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The Battle of Clontarf

2025/5/8
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Alex Woolf
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Máire Ní Mhaonaigh
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Seán Duffy
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Máire Ní Mhaonaigh: 我认为克隆塔夫战役的起因在于爱尔兰当时错综复杂的政治格局和布赖恩·博鲁的野心。1014年,爱尔兰由多个势力组成,包括布赖恩·博鲁领导的蒙斯特的达尔·盖斯、与之对抗的奥尼尔家族、强大的都柏林维京人和莱恩斯特人等。这些势力之间的联盟和对抗不断变化,布赖恩·博鲁试图将他的势力从蒙斯特向北扩张,他的主要对手是奥尼尔家族和都柏林的维京人。都柏林维京人建立了强大的中心和贸易网络,与周围的势力发生冲突。布赖恩·博鲁想要控制都柏林和莱恩斯特,而维京人和莱恩斯特人则试图阻止他。这最终导致了克隆塔夫战役的爆发。 关于这场战役的史料,我们必须意识到所有现存的史料都存在偏见,难以还原战役的真实情况。即使是同时代的史料也带有明显的倾向性。我们只能尽力从这些支离破碎的史料中拼凑出战役的轮廓。战役的结果和影响迅速传播开来,不仅在爱尔兰,而且在更广阔的欧洲地区,都留下了深刻的印记。 布赖恩·博鲁死后很快就被塑造成圣徒和殉道者的形象,这与他追随者的宣传有关。在不同的史料中,他的形象被不断地塑造和发展,成为爱尔兰民族英雄的象征。 Seán Duffy: 都柏林是爱尔兰第一个也是最重要的城镇,维京人对其控制使其成为爱尔兰最大的经济财富中心,具有重要的政治和军事意义。控制都柏林对于想要成为爱尔兰最高统治者的国王至关重要。布赖恩·博鲁家族起初势力较弱,但通过与利默里克的维京人合作,获得了先进的舰船、军事策略和贸易财富,从而迅速崛起。克隆塔夫战役的导火索是都柏林国王西特里克·西尔克比尔德拒绝接受布赖恩·博鲁的统治,并与莱恩斯特国王及其他外来势力结盟。这场战役不仅仅是蒙斯特国王与莱恩斯特国王之间的地区冲突,还涉及到来自奥克尼、曼岛、赫布里底群岛和挪威的维京人的参与,这与当时英格兰的政治局势有关。 关于克隆塔夫战役的具体过程,我们主要依靠《爱尔兰人与维京人的战争》等史料,其中一些细节得到了科学证据的证实。布赖恩·博鲁在战役中阵亡,但许多历史学家认为他一方取得了胜利,因为他阻止了入侵者征服爱尔兰的企图。克隆塔夫战役后,都柏林不再是爱尔兰的主要权力中心,而是成为各方势力争夺的对象。布赖恩·博鲁的牺牲强化了为爱尔兰而死的观念,这成为爱尔兰抵抗外来侵略的象征。 Alex Woolf: 克隆塔夫战役中,参与各方势力之间存在复杂的家族关系,他们之间既是竞争对手,也存在姻亲关系。都柏林维京人对爱尔兰的经济和社会产生了深远的影响,他们带来了货币和奴隶贸易,并与爱尔兰国王建立了共生关系。克隆塔夫战役中外部势力的参与可能与1013年斯文·福克比尔德征服英格兰以及随后英格兰局势的变化有关。这场战役并非简单的地区冲突,而是关乎爱尔兰的未来和统一。 克隆塔夫战役后,都柏林成为各方势力争夺的焦点,其地位发生了转变。冰岛史料中对克隆塔夫战役的关注可能与当时挪威国王哈肯四世的政治野心有关。这场战役对后世爱尔兰文化产生了深远的影响,其相关传说和故事被不断地演绎和传播,成为爱尔兰民族认同的重要组成部分。

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BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts. This is In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 and this is one of more than a thousand episodes you can find on BBC Sounds and on our website. If you scroll down the page for this edition, you'll find a reading list to go with it. I hope you enjoy the programme.

Hello, the Battle of Clontarf 1014 is one of the best known dates in Irish history, akin to 1066 for England in significance, but not in outcome, as in 1014 the Irish won. As medieval chronicles relate, Brian Baru, King of Ireland, led this fight against the Vikings near their Dublin stronghold, and he gave up his life defeating the foreigners.

While, as we'll hear, the offence are disputed, the Battle of Clontarf became a powerful symbol of what a united Ireland could achieve militarily if politics and diplomacy failed. With me to discuss the Battle of Clontarf are Sean Duffy, Professor of Medieval Irish and Insular History at Trinity College, Dublin, Alex Wolfe, Professor of Medieval Studies at the University of St Andrews,

and Moira Nifueni, Professor of Celtic and Medieval Studies at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. Moira, what were the different powers in Ireland in 1014? Who ruled what?

Well, I suppose starting furthest south in Munster, the main power there was a group called Dáil Gáis, who were ruled by the king that we're going to talk quite a lot about today, I imagine, namely Brian Baru. They were relatively newcomers to the scene. Brian's grandfather was the first person in his dynasty to have become powerful. His name was Cinedig and Brian's brother, Matrevan, also Matrevan.

gained some degree of power. So they were in the very far south of the country and Brian was certainly trying to kind of extend his power northwards. I suppose his main rival, they were the O'Neills, the Enail, and particularly the southern Enail that were around the kind of the area that we might think of as Meath and West Meath today. The main kind of ruler there was a man called Mael Shachnal Mac Dovnal and he really was Brian's main opponent.

