ingen Murchada O'Faelain, Gormflaith

Female 960 - 1030  (70 years)


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  1. 1.  ingen Murchada O'Faelain, Gormflaith was born in 960 in Naas, Kildare, Ireland (daughter of O'Fáeláin, King of Leinster Murchad MacFinn and Connaught, Princess O'ruarc); died in 1030 in Kincora, Munster, Ireland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FSID: LV63-B9Z

    Notes:

    Gormflaith ingen Murchada
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Gormflaith ingen Murchada (960-1030), was an Irish queen. She was born in Naas, County Kildare, Ireland, as the daughter of Murchad mac Finn, King of Leinster, sister
    of his successor, Mael Mórdha mac Murchada. According to the annalistic accounts, she was married to Olaf
    Cuaran, the Viking king of Dublin and York until his death in 981;[1] and mother to his son, King Sigtrygg
    Silkbeard.[2] Additionally, and perhaps most famously, after her son, Sigtrygg's defeat at the Battle of Glen
    Mama in 999, Gormlaith was married to Brian Boru, the King of Munster and High King of Ireland, and
    mother to his son and later King of Munster, Donnchad. It is also alleged that she married, Máel Sechnaill mac
    Domnaill after Olaf's death, but this is somewhat contentious as the sources for this marriage are less reliable.
    The Irish annals record Gormlaith's death in 1030. Gormlaith is most infamous for allegedly inciting men to
    such a degree that she caused the Battle of Clontarf in 1014. Given that her goading episode exists only in
    literary sources not contemporary with her lifetime, and, indeed, written long after her death, it is highly
    unlikely that such an event ever occurred.[3] Since the majority of depictions of Gormlaith were composed well
    after her life, very little is known about the actual historical figure.
    Annalistic and Genealogical Accounts
    The first annalistic account regarding Gormlaith appears in the Annals of Inisfallen. This is a major extant
    record of Munster history, and as such maintains a preference for Munster kingship and ancestry. The entry of
    her death was composed some 62 years after her death, making it the most contemporary and temporally
    proximate.[4] This account stated,
    The Daughter of Murchad son of Finn, queen of Munster, dies.[5]
    — Annals of Inisfallen, p. 197
    Gormlaith's father was Murchad, son of Finn and this statement paired with Queen of Munster, leaves little
    doubt amongst scholars that this reference is to Gormlaith. The Annals of Tigernach are the next
    chronologically contemporaneous account with a reference to Gormlaith. These annals, compiled in the Irish
    midlands, stated,
    Gormlaith, daughter of Murchad, son of Finn, mother of Sitric, son of Amlaíb Cuarán, king of the
    Foreigners, and of Donnachad, son of Brian, king of Munster, died.
    — Annals of Tigernach, p. 371
    Gormlaith also appears in genealogical accounts written more than 100 years after her death. The first of these
    accounts is found in the Banshenchas, which is essentially a catalogue of famous medieval Irish women.[6] The
    entry in this account echoed the annalistic accounts and names Olaf Cuaran and Brian Boru as her husbands
    and Sigtrygg and Donnchad as her sons. Gormlaith also appears in the twelfth century genealogies found in the
    Book of Leinster dating from 1150-1201. From this entry derives the famous "three leaps" of Gormlaith poem,
    which states she made a "leap in Dublin, a leap in Tara and a leap in Cashel".[7] Some scholars have used these
    "three leaps" as evidence of her three marriages to Olaf Cuaran, Brian Boru and Máel Sechnaill, contradicting
    the annalistic accounts which refer to only two marriages. In particular, the validity of this third marriage to
    Máel Sechnaill and her alleged divorce from Brian Boru, have been of serious contention amongst scholars.
    The "three leaps" poem contained in 12th century genealogies is the only medieval Irish account to potentially
    suggest a third marriage. However, some scholars have argued that the reference here to "three leaps" is
    referring instead to children and not, in fact, to marriages.[8]
    Mediaeval Literary Accounts
    Gormlaith has been depicted in many contexts since her death, and she is arguably best known for her portrayal
    in the Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh[9] This literary work of propaganda was composed between 1103 and 1111
    by a descendent of Brian Boru, Muirchertach Ua Briain. This text detailed the ascent to power of his illustrious
    ancestor in an effort to highlight the prestige of his dynasty.[10] Gormlaith makes her appearance in a singular
    scene in which she has garnered much notoriety in subsequent sources, is her inciting scene. To provide
    context: prior to this her brother, Mael Mordha, has ceded vassalage to Brian Boru.
    "Now when they arrived at Cenn Cordah, the king took off his tunic, and it was carried to his sister
    to put a silver button on it, viz. to Gormlaith, daughter of Murchad, Brian's wife; and she was the
    mother of Donnchad, son of Brian. The queen took the tunic and cast it into the fire; and she began
    to reproach and incite her brother because she thought it ill that he should yield service and
    vassalage and suffer oppression from any one or yield that which his father or grandfather never
    yielded and she said that his Brian's son would require the same thing from his son."
    — Todd, Cogadh Gaedhel Re Gallaibh, p. 143.
