The State of the
Scottish Tribes in the year 731 – Their Territories – Internal Condition
– Principles of Succession – Government.
THE Scottish
conquest (as it is generally termed), in the ninth century, is certainly
at the same time the most obscure, and the most important event in the
early annals of Scotland. That some great revolution took place at that
period, which had the effect of uniting the various independent tribes
in Scotland under the rule of one monarch, cannot be doubted; but there
are perhaps few points in Scottish history, the nature of which has been
more misrepresented and more misunderstood than that important
revolution; while no attempt whatever has been made to assign the
peculiar causes which led to so remarkable an event, or to ascertain the
effects which it produced upon the internal state and condition of the
tribes of Scotland, and the extent of its influence in the country. Our
earlier writers in general have attributed to Kenneth, the complete
conquest and extermination of the whole Pictish nation; but although
many attempts were made by their followers to bring this account within
the bounds of probability, an examination into the more genuine
authorities for Scottish history, and the total silence of contemporary
writers in other countries (a silence unaccountable upon the supposition
of a revolution of such magnitude having taken place), soon shewed the
absurdity of this fable, and led to various, although unsuccessful
endeavours on the part of later historians to ascertain the true history
of that period; some having even gone so far as to deny the truth of the
story altogether, and to maintain that the Picts were the conquerors in
the struggle, and that they had subjected the neighbouring Scots.
Unsatisfactory
as the accounts given of this event in the old Scottish chronicles and
the theories of the more modern writers are, we can nevertheless
distinctly perceive the traces of some remarkable revolution in the
state of the country, and in the relative position of the various tribes
at that time inhabiting it; and we shall now endeavour, as shortly as
possible, to ascertain the real character of this change, and the
probable causes which led to it.
The principal
events in the history of Scotland from the departure of the Romans to
the middle of the eighth century, can be sufficiently discovered from
the works of Gildas, Nennius, the Welsh bards, the Irish annals, and in
particular from the venerable Bede. The most remarkable occurrences
during this period were the arrival of the Scots from Ireland in the
year 503, and the conversion of the northern Picts to Christianity about
sixty years later by the preaching of Columba; the rest of the history
apparently consists entirely of the petty battles of the Picts with the
Dalriads and among themselves, with occasional incursions of the Angli
into the Pictish territories, none of which produced any lasting change.
Bede, however, finishes his history in the year 731, and with that year
commences a period of great obscurity and confusion, during which we
have no certain guide until the middle of the ninth century, when we
find the numerous tribes of Scotland united under the government of
Kenneth. Before entering upon this enquiry, it will therefore be
necessary for us to ascertain the exact situation in which these nations
were placed at the time when Bede finishes his history, the relations
which they bore to each other, and the peculiar laws which governed the
succession of their monarchs.
Bede closes
his history in the year 731 with a sketch of the state of the
inhabitants of Britain, and his words relating to the nations at that
time inhabiting the northern part of the island, are “Pictorum
quoque natio tempore hoc et foedus pacis cum gente habet Anglorum
et catholicae pacis et veritatis cum universali ecclesia particeps
existere gaudet. Scoti qui Brittaniam incolunt suis contenti
finibus, nihil contra gentem Anglorum insidiarum moliuntur aut fradium.
Britones quamvis et maxima ex parte domestico sibi odio gentem
Anglorum et totius catholicae ecclesiae statutum Pascha, minus recte
moribusque improbis impugnent, tamen et divina sibi et humana prorsus
resistente virtute in neutro cupitum possunt obtinere propositum.”
[Bede, b. 5, c. ult.] From this passage it would appear that when
Bede finished his history the inhabitants of North Britain consisted of
four races, Picti, Angli, Scoti qui Britanniam incolunt, and Britones,
and from the general tone of the passage, as well as from the phrase
“suis contenti finibus,” it would seem that these different nations had
probably for some time previous possessed the same territories, and that
their mutual boundaries had not experienced much alteration.