So that was in the northern part of the country. I suppose between them we have the Vikings of Dublin.

who really had built up a very, very powerful centre and an extended trading network. And because of that had come into contention with all of the groups around them. Immediately south of the Dublin Vikings were the Leinster men, and they allied with these various groups in turn. Then in the middle of the country, we have a group called Osrige or Osri. And then I suppose in the far west, but not a significant part,

From a power point of view, in this period were the men of Connacht. So a kaleidoscope really of groups and alliances. Was there war in kaleidoscope?

I suppose it was a shifting kaleidoscope. And there's no doubt that alliances, allegiances were constantly moving. And I suppose you were only really as good as your last battle or as your last strategic manoeuvre. So I think it is fair to say that, yeah, alliances, both military alliances, political alliances, and indeed marital alliances were constantly shifting. So certainly the power groups weren't stable, but there's no doubt but that

Munster, the southernmost territory, and the southern Enail, they were the two most stable power blocks immediately in the period coming up to the Battle of Cantarf. Are we talking about this early in the century, constant skirmishes and wars between these different powers?

Certainly constant skirmishes. That's certainly what the chronicle sources would lead us to believe. I mean, you know, not a constant state of warfare, but certainly constant skirmishes. But there were other kinds of, you know, there were other kinds of engagements as well. Well, so defences, for example, were being built or indeed bridges over the Shannon to try and get across strategic areas. But also we do have references to formal alliances. It wasn't just a warring state. Yeah.

Thank you. Sean, Sean Duffy. The battle was going to take place just outside Dublin, and Dublin plays a very significant part in all of this. Can you tell listeners about Dublin at that time, around 1014-ish or just before? Yeah, I mean, Dublin, as Moira said, Dublin was controlled by Vikings. It had been established... Sorry, when you say controlled by Vikings, what do you mean by that? Well...

I mean, in early medieval Ireland, there were no towns. There were no cities, towns, villages. It's a consequence of Ireland never having been part of the Roman Empire. So it had been an entirely rural landscape until the first Viking raids began around the year 800. And they tended to initially to make just sort of smash and grab raids, as it were. But before long, they were bedding themselves in.

and building camps for their ships from which they could raid further inland in Ireland. And there are a number of them, therefore, established around the coast. And very quickly, Dublin became the lead centre of Viking activity in Ireland. So I'm not sure if the explanation for that was geographical. Dublin, of course, controls a magnificent bay on Ireland's eastern seaboard.

whether they were strategic because of the fact that Dublin is, geographically in Ireland, it's right at the very centre of the country. And in early medieval Ireland, there was a kind of a symbolic division of the country between the northern half of the island and the southern half of the island. And that boundary was formed by the River Liffey on which the Viking settlement in Dublin was located.

So strategically and geographically, it was significant. Militarily, it became very important because the naval camp that they established quickly developed into a trading base, some kind of a trading emporium. And by the 10th century, say the 930s, the 940s, the 950s, we can certainly begin to think of that as a town.

And being Ireland's first and most significant town, it was the single greatest concentration of economic wealth on the island of Ireland. And therefore, that inevitably leads to a political importance for it, because you are nobody in Ireland if you don't control the levers of wealth. And if they are largely concentrated in Dublin...

The Irish king who wants to be the paramount lord on the island must gain control of Dublin if he's able to achieve his objectives.

So it was a significant goal for Irish kings in the 10th and the 11th centuries. And that feeds into the background of the Battle of Clontarf. Thank you. Can you tell us something about Brian Baru and his powerhouse and why that is significant at this time?

When Moira referred to his origins, which are in Munster in the southwest of Ireland, I think it's significant that his family, they were a relative, even if you go back 100 years, they were a relatively minor dynasty based in what is now County Clare, just across the Shannon, at the base of the Shannon. One of the few

permanent Viking bases that were established in Ireland was that limerick in the Shannon Estuary, which controlled the entrance to the River Shannon, which is the largest river in either Britain or Ireland and therefore a hugely important

strategic routeway in an age before roads and bridges. If you can control the river network, you can penetrate to the very inland heart of the country. His dynasty emerged fairly rapidly in the early 10th century, and I can't help thinking that that has to do with their interrelations with the local Vikings in Limerick.

Their capacity to get, having got control of them, they had access to much more sophisticated Viking naval craft, which Irish kings, even though we are an island people, we were not a particularly maritime nation. So we acquired Viking fleets. We acquired a more sophisticated, probably a more sophisticated way of behaving militarily in battle, you know, more organized battle tactics. Right.

and very significant access to trade and therefore wealth and, for example, to things like armour.

chain mail. If you controlled the Viking towns, you had a very significant military and political advantage over your opponents. And I think that is the thing that explains how this man from a relatively minor dynasty was able to begin to threaten the hitherto dominant forces on the island. Thank you. Alex Wolfe, how intertwined were the families that might in the face of it be clear rivals?

