called out to them inquiring from what land they
came and whether as friend or foe, the only answer
was a shower of arrows. A fierce battle ensued, in
which the Danes killed thrice their own number and
carried off the women-folk and property of the
Norsemen. In 851 they plundered the Norse settlements
at Dublin and Dundalk, but in the next
year the Norsemen attacked them in Carlingford
Lough. At first the Danes were defeated, but then
their leader cunningly exhorted his men to secure
by their prayers and alms the patronage of St
Patrick, who was incensed against the Norsemen
because of the many evil deeds they had wrought in
Erin. The battle was renewed and the Danes were
victorious. After the battle they made rich gifts to
St Patrick for 'the Danes were a people with a kind
of piety: they could for a time refrain from meat
and from women.' After the fight we learn that the
Danes cooked their meat in cauldrons supported on
the bodies of their dead foes. The Danes now helped
Cerbhal, king of Ossory, against the Norsemen who
were harrying Munster, and henceforward we hear
again and again how the various Irish factions made<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
use of the dissensions among the invaders to further
their own ends.</p>
<p>Matters were further complicated by the fact that
many of the Irish forsook their Christian baptism
and joined the Norsemen in their plundering. These
recreant Irish were known as the Gaill-Gaedhil (i.e.
the foreign Irish), and played an important part in
the wars of the next few years. The Gaill-Gaedhil
were undoubtedly a race of mixed Norse and Gaelic
stock and we must not imagine that they sprung
suddenly into existence at this time. Long before
this the Norsemen and the Gaels must have had
considerable peaceful intercourse with one another
in their various settlements, and in accordance with
well-established Scandinavian custom it would seem
that many of the Irish were brought up as foster-children
in Norse households and must soon have
learned to accept their religion and customs. There
was also extensive intermarriage between Norsemen
and Irish. The annals speak of several such unions,
the most famous being the marriage of Gormflaith,
afterwards wife of Brian Borumha, to Anlaf Sihtricsson,
while in the genealogies of the Norse settlers in
Iceland at the end of this century, Gaelic names are
of frequent occurrence. One of the most famous of
the leaders of these 'foreign Irish' was Ketill Finn
(i.e. the White), a Norseman with an Irish nickname.
These foreign Irish fought either by the side of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
foreigners or on their own account and we have an
interesting story telling how, when Vikings from
Ireland made an invasion of Cheshire (c. 912),
Aethelflæd, the lady of the Mercians, sent ambassadors
to those Irish who were fighting on the side of the
invaders, calling upon them to forsake the pagans
and remember the old kindness shown in England to
Irish soldiers and clergy.</p>
<p>The troubles between Norsemen and Danes
were probably responsible for the arrival in Ireland
in 853 of Amhlaeibh, son of the king of Norway,
to receive the submission of the foreigners. This
Amhlaeibh is Olaf the White of Norse tradition. Olaf
is represented as ruling together with his brother
Imhar (O.N. Ívarr). The annals are not very good
authority for the relationship of the Norse leaders
to one another, and it is quite possible that Ívarr is
really Ívarr the Boneless, son to Ragnarr Loðbrók.
Under the strong rule of Olaf and Ívarr Dublin became
the chief centre of Scandinavian rule in Ireland,
and the Danes and Norsemen were to some extent
reconciled to one another. The Irish suffered great
losses but some brave leaders were found to face the
Norsemen. Cennedigh, king of Leix (Queen's County),
came upon a party of them laden with booty; they
abandoned the spoil and rushed upon Cennedigh
with angry barbarous shouts, blowing their trumpets
and many of them crying <i>nui, nui</i> (i.e. probably, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
the old Norse speech, <i>knúi, knúi</i>, 'hasten on, hasten
on'). Many darts and spears were thrown and at
last they took to their heavy powerful swords. All
was however of no avail and Cennedigh won a great
victory. Less fortunate was Maelciarain, 'champion
of the east of Ireland and a hero-plunderer of the
foreigners.' He was expelled from his kingdom by
the Leinstermen, who envied him in consequence of
his many victories over the Norsemen!</p>
<p>The activities of Olaf and Ívarr were not confined
to Ireland. In 866 Olaf paid a visit to Scotland, while
in 870 both Olaf and Ívarr were present at the siege
of Dumbarton. If Ívarr is Ívarr the Boneless, he must
then have gone to England and taken part in the
martyrdom of St Edmund. In the next year both
leaders returned to Dublin with a large number of
prisoners—English, Britons and Picts. In 873 Ívarr,
'king of the Norsemen of all Ireland and Britain'
died, and about the same time Olaf returned to
Norway, possibly to take part in the great fight
against Harold Fairhair at Hafrsfjord. The Danes
seem to have taken advantage of the removal of Olaf
to attempt to throw off the Norse yoke. Fresh
fighting took place and the Danes under Albdann, i.e.