The southern
boundary of the Picts, which was also the northern boundary of the Angli,
appears from Bede to have been the Firth of Forth. For, in describing
the result of the unsuccessful expedition of the Angli under Ecfrith,
into the territory of the Picts, in the year 684, he has the following
passage: “Ex quo tempore spes coepit et virtus regni Anglorum fluere, et
retro sublapsa referri. Nam et Picti terram possessionis suae quam
tenuerunt Angli et Scoti qui erant in Britannia et Britonum quoque
pars nonnulla libertatem receperunt, quam et hactenus habent per
annos circiter quadraginta et sex.” [Bede, b. 4, c. 26] Now
the southern boundary of the Picts was at that time the Firth of Forth,
for he adds immediately after, that the monastery of Abercorn was “in
vicinia freti quod Anglorum terras Pictorumque disterminat;” and his
expression “quam et hactenus habent per annos circiter quadraginta et
sex,” shows that no change had taken place, but that it had continued to
be the southern boundary of the Picts till the year 731, which is just
forty-six years after the event he was narrating.
The German
ocean, and the Pentland Firth, were at that time the eastern and
northern boundaries of the Picts. The Welsh Triads describe them as
extending along the sea of Lochlin, or the German ocean. Adomnan
mentions Lochness and the River Ness as being “in Provincia Pictorum,”
near which also he places the palace of the Pictish king converted by
St. Columba. That they possessed the extreme north of Britain is also
clear from Nennius, who in describing Britain says, “Tertia insula sita
est in extremo limite orgis Britanniae ultra Pictos et vocatur
Orcania insula;” [Nennius, c. 2] and that they still possessed
these territories as late as the eighth century is proved from the life
of St. Findan, written in the ninth century, where the author relates
that the saint was carried away captive from Ireland by the Norwegian
pirates in the end of the eighth century, and adds “ad quasdam venire
insulas juxta Pictorum gentem quas Orcades vocant.” [Goldasti Aleman.
rerum Script. Vita Findani, p. 318]
The western
boundary of the Picts appears at all times to have been, partly a ridge
of hills, termed Drumalban, which separated them from the Scots, as the
southern part of their boundary, and as the northern part the sea from
the Linne Loch to Capt Wrath. Thus the Scottish chronicles invariable
mention that Fergus the First, King of the Scots, ruled over the
districts extending from Drumalban to Innisgall, or the Hebrides.
Adomnan, who wrote in the beginning of the seventh century, mentions the
Pictorum plebe et Scotorum Britanniae “quos utrosque dorsi montes
Britannici disterminant;” and in talking of the Picts, he invariably
describes them as being “ultra dorsum Britanniae.” The phrase dorsum
Brittanniae [sic] used by him is plainly a mere Latin translation of the
Gaelic word Drumalban.
Tighernac
implies that the same mountain-ridge was their mutual boundary in the
year 717, in which year he mentions the expulsion of the Monks of Iona
by King Nectan, “trans dorsum Britanniae.” The Chronicon Rythmicum
mentions the Scots as having inhabited “ultra Drumalban” till the reign
of Kenneth. It thus appears that Drumalban, or the dorsum Britanniae was
the invariable boundary of the Picts and Scots, south of the Linne Loch,
from the year 503 down to the eighth century. There is no range of hills
now bearing this name, but we find it frequently mentioned in older
writers. The earliest description of Scotland which contains any
allusion to its mountain ranges is entitled, “De situ Albaniae quae in
se figuram hominis habet,” and is supposed to have been written by
Giraldus Cambrensis, about the year 1180. This work describes Scotland
(which name at that period was applied only to the country north of the
Firths of Forth and Clyde) as resembling in form that of a man. The head
of the figure lay in Arregathel, the mountains of which he says resemble
the head and neck of a man; the body consisted of that chain which is
called Mound, and which he describes as reaching from the western sea to
the eastern; the arms were those mountains “qui dividunt Scotiam ab
Arregaithen;” the legs, the two rivers Tay and Spey. After this
description he adds, “inter crura hujus hominis sunt Enegus et Moerne
citra montem, et ultra montem aliae terrae inter Spe et montem.” From
this description it would seem that he considered that there were but
two remarkable chains in Scotland, “mons qui Mound vocatur,” and “montes
qui dividunt Scotiam ab Arregaithen.” The locality of the first of these
chains is perfectly distinct from his description, for he tells us that
part of it formed the northern boundary of “Enegus et Moerne,” a range
which to the present day bears the name of “The Mounth.” The other part
extended to the western sea, and must therefore be the western part of
the same chain which divides the county of Inverness from the counties