They were actually extremely intertwined. If we start with the Viking king of Dublin, Sittric, or Sittric as he's called in Irish sources, his mother, Gormla, was the sister of the king of Leinster, his immediately southern neighbour, and she had been married to Brian. And Sittric was married to Brian's daughter, Slonia, so his mother was his wife's stepmother.

And his sister was married to Moir Shechnal, the king of Midr, the southerly Nail, who we heard about from Moira. And to make things even more complicated, his predecessor as king of Dublin, Gluniar, who was Citric's half-brother, was also Moir Shechnal's half-brother. So Moir Shechnal's wife was the half-sister of her husband's half-brother. I love that.

I'm sure everybody's followed that very thing. Exactly. But the point is that when we think about these people, it's very easy to think about them as kingdoms or peoples that are sort of essentially against each other, like orcs and elves in Tolkien. But in reality, the leadership were one family. All of them will have sat and eaten and drunk together at one time or another. So this is really a family at war. We have to be very careful about thinking about

these people as sort of essentially ethnically opposed. They're extraordinarily closely interwoven and Brian and Citric and Maelmurda of Leinster and Maelshechlin will all have broken bread together at one time or another. So were they, obviously all they were gathered together, they're intertwined, they married each other, they didn't seem to be afraid to fight each other.

No, but I suspect it wasn't personal. As Royer said, it's all about power and it's a kind of game. And of course, in most battles of this sort, it isn't the kings who die. What do they need from the back?

Well, Citrix certainly did, because as we'll see, he never actually left the city during the battle and got away with no problems at all. But kings did die in battle sometimes. But I think they were just jockeying for the position, for this dominance, a hierarchy of rulers and so on. And what they thought they were going to get out of it, how many of these campaigns...

might have been more bluff than anything else, with somebody then doing a ritual submission and not much fighting happening. That happened, for example, in 1002, when Brian first really challenged Mel Shecknell for dominance. Mel Shecknell submitted and handed over dominance to Brian. So sometimes these things didn't lead to bloody battles. One of the things that's curious about Clontarf is that it was so bloody and so many people died. That's unusual.

But the Vikings, you've mentioned that word a great number of times, had a very emphatic influence on all this, didn't they? Oh, certainly. As Sean has said, they changed the economy completely. As well as there being no towns in Ireland before the coming of the Vikings, there was no coinage. For about the middle of the 10th century, we start seeing vast amounts of English coinage turning up in Ireland that's probably coming through places like Dublin and Limerick as part of the slave trade.

Initially, the Vikings are doing the raiding, but soon they set up symbiotic relationships with kings like the kings of Mida or the kings of Munster. And they're the people who are providing them with slaves and they're selling them on. But you do have to remember that Citric, the Viking king of Dublin, is a fifth generation immigrant. He's been there for a long time. His mother is Irish.

And so these people, I suspect people like Citric, who almost certainly spent part of his youth at the court of his uncle, the King of Leinster, he was probably able to code switch. He could probably comb his hair a different way, change his clothes and pass for being Irish.

Whereas he would probably also equally, wearing different clothes and speaking a different language, pass for being a Norseman. And I think that's the way we have to think about the people who modern scholars often call Hiberno-Norse to represent this hybridisation. Thank you very much. Well, let's gather our forces for this battle. Moira, why were they gathering at Klontarf in 1014? Who was gathering and why were they gathering?

Well, I suppose why they were gathering had to do with these kin relations and also this power politics that we've been talking about. And or I suppose really the ambition of Brian Baru and what would have been considered increasingly bold moves on his part. So about 1005, for example, he marched to the north of the country and went to the Church of Armagh, you know, ostentatiously laid, you know, 20 ounces of gold there on the altar and

took the hostages of the northern part of Ireland. And I think for some, that would certainly have been deemed a kind of a move too far. So he was getting increasingly bold. But I think also why they were gathering and what lay at its heart was really a desire for control over this Hiberno-Norse trading emporium we've been talking about. Dublin, as Sean has discussed, was getting increasingly powerful.

So there's no doubt that Brian also wanted control of Dublin and Leinster. And indeed, the Vikings of Dublin and their Leinster neighbours were absolutely sure that they were going to try and stop him from getting it. So that led to, well, first of all, a three-month siege around Dublin and they all returned home and then they returned and the Battle of Clontarf ensued. Sean, you want to come in on Brian Burrell?

He was a very old man as we get towards the time of the Battle of Clontarf. Some sources say in his late 80s, probably in his early to mid 70s. But...

In the final years of his life, he did actually manage to get every single other king in Ireland of note to accept him as his overlord. Finally, even the people of Donegal, and it's very hard to get the people of Donegal to agree with anything, but they agreed ultimately to accept Brian as their king.

But the trigger for the Battle of Clontarf was when this man, Citrix Silkenbeard, that we heard about from Alex earlier, the King of Dublin, decided to reject Brian's overlordship and then to ally with the King of Leinster and to ally with other forces from outside Ireland.

We don't entirely know, to be honest, what Cedric Silkbeard's ambitions were at the time of the Battle of Clontarf, but quite possibly they were to do what his father had tried to do back in the 980s, a man called Olaf Coron, to seize the kingship of Ireland for himself.

So the Battle of Clontarf is not a minor interprovincial contest between the King of Munster and a local Irish rival, the King of Leinster. There is much more going on than that. Alex, you want to take that up? Yes. I mean, one of the things that we haven't talked about much is the external people who turned up.