Halfdanr, king of Northumbria, were defeated on
Strangford Lough in 877 with the loss of their leader.</p>
<p>After 877 the <i>War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill</i>
notes a period of rest for Ireland, lasting some forty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
years. This is true to the extent that no large fleets
of fresh invaders seem to have come to Ireland during
this time—the Vikings were too busy elsewhere, both
in England and the Frankish empire—but there were
occasional raids from Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Waterford
and other towns into various districts of Ireland,
and the Norsemen were often at variance amongst
themselves. Dissensions in Dublin were particularly
violent and so much did they weaken Norse rule
there that in 902 Dublin fell into the hands of the
Irish. The Vikings were driven abroad, some going
to Scotland and others to England, where they
besieged Chester (<i>v. supra</i>, p. <SPAN href="#Page_57">57</SPAN>). In the year 914
all the old troubles were renewed. Rögnvaldr, a
grandson of Ívarr, fresh from a great victory off the
Isle of Man, captured Waterford, and two years later
Sigtryggr, another grandson of Ívarr regained Dublin.
The Irish attempted resistance under the <i>ardrí</i> Niall
Glundubh, but he fell with twelve other kings in a
fight at Kilmashogue near Dublin in 919. During
the next fifty years Ireland was a prey to ceaseless
attacks by Norwegians and Danes alike. Towards
the close of the 9th century Limerick had become
a stronghold of the Norsemen in the west, and from
there they made their way up the Shannon into the
heart of the country. Cork was settled in the early
years of the 10th century, chiefly by Danes, and from
there all Munster was open to attack. Waterford<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
and Wexford, which stood as a rule in close connexion
with Dublin, served as centres of attack
against Leinster. The Irish made a stout resistance
under able leaders and Dublin was 'destroyed' more
than once. First among these leaders stands
Muirchertach 'of the leather cloaks,' son of Niall
Glundubh, a hero who came forward about the
year 926. His activities were unceasing. He repeatedly
attacked Dublin, took a fleet to the
Hebrides where he defeated the Vikings, gaining
much spoil, and finally in 941 made a circuit of
Ireland, from which he brought back as hostages
many provincial kings, including the Norse ruler of
Dublin. More famous still in Irish song and story
was Cellachan of Cashel. He made war against the
Vikings in Munster and for a time had the Norse
kingdom of Waterford under his control. Similarly
he conquered Limerick, and we find him fighting
side by side with Norsemen from both these towns.
During these fifty years the Norse kingdom in Dublin
stood in close relation with the Scandinavian kingdom
of Northumbria. Rögnvaldr, who died in 912, ruled
there and so did his brothers Sigtryggr (d. 927) and
Guðröðr (or Godfrey) (d. 934). The brothers left sons
known respectively as Anlaf Sihtricsson and Anlaf
Godfreyson. The latter took part in the great fight at
Brunanburh and died in 939. Anlaf Sihtricsson was
destined to a longer career. He would seem to have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
spent his early years in Scotland where he married
king Constantine's daughter. It is uncertain whether
he fought at Brunanburh, but he came to Northumbria
in 941 and captured York. He was expelled from
Northumbria in 944 or 945 and retired to Dublin,
and the rest of his life was chiefly spent in fighting in
Ireland. He was in close alliance with the Norsemen
in Man and the Western Islands, and was, for some
thirty years, the most powerful Norse ruler in Ireland.