of Perth and Argyll, and which is now termed Drumuachdar. The other
chain, viz. the “montes qui dividunt Scotiam ab Arregaithel,” are
described as forming the arms of the figure, and must therefore have
consisted of two ridges, the one branching from the Mounth, on the
south, and the other on the north. As it appears, however, in describing
the seven parts into which Scotland was of old divided, that Athol is
named as one of them, it is plain that the western boundary of the
southern part of Argyll was at that time the same as it is now, and
therefore the southern branch of the “montes qui dividunt Scotiam ab
Aregaithel” must be the same with that chain of hills which runs from
Benauler on the north-west corner of Perthshire to the head of Loch
Long, and which to this day separates the county of Argyll from the
district of Atholl and the counties of Perth and Dumbarton. But this
very chain is called by the same author Bruinalban, for in afterwards
describing these seven parts of Scotland, of which he had formerly given
the names (though with some variation), he mentions that division which
corresponds with Atholl and Gouerin, as extending “a Spe usque ad Montem
Bruinalban.” The Bruinalban of this writer appears, from the following
circumstances, to have been synonymous with the Drumalban of others; for
while Giraldus concludes his description with the words, “Fergus filius
Erc ipse fuit primus qui de semine Chonare suscepit regnum Albaniae a
monte Bruinalban usque ad mare Hiberniae et ad Inche Gall,” [Innes,
App. No. 1] the same passage is found in other chronicles in the
following words: “Fergus filius Eric fuit primus qui de semine Chonare
suscepit regnum Albaniae; i.e., a monte Drumalban usque ad mare
Hiberniae et ad Inche Gall;” [Innes, App. No. 4] and “Fergus
filius Erth primus in Scotia regnavit tribus annis ultra Drumalban usque
Sluaghmuner et ad Inche Gall.” [Chron. San. Andrew]
The name of
Drumalban was known even at a much later period than this, for it occurs
in the Regiam Magistatem; and also in the history of the Bishops of
Dunkeld, in both of which it appear as certainly applied to the same
chain. The passage in the Regiam Magistatem as translated by Sir John
Skene is as follows: –“2. And gif he quha is accused of the cattell, or
anie other thing thifteously stolen or reft, alledges anie man for his
warant dwelling betwixt Forth and Drumalbane, he quha is
challenged sall have fifteen days to produce his warant before the
sheref; whilk warant dwells within the said bounds. – 3. And gif anie
dwell beyond thir places or bounds in Murray, Ross, Caithness, Argyll,
or in Kintyre, he sall have all the fifteen days, and also ane moneth to
bring and produce all his warants.”
He thus
divides Scotland, which is afterwards defined as “the partes of the
realme benorth the water of Forth,” into two parts, the one extending
from the Forth to Drumalbane, and the other lying beyond “thir bounds;”
and containing Murray, Ross, Caithness, and Argyll. His Drumalbane,
therefore, can refer only to that chain of hills which forms the present
eastern boundary of Argyllshire. The history of the Bishops of Dunkeld
evidently places Drumalbane in the same place, for Atholl and Drumalbane
are mentioned as forming one of the decanatu of that bishopric. Since,
then, the name of Drumalbane existed, and was known as applied to a
particular range of hills at so late a period, we may conclude with
safety, that the descriptions of it given by Buchanan, Monypenny and
others, applied to a range of hills well known at the time under that
name, and were not merely speculations as to the locality of a name
which had ceased to be used. The great distinguishing feature applied to
Drumalbane by these authorities is, that it divides the rivers flowing
into the western sea from those flowing into the eastern, – a
peculiarity which belongs only to a long range of hills commencing at
Loch Long, and running up the centre of the island until it is lost
among the mountains of Caithness, and of which that chain already
alluded to as separating the counties of Perth and Argyll forms the
southern part. As an additional corroboration of this, Buchanan mentions
that the River Earn takes its rise from it, and that in fact it was
merely the highest part of Breadalbane.
The southern
part of the western boundary of the Picts was therefore evidently the
same with the present western boundary of Perthshire and
Inverness-shire. The remaining and northern part of their western
boundary appears to have been the sea from the Linne Loch to Cape Wrath,
and this is a part of the boundary which it is of considerable
importance for us to determine, as it involves the question of the
possession of those districts which extend from Caithness to the Linne
Loch, and comprise the western parts of the counties of Sutherland,
Ross, and Inverness, and the northern part of the county of Argyll.
