The Early Scottish Church the Ecclesiastical History of Scotland From the Firs

Cover The Early Scottish Church the Ecclesiastical History of Scotland From the Firs
The Early Scottish Church the Ecclesiastical History of Scotland From the Firs
Thomas Maclauchlan
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, c. 4). If this visit was in 563 Brude commenced his reign about 554. In the Pictish chronicle first published by Innes in the appendix to his " Critical Essay " (Crit. Essay, p. 779), the name of this king appears as forty-ninth in 144! The Early Scottish Church.
succession of the Pictisli monarchs. He is called " Brides filius Mailcom. " He is also represented as successor to Necton Morbet filius Erp, or Neachdain mbr mac Eirp, who gave Abernethy to Dairlughdach as a gift to God and St. Brid
...e, and who was monarch of the southern Picts. From this it appears that there were not two lines of Pictish kings, as generally believed, or if so, that they are so intermingled in this chronicle as that the separate lines are inextricable. Tighernac notes the death of Cendaladh, king of the Picts, in 580.
We have, then, pretty reliable authority for belie\4ng that, about the middle of the sixth century, there wa:s in what is now called Scotland a Pictish people, of whose history we know almost nothing, in Galloway ; an Angle kingdom extending over the Lothians, and embracing the modern shires of Roxburgh and Dumfries ; a kingdom of Strathclyde Britons, whose king was Rhydderch Hael, or Roderick the bountiful ; a kingdom of Picts, said by some to be divided into northern and southern Picts, although we have no evidence of the existence of two lines of monarchs ; and a kingdom of Scots in Argyll, ruled by Conall the son of Comgall.


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