The one we know for certain the most about is Sigurd, Earl of Orkney, who is the ruler of the Orkney Islands, probably also Shetland and Caithness in the north of Scotland. He's from a very Scandinavian background.

But we're also told that there's another major Viking leader who the sources all call the name something like Brodhia, which is a slightly odd name. It doesn't appear in any other Scandinavian sources. And he's sometimes said to be an apostate deacon, but he's supposed to be a Viking, maybe based on the Isle of Man, maybe in the Hebrides, maybe coming from Norway. And also there are supposed to be a thousand male-clad Norwegians there.

Loughlanagh, as they're called in the Irish sources. And sometimes they're said to be brothers, men. Sometimes they're said to be an additional group. What's really odd is that this battle took place at about this time of year in April. And if they've come from Norway, it's not really the time of year that you would sail either from Norway or Orkney. Usually you'd expect people to be sailing later in the year when the weather was better. It's quite risky sailing in the North Atlantic in the early spring.

So one possibility is that it's connected to what's happening in the wider insular world, because in late 1013... What do you mean by insular here? I mean Britain and Ireland and the various islands associated with them. So insular as opposed to continental. And in 1013, the end of 1013, Sven Forkbeard, the king of Denmark, had conquered England.

But then at the end of February, he died mysteriously and unexpectedly in Lincolnshire. And the English recovered their independence briefly for a couple of years before his son, the famous Canute, came back. And it seems to me quite likely that some of these Scandinavians who are available for Sittrick to hire...

perhaps people who were expecting to be or had been part of Sven's army and that they were to get out of England because things are going pear-shaped there. I was just going to add to that. I mean, if we think about contemporary England and contemporary Ireland, England is a much wealthier country than Ireland. And yet it was conquered by the Danes then. It was conquered by the Normans in 1066. It was Reagan...

The Swedes regularly contemplated its conquest throughout the 11th century, as did the Norse. And so in the 11th century, these islands were up for grabs by people from a Scandinavian background. So there's no reason to think that the experience of Ireland would have been any different from the experience of England at the time. That's to say there were people from the Scandinavian world who had political views

and economic ambitions here. So if we are to understand the Battle of Clontarf fully, we can't allow ourselves to look at it in an entirely insular way. In other words, to confine ourselves just to thinking of the island of Ireland. What is happening in England must be significant. Historians do not believe in coincidence.

And the fact that England was conquered a matter of months beforehand and that the Danes had been kicked out of England about 10 weeks before the Battle of Clontarf is not just happening at the same time. These matters are all interrelated. Yeah.

Can we take on that battle now? Do you want to start with you, Alex? Well, some people say it went on for three days, but let's start with who's on whose side. The principal people on the right-hand side are the King of Leinster, Moel Morda, and his nephew, Citric of the Silken Beard, the King of the Hibernian Norse in Dublin.

They have brought to help them, and who are camped north of Dublin, near the shore, the Earl of Orkney and other Norsemen of various backgrounds.

Against them is Brion himself and many of the other lesser kings of Ireland. And then there's a slight mystery about how Mel Shacklin fits into this. And different accounts give different things. He seems to have arrived late, and whether that was deliberate or not is a question. So he seems to have been on paper on Brian's side, but he didn't do very much. On the day of the battle, the Leinster men and the mercenary Vikings, shall we call them that,

seem to bear the brunt and to begin with do very well. Citric decides not to leave the city and keeps the gates shut and stays inside. City being Dublin. City being Dublin, yes. And so he stays inside Dublin and the Leinster men and the mercenary Vikings attack Brian's camp. Brian has sent one of his sons, Donnacher South, to ravage Leinster so part of his army isn't there.

So that's how the battle starts. That's the opening sort of phase of the battle. That's sometime in the morning, is it? Sometime in the morning, yes. Moira, do you want to take it up? One of the things I think that's really, really important to stress is that we don't have any neutral sources. So even contemporary sources...

in effect, show bias. So there's a Munster Chronicle that gives a very, very brief account of the battle. All it says is that it was a great battle between Munster and Vikings. And then in the list of slain gives us a couple more. But what we might expect to be a neutral chronicle, the Annals of Ulster, again, already has a very dramatic flourish at saying that this was a battle, you know, the like of which never before had been encountered. So I think it's really important to acknowledge all the time that really we don't

know fully what happened on the day of the battle, nor can we know, because all of the sources, even contemporary ones, are really being driven by one agenda or another. I mean, in terms of its significance, and I couldn't agree more that we have to see it in a kind of a wider context text, it

It very, very quickly, news of the battle spread. And for example, there's a set of Latin annals from Wales and the Annales Cambriae that make mention of it. About a decade after the battle, there's a French chronicler, Adhemar of Chabin, who is again presenting an account of a three-day battle. You had mentioned the three days where, you know, Norse women and children were drowned, where all of the Norse men had to flee. Right.

We don't know where he's getting his information other than that we know from elsewhere that he does kind of make things up. But he must have been at least drawing on some kinds of sources. But I think it's really, really important to always acknowledge that all of the sources we have are biased. So we're just trying to, I suppose, piece together as best we can little bits and pieces from kind of fragmentary sources. Yeah.

Yes, because some of the most graphic stories that you see represented in popular retellings actually come from Icelandic sagas written 200 years later in Iceland, because a number of Icelanders were said to be present at the battle in the retinue of Earl Sigurd of Orkney, but

But these are the very graphic details of exactly how different people died. Nearly all come from that kind of source. But there are simple facts that have some sort of ring of truth, or don't they? One is that battles of that kind usually took two or three hours. This took an entire day with enormous, inordinate slaughter going on. Do you think there's any truth in that?

Yeah, I mean, I think one of the main sources that we use is a text called the Cogogail Regalaf, which is the war of the Irish with the Vikings. And now it's written at the very earliest about...

two generations later, maybe upwards of a century later. But it has interesting details which have actually subsequently been corroborated, if one can do that, by science. So it says, for example, that what happened very early in the morning was that the Viking fleet landed taking advantage of a full tide very early on just at dawn.

And so you can you can check what the tide is on such and such a day, even a thousand years ago. And apparently the full tide there was on that day was at half five in the morning.

So they were able to use the full tide, apparently, to land. Then what happened, of course, is the tide went out. Their ships began to float around and got scattered in the bay. So when the battle started to go against them, the problem was that they could not access the ships. And as the battle went on during the course of the day, the tide, of course, was coming back in.

Now, if you were struggling at Clontarf, this place called Clontarf, which is about three or four miles northeast of Dublin, of the city of Dublin, on the way to Hoth,

The only way you could get it, because Mulhochlan or Mulhochlan's army seems to have been to the west. There was a forest up towards Hoth to the north, but the tide had come in preventing them going there. If they were to try to make it back to Dublin, the walled city of Dublin for protection there, they had to cross a little river called the Tolka River.

which was linked by one bridge. It's near, if any of our listeners are familiar with the Fairview Strand in Fairview Park in Dublin, it was located there. The tide came in there also.

So what they ended up doing was standing with their backs to the sea, trying to defend themselves. This is the Viking force. And of course, as the tide came in, they were up to their knees in water gradually. And so all of the accounts are very clear that many of them were not killed in battle so much as drowned.

What did it matter that Brian Buru was killed in battle and how was he killed in battle? The contemporary sources simply say he was killed, but these later sources like the Kogogail Raghalov that Sean has just mentioned and indeed later Norse sources give us very, very detailed depictions of what was happening.

He was a very, very old man, apparently. So this 12th century source tells us that he himself couldn't take part in the battle. So he'd handed over kind of leadership to his favoured son. And he was outside the battlefield in a tent praying. He had a saunter in his hand. And as I say, this 12th century story then tells us that Broðr, this man, this Viking that Alex mentioned, came along and thought he was a priest. Right.

And it was only then later that he realised that this wasn't a priest, that this was a king. So he jumps from saying something like priest, priest to king, king, according to the source. And it's presented very much as a kind of an opportune killing. He then kills him, but not before Brian Buru manages to be utterly heroic in death. But that really is a later. I mean, that's that's.

of one of these kinds of embellishments. So very, very quickly he became, I suppose, a saint, a holy martyr. And this particular theme is developed and exemplified particularly in Old Norse sources. We get a reference to it already in about the middle of the middle, kind of towards the end of the 11th century. An Irish chronicler called Marianna Scotus, who moves from Ireland to Mainz,

In his account of the battle, he doesn't really talk about the Battle of Cantarf at all, but he does talk about Brian dying with his hands lifted to prayer. So very, very quickly, he becomes this holy, saintly figure. But this is all part of the development of the legend of Brian. And, you know, an awful lot of that has to do with his own followers, with his own descendants, who, you know, clearly want to bask in the glory of this constructed leader.

Yes, and it's interesting that that martyr model may be one of the reasons why the sources often present Brodia as an apostate or a pagan because most of the people at Citric were Christians. His father had died as a penitent on Iona. So in order to make Brian a martyr, you have to have the guy who kills him as a non-Christian or a heretic or an apostate.

And so part of the mythology and the rather bizarre stories that are told about Brodia's backstory, which is never very clear but always very graphic with visions of hell and so on, probably relates to emphasising this idea that Brian is a martyr.

But I think we can probably be fairly certain that the core element that is true is that he probably wasn't, he was probably too old to actually fight and is killed in some sort of side action. Who would we say won? Welsh Eclan won. He dodged the bullet. He dodged the bullet. He didn't actually really get heavily involved. He had his army, as Sean said, to the north, arriving a bit late to get involved. And, of course, he was the person who, as I mentioned earlier, about a dozen years earlier, had ceded the overkingship

to Brian and with Brian out of the way and most of the other and Brian's favourite son also dead he was able to just resume as the leading king and had another well he continues as the dominant king in Ireland until I think 1022 so I would say he sort of wins but he wins by default

Yeah, I mean, obviously, it seems like an extraordinary thing because most people assume that Brian Baru won the Battle of Clontarf. If you stopped 100 people in the street in Ireland and asked them about Brian Baru, they'd say, well, he was the guy who won the Battle of Clontarf. But some historians seem to doubt it. I personally don't have any doubt of it.

I mean, it is the case that the contemporary sources, insofar as there are contemporary, strictly contemporary sources, they don't clearly state that he won the battle.

But to my mind, it is implicit in all accounts. And it is stated in, you know, there's an early Norse text that I think it's a poem that refers, that says Brian fell and won the day. I forget what the precise wording of it is. So this man seems to have died and yet is considered a victor. And I think he's considered a victor because of what he achieved. I mean, it is the case that you can argue that

If he had won, if his side had won, they would have done as all victors do and pressed home the advantage and they would have marched on Dublin and so on. But if the numbers killed on both sides were so severe that they were both so heavily depleted that nobody was capable of continuing, then you can understand why nobody pressed any advantage home from it. And so I think...

One of the problems with history is it's very hard to argue from a silence. To argue that Brian achieved what he sought to achieve while dying in the process, you have to accept that the reason contemporaries implicitly viewed it as a success is because he helped avert what would have happened had he not died on that day.

So in other words, Ireland, it seems to me, was being hostilely invaded by people intent upon seizing the kingship that he was claiming.

By the end of that day, they had abandoned that hope. Within a matter of months, Cnut had done for the Danes what the Scandinavians failed to do in Ireland, and England was comprehensively conquered for a generation by the Danes. That did not happen in Ireland, and Ireland was not conquered for another 150 years.

until the descendants of the Normans did it in the late 1160s. So I think it was a major achievement on Brian Baru's part. In other words, Brian Baru has been deemed a hero.

by a thousand years of Irish people and Irish scholars and Irish writers writing about it because there is no more plausible explanation for what occurred on the day than that his side, you know, whilst suffering great losses, achieved what they wanted to achieve and the death of this elderly king was a price worth paying. Let's bring it back to Dublin. Alex, let's bring it back to Dublin. What happened to Dublin?

Well, Dublin, as Sean has implied, it wasn't sacked. But from this time onwards, the kings of Dublin were always second division leaders. And over the next 150 years, between the time of Clontarf and the Anglo-Norman invasion in the 1160s that Sean just mentioned...

Dublin becomes a kind of prize. It usually retains its own kings, although sometimes the sons of Irish major kings are put in in lieu of Hibernian Norse kings. The fleet is an important asset.

but it's the first thing that people go for now when they're trying to assert their dominance over Ireland. So, for example, Brian's great-grandson, Murkchuk, who's probably the patron behind the Coggarth text that Moira and Sean have talked about, one of the first things he did was seize Dublin when he wanted to become king of Ireland. Another 11th-century king from Leinster, Geomar von Malnabo, does the same thing. And it's now become, rather than one of the symbolic things

ritual centres in the middle of Ireland, which in the earlier times were the places people went to, like the Hill of Tara. Dublin is now the prize that gives people the right to the sovereignty of Ireland. But the Dubliners themselves are no longer major players. They just have a supporting role in the competition between Irish provincial kings for overkingship. Moira, how did this story of the battle spread? Who spread it and what effect did that have?

The spreading started very, very quickly because of the fact that Ireland, as we've been saying, was very much part and parcel of this connected world. I've already mentioned this French chronicler who got wind of it and certainly took it up relatively quickly. I think

What we also have then are, you know, very, very skilful, sophisticated Irish scholars, you know, writing detailed accounts of the battle. And this text that we've mentioned, Cogogail Raigal, is extraordinarily sophisticated and skilful in that regard because, in effect, not alone does it draw on chronicle evidence to build up Brian as this, you know, major fighter against Vikings leading up to the kind of the Battle of Clontarf.

but it presents him and his son very much in Trojan mould. So his son, for example, is presented as Hector.

And in Brian's own obituary in this text, he's identified with Augustus, with the Roman Empire. He's identified with David. He's identified with Solomon. So what these scholars are trying to do is, in effect, claim for Brian, you know, the same kind of power as these extraordinary kind of biblical and classical characters had.

And that, of course, had resonance and that absolutely spread because, of course, Dublin in particular was a bilingual milieu. The story of Clontarf moved from an Irish milieu into an Old Norse one. And Alex has already mentioned the number of Old Norse sagas and indeed one particularly powerful kind of prophetic poem, that of Arljó, that may be concerned with the

with the battle. So I suppose it spread as part of this interconnected world and because of its significance. I'll ask each of you in turn on this one, but start with you, Sean. When did it become such thought of, more generally, as such a defining moment in Irish history? Yeah, I mean, it is extraordinarily powerful thing in the Irish psyche, I think still. I think there's a tendency of some people to assume that this is a

a relatively modern thing, you know, that all modern nation states look back on some romantic battle as being a pivotal moment, you know. So for the Scots, it may be Bannockburn, or for the English, it might be Agincourt, something like that. But it seems to me that throughout the Middle Ages, from a very early stage, Clontarf was perceived in those terms. So there's a lot of Bardic poetry there.

from the Middle Ages, which looks back on Clontarf as a truly national thing. And there's a famous, I think it's by Murdoch Albany-Codall, an early 13th century poem, which talks about what Brian succeeded in doing at the Battle of Clontarf and how now, 150 years later, what he prevented happening has now happened. Ireland has been conquered by the Anglo-Normans.

And every year it says another fleet load of foreigners is coming into Ireland. But Brian is the one. And it says what we need is another Brian who will achieve what Brian achieved. And I'm always struck by one of the, we talked a lot about the Irish annals today. One of the most important late medieval collections of annals are called the Annals of Loch Kaye.

And the Annals of Luck, the authors of those were a professional family of historians. They probably had access to all sorts of data relating to early medieval Ireland, going all the way back to the time of St. Patrick. But the book actually begins with the year 1014.