From all the
notices which I have been able to collect, it appears that these
districts, at all times, belonged to the Picts. In the first
place it may be inferred from the ancient chronicles, that Dalriada did
not originally extend beyond the Linne Loch, for they divide Dalriada
among the three brothers who are said to have conducted the Scot from
Ireland. The eldest obtained Lorn; the second, Argyll Proper and Kintyre;
while the youngest obtained Isla. And this division is fully
corroborated by the Irish Annalists, who mention the descendants of
these brothers frequently, and always in the same districts as they are
placed by the Scottish Chronicles. In the second place, independently
even of this argument, we have the direct testimony of Bede, that these
districts were possessed by the Picts from the time of St. Columba to
the year 731, when he finishes his history. He mentions that Oswald, the
King of the Angli of Northumberland, wishing to Christianize his
subjects, sent to the Scots requesting them to supply him with a Monk
for that purpose; and that in consequence of this request, Aidan, a Monk
of the monastery of Hy or Iona left that island and went to him. After
which, he adds the following passage – “Quae videlicet insula ad jus
quidem Britanniae perinet non magno ab ea freto discreta, sed donatione
Pictorum qui illas Britanniae plagas incolunt jamdudum Monachis Scotorum
tradita, eo quod illis predicantibus fidem Christi perceperunt.”
[Bede, b. 3, c. 3] Thus shewing not only that Iona was in the
Pictish territories in the days of St. Columba, but that they actually
possessed and inhabited the neighbouring districts of Britain in his own
time, that is, in the eighth century. A testimony so direct and positive
as this to the existence of a fact in his own lifetime, and at the very
time he is writing, it is impossible by any reasoning or criticism to
overcome. But Bede is not the only one who asserts this fact; Walafred
Strabo, in his life of St. Blaithmac, asserts the same, although at a
period some years later. He opens his poem with these words: –
“Insula Pictorum quaedam monstratur
in oris
Fluctivago suspensa salo cognomine Eo.”
But if the
Picts thus possessed the districts extending to the western sea opposite
Iona, and since we have distinct evidence of their inhabiting the
northern shore of Scotland, it would seem incredible to suppose that
they did not also possess the intervening districts. We can hardly
imagine that the Scottish nation were thus as it were divided into two
by the Pictish tribes, or that a small portion of them could exist
unmolested in the very heart of their powerful enemies, and completely
cut off from the rest of the Scots in Britain, as well as from the
Irish. We must therefore conclude, that the Picts inhabited the whole of
the districts lying to the north of the Linne Loch, a circumstance
corroborated by the language of Bede, who mentions the Picts in general
terms as inhabiting the “Septentrionales plagas Britanniae.”
We have thus
shewn by an incontrovertible chain of authorities, that in the year 731,
the period at which Bede closes his history, the territories of the
Pictish nation consisted of the present counties of Kinross, Fife,
Perth, Forfar, Kincardine, Aberdeen, Moray, Inverness, Ross, Sutherland,
Caithness, and the northern part of Argyll; in fact, the whole of
Scotland north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, with the exception of
Southern Argyll.
The Firth of
Clyde is universally allowed to have been the boundary which separated
the Dalriads from the Strathclyde Britons, and consequently it follows
that Dalriada, or the territory of the Scots in Britain, must
have been confined to South Argyll, or that part of the county lying
to the south of Linne Loch; and the Scots appear to have maintained
their possession of a territory so inconsiderable in comparison with
that of the Picts, partly by the strong natural boundaries and
impervious nature of the country itself, and partly by the close
connexion which they at all times preserved with the Irish. We shall now
proceed, in pursuance of our plan, to investigate shortly the internal
state and strength of these nations at the same period.