Then came the first great blow to Norse rule in
Ireland. In 980 Maelsechlainn II, the <i>ardrí</i>, won
a great victory at Tara over the foreigners of Dublin
and the Islands in which Anlaf's son was slain. The
power of the kingdom of Dublin was effectually
broken. The Norsemen were compelled to liberate
all the hostages in their custody, to pay a fine of
2000 oxen and to remit the tribute which they had
imposed on all Ireland from the Shannon eastwards
to the sea. Anlaf abandoned his authority and
retired on a pilgrimage to Iona, where he died in the
same year an inmate of its monastery.</p>
<p>In the meantime events, fraught with important
consequences for Norse rule in that country, were
gradually developing in a distant quarter of Ireland. In
the province of Munster the Dalcassian line of princes
first comes into prominence about the middle of the
10th century, and the two most famous of these
princes were the brothers Mathgamhain and Brian,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
commonly known as Brian Borumha. Together the
brothers conquered Munster in spite of the support
given to the Irish by the Viking settlers, and when
their success aroused Ívarr, the ruler of Limerick,
they attacked him and won a great victory at
Sulcoit near Tipperary (968). Limerick was captured,
Mathgamhain died in 976 and Brian was soon
acknowledged king of all Munster. He next became
master of Leinster, but his rapid advance brought
him into conflict with the <i>ardrí</i> and by a compact
made in 998, Maelsechlainn practically surrendered
the southern half of Ireland to Brian. The ruler
of Dublin at this time was Sigtryggr of the Silken
Beard, son of Anlaf and Gormflaith, sister of
Maelmordha, king of Leinster. In 1000 Leinster
with the support of the Norsemen in Dublin revolted,
but Brian defeated them and captured Dublin, giving
his daughter in marriage to Sigtryggr and himself
marrying Gormflaith. In 1002 Maelsechlainn submitted
to Brian and the latter became <i>ardrí</i>. There
followed twelve years of peace, but Brian's marriage
with Gormflaith was his undoing. Quarrelling with
her husband, she stirred up Maelmordha of Leinster
against him. An alliance was formed between
Maelmordha and Sigtryggr, and Gormflaith dispatched
embassies to all the Viking settlements in the West,
summoning them to the aid of Sigtryggr in a great
fight against Brian. Sigtryggr secured the help<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
of Earl Sigurd of the Orkneys and North Scotland
by promise of the kingship of Dublin. Ships came
from all parts of the Viking world, from Northumbria,
from Man and the Western Islands, from Scotland
and the Orkneys, and even from Iceland. Dublin
was fixed as the trysting-place and Palm Sunday
1014 was to be the time of meeting. Brian mustered
all the forces of Munster and Connaught and was
joined in half-hearted fashion by Maelsechlainn, who
was really waiting to see which way the fortunes
of war would turn. Brian advanced into the plain
of Fingall, north of Dublin, and the two armies
faced one another at Clontarf all Passion week.
The Norsemen had learned by magic incantations
that if the fight took place before Good Friday their
chiefs would perish and their forces be routed, while
if the fight took place on Good Friday Brian himself
would perish but the Irish would win the day. So
they waited until the Friday and then made their
attack. The fight was long and the slaughter was
terrible. Brian and Sigurd were themselves numbered
among the slain. In the end the Norsemen were
defeated and Maelsechlainn completed their discomfiture
when he cut down the fugitives as they
tried to cross the bridge leading to Dublin and so
reach their ships. No fight was more famous in
Irish history and it seems to have appealed with
equally strong force to Scandinavian imagination.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
Clontarf and Brunanburh are the two great Viking
battles which find record in Scandinavian saga, and
in the story of Burnt Njal<SPAN name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</SPAN> we have a vivid account
both of the actual battle and of the events leading
up to it. Yet more interesting perhaps is the old
lay preserved to us, the <i>Song of the Valkyries</i>, who
that same day were seen in Caithness riding twelve
together to a bower where they set up a loom of
which men's heads were the weights, men's entrails
the warp and woof, while a sword was the shuttle
and the reels were arrows. They wove the web
of war and foretold the fate of king Sigtryggr and
Earl Sigurd as well as the sharp sorrow which
would befall the Irish<SPAN name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</SPAN>. The Norse world was full
of this and like portents and there can be no question
that the Vikings were themselves conscious that the
battle of Clontarf marked a very definite epoch in
the history of the Vikings in the West and in Ireland
more particularly. The Norsemen remained in
possession of their cities, Sigtryggr continued as
king of Dublin, but gradually the fortunes of the
Norse settlers tended to become merged in the history
of the nation as a whole and there was no further
question of Scandinavian supremacy in Ireland.</p>
<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></SPAN> English version by Sir G. W. Dasent.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></SPAN> This song was probably composed soon after the events with
which it is concerned and was first rendered into English by the poet
Gray under the title <i>The Fatal Sisters</i>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />