Ragnall mac Torcaill explained
Ragnall mac Torcaill (died 1146) was a twelfth-century Norse-Gaelic magnate who may have been King of Dublin. He was a member of the Meic Torcaill, and may be identical to a member of this family who campaigned in Wales in 1144. Ragnall was slain in 1146, with some sources styling him king in records of his demise. He was the father of at least one son, Ascall, a man who certainly reigned as king.
Background
Ragnall's father, a significant figure named Torcall, is mentioned by the sixteenth-century Annals of Loch Cé in 1133.[1] Although Torcall's ancestry is uncertain,[2] later sources suggest that his family—the Meic Torcaill—were a substantial landholding kindred in the region.[3] Torcall's rise to power seems to have occurred at about a time when Kingdom of Dublin was closely aligned with Diarmait Mac Murchada, King of Leinster.[3] The latter lost control of Dublin in 1141, however, as the seventeenth-century Annals of the Four Masters reveals that the town was seized and held by Conchobar Ua Briain, overlord of Munster.[4]
Dublin
Following Conchobar's ousting, the Annals of the Four Masters further indicates that the Dubliners installed a certain Islesman, Ottar mac meic Ottair, as King of Dublin in 1142.[5] Two years later, Ottar, along with an unnamed member of the Meic Torcaill (who may well have been Ragnall himself) and an unnamed son of a certain Erulb, are noted in the context of mercenary operations in Wales by the thirteenth- and fourteenth-century texts Brenhinedd y Saesson and Brut y Tywysogyon, and the "B" and "C" versions of the eleventh- to thirteenth-century Annales Cambriæ.[6] This episode seems to concern Dublin's military involvement in a Welsh factional dispute between Owain Gwynedd and Cadwaladr, sons of Gruffudd ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd.[7] It was in the course of this inter-dynastic struggle that Cadwaladr sought assistance from Ireland.[8] At one point, the sources report that the Dubliners demanded two thousand captives or cattle for their assistance,[9] a pay-off that evinces the kingdom's interest in the continuing twelfth-century slave trade.[10] Contemporary sources reveal that a desire to extinguish the Irish Sea slave trade was one of the reasons the English used to justify their twelfth-century conquests in Ireland.[11]
Death
Ragnall died in 1146.[12] His slaying is reported by the fourteenth-century Annals of Tigernach, the twelfth-century Chronicon Scotorum, and the fifteenth-century Mac Carthaigh's Book. These sources accord Ragnall the title King of Dublin.[13] If these accounts are to be believed, his reign would appear to have begun no earlier than 1144, and interrupted Ottar's reign.[14] The Annals of the Four Masters, however, accords Ragnall the title Irish, Middle (900-1200);: [[Mormaer|mórmáer]], which could indicate that he was merely a subordinate within Ottar's regime.[15] Ragnall's death appears to have occurred in the context of conflict with the inhabitants of East Meath. The record of his demise[16] —and the Dubliners' part in the slaying of Cellach Ua Cellaig, King of Brega within the same year[17] —may partly evince the apparent north-western expansion by the Dubliners in the twelfth-century.[16] Although Ottar could well have enjoyed the cooperation of the Meic Torcaill in the early part of his reign, the Annals of Tigernach and Chronicon Scotorum reveal that they were responsible for his slaying in 1148.[18]
Descendants
Ragnall had at least one son, Ascall, who ruled as king for a brief period in the last half of the century.[19] Several decades before, the Annals of the Four Masters reports the death of a certain "mac Mic Turgaill" in 1138.[20] If Ragnall was the leading representative of the family at this point in history, the fact that the deceased individual is not accorded any title could indicate that he was a son of Ragnall.[21] Another possibility is that this man was instead a son of Torcall himself,[22] or perhaps some other member of the Meic Torcaill.[19] Another son of Ragnall may be a certain Ragnall mac Ragnaill, styled tigerna Gall ("lord of the foreigners"), who is stated by the Annals of the Four Masters to have attended the great assembly convened by Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair, High King of Ireland in 1167.[23] The name and title of this Ragnall suggest that he was either an otherwise unattested son of Ragnaill mac Torcaill, or else an annalist's mistake for Ascall himself.[24]
References
Primary sources
- Web site: Annals of Inisfallen . 2010 . . 16 February 2010 . . 31 July 2014 . A7 .