    In this depiction, Gormlaith, unsuccessfully, attempted to goad her brother into going to war against her
    husband Brian Boru.
    Njál's Saga, a thirteenth century Icelandic literary work,[11] referred to her as Kormloð, and portrayed her as a
    jealous divorcee bent on revenge on her ex-husband Brian Boru.
    “She was a very beautiful woman, but her best qualities were those over which she had no control,
    and it was commonly said that her character was evil insofar as she had control over it.”
    — Cook, Njal's Saga p. 296
    In this narrative, she goads her son Sigtrygg, unlike the Cogadh, where she attempted to incite her brother,
    Mael Mordha. She prompted Sigtrygg into gathering support from Vikings outside Ireland, most notably Earl
    Sigurd of Orkney and Brodir of the Isle of Man, by promising her hand in marriage. This is the first work to
    introduce the idea that Gormlaith was divorced from Brian Boru.
    Early Modern Narrative Texts
    A separate strain of wholly negative conceptions of Gormlaith appeared in Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa Ar
    Eirinn composed in 1634. In this text Keating makes explicit the link between Gormlaith’s goading and Máel
    Mórda’s declaration of war. Gormlaith’s remarks in this Early Modern account weighed on Máel Mórda,
    contributing to his quarrel with Murchad and eventually lead the “Leinster king to seek allies in the war against
    the Dál Cais”.[12] As to why Keating decided to place the cause of hostilities with Gormlaith is up for some
    debate. One scholar, Meidhbhín Ní Úrdail suggested that he was influenced by Meredith Hamner's Chronicle of
    Ireland published in 1633, where the cause of Clontarf is attributed not to Gormlaith, but an anonymous
    "merchant's wife".[13] Keating's work would in turn influence a slightly later text of the same period, Cath
    Cluana Tarbh. Only one version of this work contains a reference to Gormlaith, but the depiction is derived
    from Keating.[14]
    See also
    Mongfind
    References
    1. Ni Mhaonaigh, Maire (2002). "Tales of Three Gormlaith's in Medieval Irish Literature"E. riu. 52: 18.
    2. Forte, Angelo; Oram, Richard; Pedersen, Frederik (2005)V. iking empires (1st ed.). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge
    University Press. ISBN 0521829925.
    3. Wade, Christina (2012). Contextualizing Gormlaith: Portrayals and Pecreptions of a Medieval Irish Queen. Dublin:
    Unpublished MPhil Dissertation.
    4. Mac Airt, Sean (1951). The Annals of Inisfallen. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. p. xxi.
    5. Mac Airt, Sean (1951). Annals of Inisfallen. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. p. 197.
    6. Connon, Anne (2000). Alfred P. Smyth, ed. "The Banshenchas and the Ui Neill queens of aTra". Seanchas: Studies in
    Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology, History, and Literature in honour of Francis J. Byrne: 98.
    7. Sullivan (ed), Anne (1988). Book of Leinster Vol. 6. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. pp. 1492–1493.
    8. Ni Dhonnchadha, Maire (2002). Angela Bourke, ed. "Gormlaith and Her Sisters c. 750-1400F".i eld Day Anthology of
    Irish Writing. 4: Irish Women's Writing and Traditions: 188.
    9. James Henthorn Todd, ed. (1867). Cogadh Gaedhel Re Gallaibh. London: Longmans, Green, Reade,r and Dyer.
    10. Ni Mhaonaigh, Maire (2007). Brian Boru: Ireland's Greatest King?. Stroud: Tempus. pp. 45–46.
    11. Cook, Robert (2001). Njal's Saga. London: Penguin.
    12. Keating, ed. David Comyn, Geofrey; et al. (1902). Forsa Feasa ar Eirinn le Seathrun Ceitinn. London: Irish Texts
    Society. p. 268.
    13. Ni Urdail, Meidhbhin (2011). "Introduction". Cath Cluana Tarbh: 'The Battle of Clontarf.' London: Irish Texts Society.
    p. 14.
    14. Ni Urdail. "Introduction" of Cath Cluana Tarbh. p. 1.
    Further reading
    Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis
    Weis; Lines 175-1, 239-2
    External links
    The Story of Gormlaith: Jealous Divorcee or Literary Victim?
    A History of Vikings in Scotland
    Events leading up to the Battle of Clontarf
    Njal's Saga
    Gormflaith's marriages and families online
    Gormflaith was a Naas woman
    Who was Gormlaith's mother? A detective story, by Muireann Ní Bhrolcháin. In: Lost and Found II –
    Rediscovering Ireland’s past. (Ireland, 2009), pp. 83–94.
    ‘Tales of three Gormlaiths in early Irish literature by Máire Ní Mhaonaigh. In Ériu 52 (2002), pp. 1–24.
    'Viking Age Queens and Identity by Shannon Lewis-Simpson. In The Viking Age: Ireland and the West,
    Proceedings of the Fifteenth Viking Congress (Cork, 2005), John Sheehan & Donnchadh Ó Corráin
    (eds), pp. 217–226.
    Gormflaith, the Queen by L. M. McCraith. In: Romance of Irish Heroines (Dublin) pp. 42–50.
    ‘Gormflaith and the Northmen of Dublin by G. C. Stacpoole. In: Dublin Historical Record, Vol. XX, No.
    1, December (1964) pp. 4–18.
    ‘Gormlaith ingen Murchada ben Briain by Catherine Swift. From: Brian Boru Lecture Series, Mary
    Immaculate College.
    Contextualizing Gormlaith: Portrayals and Perceptions of a Medieval Irish Queen by Christina Wade.
    Unpublished M.Phil Dissertation, 2012.
    Queen Gormlaith, Brian Boru and the Northmen of Dublin by Howard B Clarke, Dublin City Lunchtime
    Lecture Series, 8 April 2014.
    "Gormflaith - A Naas Woman?" by James Durney, Co. Kildare Online Electronic Journal, 16 February
    2008.
    "A Game of Thrones: Leinster v Munster at the Battle of Clontarf" by James Durney, Co. Kildare Online
    Electronic Journal, 27 March 2014,