When the Picts
first appear under that appellation upon the stage of history, and when
by the frequency of their incursions into the Roman provinces in Britain
they attracted the attention of the Roman writers, they are described by
them as having been divided into to great nations, Dicaledones,
and Vecturiones. the origin of this division cannot now be
traced, but as it apparently did not exist at the time when Ptolemy
wrote his geography, it must have owed its origin to circumstances
occurring subsequent to that period. In whatever manner, however, it may
have originated, this twofold division of the Pictish nation appears to
have subsisted at least down to the eighth century. We trace it in Bede
as existing in full force in the time of St. Columba, when he mentions
that Columba came over “predicaturus verbum Dei provinciis
septentrionalium Pictorum, hoc est eis quae arduis atque horrentibus
Montium jugis ab Australibus eorum sunt regionibus sequestratae. Namque
ipsi Australes Picti qui intra eosdem montes habent sedes multo ante
tempore (ut perhibent) relicto errore idolatriae fidem veritatis
acceperant.” [Bede, b. 2, c. 4]
The northern Picts
mentioned by Bede, in all probability correspond with the Dicaledones of
the Roman authors, for the Dicaledones, from their name, apparently
extended along the Deucaledonian or Northern Sea. This distinction of
the Pictish nation into the two great tribes of the northern Picts or
Dicaledones and southern Picts, or Vecturiones, took its origin probably
from incidental circumstances, and was afterwards perpetuated and
increased by the difference of religion between them during the period
from the conversion of the southern Picts by Ninian, and that of the
northern Picts by St. Columba, as well as by the superior progress in
civilization, which the prior conversion of the southern Picts would
naturally give rise to. The same twofold division of the Picts can be
traced subsequent to the time of St. Columba in Tighernac and the other
Irish annalists. In Tighernac, we find the Picts sometimes termed Picti,
at other times Cruithne and Piccardach: but although the last two are
occasionally called Picti, yet we find a marked distinction at all times
drawn between them, and occasionally we find them even having kinds
independent of each other. As an instance, in the year 731, Tighernac
mentions a battle “between Brude, the son of Angus, and Talorcan, the
son of Congusa. Brude conquers, but Talorcan escapes;” and in 734, we
find it mentioned, that Talorcan, the son of Congusa, was taken by his
own brother, and given over by him into the hands of the
PICCARDACH, thus making a complete distinction between the Piccardach
and the other Picts, of whom Talorcan Mac Congusa was one. Again in 729,
Tighernac calls Angus, the father of Brude above-mentioned, “Ri na
Piccardach,” or King of the Piccardach, while, at that time, Drust was
king of the Picts, and Angus did not attain the throne of the Picts till
the year 731. We may also remark, that whenever Tighernac has the word
Piccardach, the annals of Ulster use the word Pictores in Latin, instead
of Picti, the name usually applied by them to the Picts. These words
Piccardach and Pictores have generally been thought synonymous with
Picti, and a mere error of the transcriber, and they have accordingly
been so translated by O’Connor in his edition of these annals; but when
we remark the uniformity with which these appellations occur in the two
annalists, and with which they are distinguished from the rest of the
Picts, and the confusion which such an idea must necessarily introduce
both in the chronology and in the succession of the Pictish monarchs, it
is impossible to suppose that they are the mere casual blunders of a
transcriber.
The similarity
of name, and other causes connected with their kings, which we shall
afterwards mention, plainly point out the Piccardach of Tighernac to be
the same with the Vecturiones of the Romans, and the southern Picts of
Bede, and consequently the name of Cruithne, although no doubt
occasionally applied to all the Picts, would in its more restricted
sense belong to the Dicaledones or northern Picts.
Besides this
great division of the Pictish nation into the northern and southern
Picts, they were also divided into a number of smaller tribes, whose
union together in a sort of permanent confederacy formed the two larger
nations. The expressions of Tacitus shew, that when the Romans first
appeared in Caledonia, it was inhabited by a number of “Civitates”
apparently independent of each other, and the immediate result of the
Roman invasion was the union of these tribes for the first time into a
strong confederacy, and the election of Galgacus as a general to lead
them to battle. In the second century, we again find them divided into a
number of small tribes, whose names and situations are given us by
Ptolemy. Shortly after this time, the great division into Vecturiones
and Dicaledones took place, but that division did not, it would seem,
make any change in the constitution of the Pictish nation as a
confederacy of small tribes, or even produce a more close connexion
between them.
From this
period, the existence of the smaller tribes which composed the Pictish
nations, can be sufficiently traced in Bede and the Irish annalists.
Thus Bede appears to allude to these tribes under the appellation of “Provinciae,”
when, on one occasion, he mentions the “Universas Provincias
Pictorum,” and in another, the “Provinciis Septentrionalium
Pictorum.”
In the
following passages of Tighernac and the annals of Ulster, particular
tribes of the Picts also appear to be mentioned:
A.D.
666. Eochaigh Iarlaithe Ri Cruithne Midha mortuus est.
A.D.
668 Navigatio filiorum Gartnaidh ad Hiberniam cum plebe Scith.
A.D.
670 Venit gens Gartnaidh de Hibernia.
A.D.