- Web site: Annals of Inisfallen . 2008 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 23 October 2008 . University College Cork . 31 July 2014 . A6 .
- Web site: Annals of Loch Cé . 2008 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 5 September 2008 . University College Cork . 31 July 2014 . A3 .
- Web site: Annals of Loch Cé . 2005 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 13 April 2005 . University College Cork . 31 July 2014 . A2 .
- Web site: Annals of the Four Masters . 2013a . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 3 December 2013 . University College Cork . 29 July 2014 . A1 .
- Web site: Annals of the Four Masters . 2013b . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 16 December 2013 . University College Cork . 29 July 2014 . A4 .
- Web site: Annals of Tigernach . 2005 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 13 April 2005 . University College Cork . 31 July 2014 . A5 .
- Web site: n.d. . Bodleian Library MS. Rawl. B. 488 . Early Manuscripts at Oxford University . . 2 October 2016 . B1 .
- Book: 1867 . Dimock . JF . James Francis Dimock . Giraldi Cambrensis Opera . Rerum Britannicarum Medii Ævi Scriptores . 5 . . London . D1 .
- Book: 1874 . Munch . PA . Peter Andreas Munch . Goss . A . Alexander Goss . Chronica Regvm Manniæ et Insvlarvm: The Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys . 1 . . Douglas, IM . M5 .
- Web site: Chronicon Scotorum . 2010 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 24 March 2010 . University College Cork . 31 July 2014 . C3 .
- Web site: Chronicon Scotorum . 2012 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 14 May 2012 . University College Cork . 31 July 2014 . C4 .
- Book: Gough-Cooper . HW . 2015a . Annales Cambriae: The B Text From London, National Archives, MS E164/1, pp. 2–26 . September 2015 . Welsh Chronicles Research Group . G1 .
- Book: Gough-Cooper . HW . 2015b . Annales Cambriae: The C Text From London, British Library, Cotton MS Domitian A. i, ff. 138r–155r . September 2015 . Welsh Chronicles Research Group . G2 .
- Web site: n.d. . Jesus College MS. 111 . Early Manuscripts at Oxford University . Oxford Digital Library . 2 October 2016 . J2 .
- Book: 1870 . Jones . O . Owen Jones (antiquary) . Williams . E . Iolo Morganwg . Pughe . WO . William Owen Pughe . The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales . . Denbigh . 6930827M . J1 .
- Web site: Mac Carthaigh's Book . 2016a . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 21 June 2016 . University College Cork . 14 June 2018 . M7 .
- Web site: Mac Carthaigh's Book . 2016b . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 21 June 2016 . University College Cork . 14 June 2018 . M8 .
- Web site: n.d. . Oxford Jesus College MS. 111 (The Red Book of Hergest) . Welsh Prose 1300–1425 . 2 October 2016 . O1 .
- Book: Parry . T . Thomas Parry (author) . 1967 . 1962 . The Oxford Book of Welsh Verse . registration . . Oxford . 5845392M . P2 .
- Web site: n.d. . Royal MS 13 B VIII . . 7 August 2014 . R2 .
- Web site: The Annals of Tigernach . 2016 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 8 February 2016 . University College Cork . 14 June 2018 . T3 .
- Web site: The Annals of Ulster . 2008 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 29 August 2008 . University College Cork . 29 July 2014 . T1 .
- Web site: The Annals of Ulster . 2017 . Corpus of Electronic Texts . 6 January 2017 . University College Cork . 14 June 2018 . T2 .
- Book: 1867 . Todd . JH . James Henthorn Todd . Cogad Gaedel re Gallaib: The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill . Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer . London . 24826667M . T6 .
- Book: 1860 . Williams Ab Ithel . J . John Williams (Ab Ithel) . Brut y Tywysigion; or, The Chronicle of the Princes . Rerum Britannicarum Medii Ævi Scriptores . Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts . London . 24776516M . W2 .
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- Book: Byrne, FJ . 2008 . 1987 . The Trembling Sod: Ireland in 1169 . Cosgrove . A . Art Cosgrove . Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534 . New History of Ireland . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 978-0-19-953970-3 . 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199539703.003.0002 . . B2 .
- Book: Downham, C . 2013 . Living on the Edge: Scandinavian Dublin in the Twelfth Century . No Horns on Their Helmets? Essays on the Insular Viking-Age . Celtic, Anglo-Saxon, and Scandinavian Studies . . Aberdeen . 157–178 . 2051-6509 . 978-0-9557720-1-6 . D5 .