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gormflaith_ingen_Murchada&oldid=775132434"
    Categories: Irish royal consorts 960 births 1030 deaths 10th-century Irish people
    11th-century Irish people 11th-century women Irish princesses Women of medieval Ireland
    Viking Age women People from County Kildare
    This page was last edited on 12 April 2017, at 21:30.
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    Family/Spouse: Sigtryggsson, King of Dublin & York Olafr. Olafr was born in 927 in York, Yorkshire, England; died in 981 in Iona, Argyll, Scotland; was buried in 981 in Iona, Argyll, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Family/Spouse: Sitric, Amlaíb mac. Amlaíb was born in 993 in Ireland; died in 1034 in England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. of Dublin, King of Dublin Sigtrygg was born in 970 in Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; died in 1042 in Dublin, Ireland.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  O'Fáeláin, King of Leinster Murchad MacFinn was born in 900 in Leinster, Ireland; died in 972 in Leinster, Ireland.

    Murchad married Connaught, Princess O'ruarc. O'ruarc was born in 920 in Connacht, Ireland; died in 960 in Leinster, Ireland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Connaught, Princess O'ruarc was born in 920 in Connacht, Ireland; died in 960 in Leinster, Ireland.
    Children:
    1. 1. ingen Murchada O'Faelain, Gormflaith was born in 960 in Naas, Kildare, Ireland; died in 1030 in Kincora, Munster, Ireland.