739 Talorcan mac Drostan Rex Athfotla.
A.D.
752 Cath a Sreith in terra Circi.
The
territories of the Dalriads, as we have already seen, consisted of the
southern half of Argyllshire and the Island of Isla, and they seem at
all times to have been divided into no more than three tribes, namely,
the Genus Loarn, Genus Comgal, and Genus Gabran. The districts inhabited
by these tribes can also be pretty nearly ascertained from these annals.
The name points out the district of Lorn as the possession of the Genus
Loarn. Argyll and Kintyre belonged to the Genus Gabran, for Duncan Begg,
who is mentioned by Tighernac in 719 as leading that tribe, is called by
him in 721 Rincina tire, or King of Kintyre. While the present district
of Cowall, which is in old MSS. always termed Comgaill, points itself
out as the seat of the Genus Comgaill. These tribes of the Dalriads,
however, must not be viewed in the same light as the Pictish tribes,
because the tribes of the Picts, although they possessed a common
origin, yet had been for a long course of time separated from each
other; they possessed independent chiefs of their own, and were
connected together only by the necessity of having a common head for the
sake of their mutual safety. The Dalriadic tribes, on the contrary, had
a much closer connexion; they formed but one nation, had sprung from the
original stock within a very few generations, and were, therefore,
united together by the ties of affinity and relationship as well as
those of common origin and of policy.
The only point
which now remains for us to examine before we can proceed to determine
the causes which led to the union of all these nations, under the rule
of Kenneth Mac Alpin, are the principles which regulated the succession
to the throne among them.
On examining
the line of Pictish kings, as contained in our ancient chronicles, we
cannot fail to observe one great peculiarity, namely, that hereditary
succession to the throne, appears to have been wholly unknown to them
even so late as the ninth century. We occasionally find a king succeeded
by his brother, but in no instance by his son; and in general, each king
appears to be totally unconnected with his predecessor. But that some
rule of succession existed among them is apparent from the testimony of
Bede, who states, that the Picts on their first landing agreed, “ut Ubi
res veniret in dubium, magis de ffoeminea regum prosapia quam de
masculina regem sibi eligerent,” and adds, “quod usque hodie apud
Pictos constat esse servatum.” From this passage of Bede we may
infer, first, that the Picts elected their monarchs; and, secondly, that
the election was not unlimited in its range, but was confined to some
specific class of individuals, otherwise it could not come into doubt;
and thirdly, that when there did exist a doubt as to the proper object
of the election, they chose that person most nearly related to the
former king by the female line.
Now there
appears from Adomnan to have existed among the Picts a division of the
people into Nobiles and Plebeii [Quendam de Nobili Pictorum genere. –
Adom.l, b. 2, c. 24. Illo in tempore quo Sanctus Columba in Pictorum
provincia per aliquot demorabatur dies, quidam cum tota plebius familia.–
Adom., b. 2, c. 33], and the account given by Tacitus of the
election of Galgacus, plainly indicates that it was to the Nobile genus
alone that this privilege of being chosen to fill the Pictish throne
belonged. [Inter plures duces virtute et genere praestans nomine
Galgacus. – Tacit. Vita Agric.] We have already seen that besides
the great two-fold division of the Picts into Dicaledones and
Vecturiones, they also at all times consisted of a number of small
tribes; we have also remarked that it appears from Tacitus and from the
notices of these tribes formerly given from Tighernac, that they were
originally independent of each other, and that they possessed chiefs of
their own to whom alone they owed obedience, although they were
frequently led by considerations of mutual safety to unite under a
common head. When we consider these facts, it must appear evident that
it was these chiefs alone who could be elected kings of the Picts, for
it cannot for a moment be supposed that if the whole nation was divided
into tribes subject respectively to the authority of their chiefs, that
they would suffer any one of inferior rank to themselves to fill the
Pictish throne. This view is confirmed by the expression of Tacitus with
regard to Galgacus, that he was “inter plures duces virtute et
genere praestans,” and still more strongly by the following passages of
Tighernac:
A.D.
713 Tolarg Mac Drostan ligatus spud fratrem suum
Nectan regem.
A.D.
739 Tolarcan Mac Drostan, REX ATFOTLA a bathadh la Aengus
(drowned by Angus).