They could have started a century earlier or half a millennium earlier, but they start with 1014 because as far as they were concerned, that was the start of a whole new era in the Irish story. So it is not a modern nationalist myth.

myth to imagine that Clontarf was one of these epic moments in the Irish story. It is something that was generated from within a decade or two of the battle itself taking place. Alex, would you like to take that on? Yes, I think a key moment is the period when the Cogath is written for Brian's great-grandson Murdoch. Murdoch also becomes effectively king of Ireland but I think importantly for this

for the sort of national myth element is that he enters into a quite sticky relationship, a kind of cold war with Henry I of England. Henry tries to blockade Ireland and stop trade coming in because certain rebels have been given succour at Marukachuk's court. He faces a Norwegian invasion, which he deals with. This is Magnus Baeleg, King of Norway, arrives with a fleet of

Murkatoch deals with that by meeting him in Dublin, having a feast with him and marrying his daughter to his son. And he also sends fleets out and asserts his control over the Isle of Man and maybe some other parts of what's now southwest Scotland.

And so I think he's someone who presents himself as representing Ireland on an international stage and seeing off potential existential threats from Henry of England and Magnus of Norway. And so I think for him, it's important to say, this is my heritage. This is what my great grandfather did as well. And the claims I'm making to get other Irish people to help me in this project are

is a just one, there's precedence in the past. And Moira, what's your view on this? What would you say about it, based on the sources? Yeah, no, I absolutely agree that that moment at the beginning of the 12th century when this text comes into being is very important. But it's, I suppose, more important almost for the significance of this particular group, the descendants of Brian Baru, rather than for a kind of an all-Ireland movement at that stage. I think what's significant in that regard is

is perhaps much later when after the English invasion and settlement, and I think it's significant there, that the word used for foreigner in Irish, so the word used for Viking, namely Gail, is exactly the same word that's used then later for English. So the nature of the foreigner changes, but I suppose you could then use the same rhetoric here.

If the word for foreigner, the word you use for Viking, is the same as the one you use for English, then, of course, it's very, very easy to adopt that rhetoric after the English have come. So I think looking back to past rhetorical models, looking back to past literary sources, becomes very important from the time of Murdoch Albenoch that Sean mentioned, and indeed much, much later as well. Sean, we're coming towards the end now. How has Brian Beru's reputation developed over the centuries?

I suppose one of the things that Brian, his death at Clontarf, it did, I suppose, begin the idea that dying for Ireland was a noble thing. So there's been a long...

in Ireland of viewing the world as a war between the Irish and a foreign oppressor. The very title of that text that we have been talking about a lot, which is, you know, about events that happened a thousand years ago, Coghagail Raghall of the war of the Irish with the foreigners. It's like a motif that applies all the way through Irish history afterwards. And that began with Brian Burroughs.

And this battle, there are several contemporary, near contemporary sources that date that it happened on Good Friday. And on Good Friday, Christ died to save humankind and he was resurrected on Easter Sunday.

So Brian and that poem that we talked about by Murdoch, Albin O'Dollick, actually likens him to Christ, his death, his sacrifice. As Christ saved humankind, Brian died to save the Irish. And that feeds all the way through the Irish story of resistance to their perceived oppressors through the centuries. So that, for example, most Irish people will think of the 1916 rising against British rule as a

pivotal moment in Irish history. That took place at Easter by people who felt that they were giving their lives for Ireland and it is, whether it was stated at the time or not, what was motivating them in part at the back of their mind was the idea that they were following in the footsteps of Brian Burrow. Well, thank you very much. Thank you Moira Nimweni, Sean Duffy and Alex Roo for next week.

how people and events in the Old Testament are seen as foreshadowing those in the New. That's typology. Thanks for listening. And the In Our Time podcast gets some extra time now with a few minutes of bonus material from Melvin and his guests. I'd like to say, what didn't you have time to say that you would like to have said? Oh, I think we need to talk about Garland. Surely. Yes. Sorry, where you go?

I suppose one of the characters who's become highly developed in her own right is one of Brian's wives, Gorlumla. And she's presented both in the Irish 12th century source, this text we've been talking about, Cogogelwa Gulliv, and indeed in particularly one of the Old Norse sagas, namely Nial's saga. She's presented very much as kind of the villain of the piece, but in very, very different ways.

And I suppose, in a way, I think that all has to do with also how Brian is being developed, because certainly in the Old Norse material, she's the villain to Brian's holy man. You know, Brian wouldn't do anything bad to anybody, we're told. And yet she was so evil and malicious.

And she, in the Old Norse material, she's said to be working in consort with her son, Cedric Silkenbeard, the King of Dublin. And what she says there is that he may promise, she's supposed to be absolutely beautiful, and that he may promise her hand in marriage to anybody that will come and fight for her.

fight for him so you know she does to or he does in terms of Sigurdur of Orkney as well whereas in the Irish material she's very much presented as part and parcel of her own dynasty which is the eastern dynasty of Leinster and she taunts her brother who's on a visit to Brian's court and she's there as well and she taunts him that in effect he's

He's accepting gifts that Brian Buru is giving her and she does it very dramatically. She takes a kind of a silken tunic, according to this 12th century text, and throws it into the fire. And in this dramatic account of the Battle of Cantarf, she's very much presented as a catalyst, really. You know, her brother marches off then and then we're told that he goes and gathers allies. But of course, this is a not unusual literary theme, but it's interesting how it's developed in different ways here.

in different sources in Norse and Irish material. Yes, I think one of the things that's really puzzled scholars about a lot of this material is that the similarities between the Norse and the Irish material are very close.