- Duffy . S . 1992 . Irishmen and Islesmen in the Kingdoms of Dublin and Man, 1052–1171 . . 43 . 93–133 . 0332-0758 . 2009-0056 . 30007421 . D2 .
- Duffy . S . 1993a . Ireland and the Irish Sea Region, 1014–1318 . 2262/77137 . free . PhD . . D4 .
- Duffy . S . 1993b . Pre-Norman Dublin: Capital of Ireland? . . 1 . 4 . 13–18 . 0791-8224 . 27724114 . D3 .
- Eogan . G . Byrne . FJ . 1967–1968 . Excavations at Knowth, Co. Meath, 1962–1965 . . 66C . 299–400 . 0035-8991 . 2009-0048 . 25505140 . E1 .
- Book: Flanagan, MT . 1989 . Irish Society, Anglo-Norman Settlers, Angevin Kingship: Interactions in Ireland in the Late Twelfth Century . Clarendon Press . Oxford . 0-19-822154-1 . F1 .
- Book: Flanagan, MT . 1997 . 1996 . Irish and Anglo-Norman Warfare in Twelfth-Century Ireland . Bartlett . T . Thomas Bartlett (historian) . Jeffrey . K . Keith Jeffery . A Military History of Ireland . . Cambridge . 52–75 . 0-521-41599-3 . F8 .
- French . NE . 2015 . Dublin, 1160–1200: Part One . . 68 . 1 . 21–35 . 0012-6861 . 24616064 . F2 .
- Holm . P . 1986 . The Slave Trade of Dublin, Ninth to Twelfth Centuries . . 5 . 317–345 . 2034-6506 . 0332-1592 . 10.1484/J.Peri.3.139 . H1 .
- Book: 2005 . Moody . TW . Theodore William Moody . Martin . FX . F. X. Martin . Byrne . FJ . Maps, Genealogies, Lists: A Companion to Irish History . New History of Ireland . Clarendon Press . Oxford . 9780198217459 . M3 .
- Book: Moore, D . 1996 . Gruffudd ap Cynan and the Medieval Welsh Polity . Maund . KL . Gruffudd ap Cynan: A Collaborative Biography . Studies in Celtic History . . Woodbridge . 1–60 . 0-85115-389-5 . 0261-9865 . M1 .
- Book: Moore, D . 2013 . 2005 . The Welsh Wars of Independence . . Brimscombe Port . 978-0-7524-9648-1 . M2 .
- Web site: Owain Gwynedd (d. 1170) . Pryce . H . 2004 . . Oxford University Press . 10.1093/ref:odnb/20979 . 1 October 2016 . subscription . P1 .
- Ryan . J . 1949 . Pre-Norman Dublin . . 79 . 1/2 . 64–83 . 0035-9106 . 25510687 . R1 .
- Woods . A . 2013 . Economy and Authority: A Study of the Coinage of Hiberno-Scandinavian Dublin and Ireland . 1 . . 10.17863/CAM.7489 . free . PhD . W1 .
- Wyatt . D . 1999 . Gruffudd ap Cynan and the Hiberno-Norse World . . 19 . 4 . 0043-2431 . 0083-792X . 10107/1083764 . free . 595–617 . W5 .
- Book: Wyatt, D . 2009 . Slaves and Warriors in Medieval Britain and Ireland, 800–1200 . The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 AD. Peoples, Economics and Cultures . . Leiden . 978-90-04-17533-4 . 1569-1462 . W6 .
Notes and References
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#A1|''Annals of the Four Masters'' (2013a)]
- [#A1|''Annals of the Four Masters'' (2013a)]
- [#G1|Gough-Cooper (2015a)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#W6|Wyatt (2009)]
- [#W1|Woods (2013)]
- [#M7|''Mac Carthaigh's Book'' (2016a)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#A1|''Annals of the Four Masters'' (2013a)]
- [#D2|Duffy (1992)]
- [#D2|Duffy (1992)]
- [#T3|''The Annals of Tigernach'' (2016)]
- [#D5|Downham (2013)]
- [#A1|''Annals of the Four Masters'' (2013a)]
- [#D4|Duffy (1993a)]
- [#D2|Duffy (1992)]
- [#A1|''Annals of the Four Masters'' (2013a)]
- [#D2|Duffy (1992)]