Thus Tolard
Mac Drostan, the brother of Nectan, the king of the Picts, appears after
his brother’s death, and during the reign of Angus, as king of Athol,
and consequently Nectan must have been chief of Athol before he became
king of the Picts. What the peculiar rule was which regulated the
election of these chiefs to the Pictish throne, and on what occasions
that rule failed so as to bring the affair “in dubium,” it is impossible
now to determine; but from the authorities which we have mentioned we
may conclude, first, that the privilege of being elected monarch of th
Picts, was confined exclusively to the hereditary chiefs of the
different tribes into which that nation was divided, and, secondly, that
whenever that election was involved in doubt, the chief most nearly
related to the last king by the female line was chosen.
Such a mode of
succession as this, however, was not calculated to last; each chief who
in this manner obtained the Pictish throne, would endeavour to
perpetuate the succession in his own family, and the power and talent of
some chief would at length enable him to effect this object and to
change the rule of election into that of hereditary succession. This
object appears in reality to have been finally accomplished by
Constantin, the son of Fergus, who ascended the Pictish throne toward
the end of the eighth century, and in whose family the monarchy remained
for some time.
Such, then,
being the principles which regulated the succession to the Pictish
throne, it may be well to enquire whether the same rule of election
applied to the chiefs of the different tribes as well as to the monarch
of the whole nation. The fact of the regal succession of the Picts being
so peculiar does not in itself by any means lead to the inference that
the same principles must have regulated the succession of the chiefs,
for it is plain that this peculiarity assumed its form, not from the
general principles of succession having always been so, but from the
fact of the Picts having been rather an association of small and
independent tribes united only by similarity of origin and language, and
for purposes of mutual safety, than one compact nation. consequently no
argument drawn from the nature of the succession to an office of no
distant origin, and one produced by adventitious circumstances, can
affect the question as to the nature of succession in general, which
must have existed from the beginning, and which it is scarcely possible
that circumstances can alter. Whatever was the nature of the succession
among the chiefs, we may infer with great probability that when one of
these chiefs succeeded in perpetuating the succession to the throne in
his own tribe, the mode of succession introduced by him must have been
that previously existing in his own tribe. This was effected for the
first time by Constantin, who commenced his reign anno 791. He was
succeeded by his brother Angus. Angus was succeeded by Drust the son of
Constantin, and Drust by Uen the son of Angus. We see here, that though
this was strictly a male succession, yet that in several points is
differs from our ordinary rules of male succession. Thus it seems to
have been a fixed rule among the Picts that brothers in all cases
succeeded before sons; this is observable in the catalogues of the
Pictish kings, and also in the only instance we possess of succession to
the government of a tribe when Nectan is succeeded in Atholl by his
brother, Talorg. Secondly, after all the brothers had succeeded, the
children of the elder brother were called to the succession; and,
thirdly, as in the case before us, in their failure the sons of the
second brother succeeded, and so forth.
Among th
Dalriads the rules of succession to the government of the different
tribes appear to have been very much the same; this is evident upon
referring to the genealogies of the Dalriadic kings, and it would be
needless to multiply examples. With regard to the succession to the
command of the Dalriadic nation, that appears originally to have been
governed by the same rule as that of the single tribes, and it
afterwards became so frequently the subject of contention, that in
general the most powerful at the time obtained the supremacy.
Such, then, is
a general view of these nations in the year 731. The Picts, we have
seen, were by far the most powerful of the different nations inhabiting
North Britain; they possessed the whole of Scotland proper, or Scotland
north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, with the exception of the
southern part of Argyllshire, which was occupied by the Dalriads;
although divided into numerous tribes, they were united under the rule
of one monarch, and while part of the nation had made considerable
progress in civilization, and therefore may be supposed less inured to
warfare, the other part possessed all the hardihood and constitutional
bravery of a mountain people. The Dalriads, on the contrary, were of far
less power; they occupied a small and mountainous district, and
apparently owned their existence in the heart of the Pictish tribes to
the strength of their natural barriers, the poverty of their country,
and their alliance with Ireland, and perhaps also to the policy with
which they took advantage of the jealousies and rivalry between the two
great nations of the Picts.
In the ninth
century we find the state of Scotland very different; the whole country
was then united under the government of one monarch, hereditary
succession was firmly established, the once formidable name of Picti
gradually disappearing, and the name of Scotia and Scotti, formerly
confined to so small a portion of the island, rapidly spreading over the
whole country. It must unquestionably have been a series of events of no
small importance which could have given rise to a revolution so
remarkable.