And you could argue that means they're true. But as Moira has said, many of them have a very literary feel to them. And so people are puzzled over whether the Icelandic saga writers had access to Irish literature, whether there was a saga written in Old Norse in Dublin itself, or the Isle of Man, or the Hebrides or somewhere. So this intriguing cross-fertilisation and the fact that

of all the battles, the sort of major battles of the period, it's the one that has the highest profile in Icelandic literature other than the one possible exception would be Stiklestad where St Olaf is killed. But even then, I think fewer Icelanders were present there. I think there's maybe only two Icelanders present there. Whereas this appears in several Icelandic sagas, several Icelanders were there. The detail is always quite thick. It's almost like they go off a big digression of

even though this might be a saga like Nial's saga that's mostly about feuding farmers in a small part of South Iceland. But suddenly there's this big digression with a huge amount of detail about Brian's personal relationship and so on. And so it's a great puzzle as to why the Icelanders felt so strongly about this battle and why their version of it is so close to the Irish version. What is the answer to that then? Why is it in the 13th century in Iceland they are fascinated in this, what...

what should have been a very obscure encounter that had taken place in Ireland a quarter of a millennium earlier.

Well, I think one of the answers to that is because the Norwegian king, namely Haakon IV, was very much interested in all of Britain and Ireland. And he certainly had pretensions and ambitions. So, I mean, certainly I think it's in that context that we can see, you know, an Old Norse account of the battle actually moving northwards. And of course, that would be absolutely what we would expect, that it would be via Norway that it would go to Iceland. So I think 13th century politics

basically is the answer to that question. Yes, because Håkon, this 13th century king, in the 1260s, he leads a fleet into the Scottish islands. And what we're told in his saga, which is written by a contemporary, Sturla Thorðarson, who knew him personally, we're told that when he was in Kintyre, men came from Ireland and offered him the crown of Ireland if he would come and liberate them from the...

English, yes. If I can make an unprecedented intrusion in this space, which is supposed to be sacred to just the three of you, going through the notes and listening to you now and reading around a bit...

The literary content of the reports on this are very extensive and very fluid. And is this a precursor of the written life in Irish culture? Do you think there's any connection there? Well, I mean, I think, you know, obviously it is the case that something happened. The correct answer is yes.

Happened on that that, you know, that fed into the imagination because there were all sorts of extraordinary phenomena in it. We mentioned earlier about this, you know, the fact of it having happened on Good Friday, which I think, I mean, as far as I'm aware, there are three different sources that tell us that. So...

I think we can believe, therefore, that it fed into sort of Christian ideas of their conflict with non-Christian Vikings. And the Vikings, it seems, have always thrilled the imagination. But, I mean, one of the things that I think, and it's something I don't think we discussed earlier, was, you know, if you like, the negative, Brian Burroughs' negative achievements, you know, the bad achievements,

stuff as opposed to the good stuff. I mean, he was what had Brian Baru succeeded in showing during the course of his life. When you boil it down, he had kind of shown that might is right, you know, because he had come from nothing. He acquired the military resources to push his weight around and force himself to the top of

So to an extent, after he died, I mean, he opened up the floodgates to anybody who felt that they were, you know, wealthy enough or brave enough or courageous enough or lucky enough to have a go at the top to do so. And so I think when you look at, say, the 150 years between 1014 and 1169, when you have the Anganorman invasion of Ireland, what are those years? I mean, they seem to me to be years of...

near incessant warfare amongst the competing Irish province kings, each one of them trying to emulate Brian Baru and, you know, elevate their province from having been a backwater to being at the centre of Irish life. And so it did have that. I think it did have that. His career...

was an unhealthy exemplar in that way, I think. And we don't often pay enough attention to that, I think. I might just go back to the question about, I suppose, about this extraordinary corpus of writing that we have. And certainly, as you suggest, influenced what came after. But I think what's also important to say is that

It was influenced by a huge body of rich, varied literature that was composed in Ireland in the couple of hundred years before the Battle of Clontarf. I think medieval Ireland is extraordinary in terms of the variety and the extent of literary culture that has survived. Only, I suppose, there's a huge amount as well in Norse, but that's much, much later. So I think

It's important that we look at this corpus of really imaginative stuff about Clontarf in the context of what went before as well. And the fact is that it ended up really, really quickly. So this text we were talking about, Cogha, in a hugely significant manuscript from the 12th century. There's this large compilatory manuscript called the Book of Leinster. And it is...

ended up in that alongside an adaptation of the destruction of Troy so it was very quickly seen in that kind of way so yeah so it's certainly not the beginning it builds on what went before and absolutely influenced what comes after Well thank you all very much again thank you very much that was terrific loved it

Does anyone want tea or coffee? Tea? Melvin? I'll have some tea, lovely, thank you, yes. Nothing stronger now? I'll have a glass of water, please. A glass of water would be great. In Our Time with Melvin Bragg is produced by Simon Tillotson and it's a BBC Studios audio production.

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