High King of Ireland ( ga, Ardrí na hÉireann ) was a royal title in
Gaelic Ireland
Gaelic Ireland ( ga, Éire Ghaelach) was the Gaelic political and social order, and associated culture, that existed in Ireland from the late prehistoric era until the early 17th century. It comprised the whole island before Anglo-Normans co ...
held by those who had, or who are claimed to have had, lordship over all of
Ireland. The title was held by historical kings and later sometimes assigned anachronously or to legendary figures.
Medieval and early modern
Irish literature portrays an almost unbroken line of High Kings, ruling from the
Hill of Tara over a hierarchy of lesser kings, stretching back thousands of years. Modern historians believe this scheme was crafted in the 8th century from the various genealogical traditions of powerful dynasties, and intended to justify their status by projecting it far into the past.
[ Dáibhí Ó Cróinín, "Ireland, 400–800", in Dáibhí Ó Cróinín (ed.), ''A New History of Ireland 1: Prehistoric and Early Ireland'', Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 182–234.] John T. Koch
John T. Koch is an American academic, historian and linguist who specializes in Celtic studies, especially prehistory and the early Middle Ages. He is the editor of the five-volume ''Celtic Culture. A Historical Encyclopedia'' (2006, ABC Clio). He ...
explains: "Although the
kingship of Tara was a special kingship whose occupants had aspirations towards supremacy among the kings of Ireland, in political terms it is unlikely that any king had sufficient authority to dominate the whole island before the 9th century".
The concept of national kingship is first articulated in the 7th century, but only became a political reality in the
Viking Age, and even then not a consistent one.
While the High Kings' degree of control varied, they never ruled Ireland as a
politically unified state, as the High King was conceived of as an overlord exercising
suzerainty
Suzerainty () is the rights and obligations of a person, state or other polity who controls the foreign policy and relations of a tributary state, while allowing the tributary state to have internal autonomy. While the subordinate party is cal ...
over, and receiving tribute from, the independent kingdoms beneath him.
[Francis John Byrne, ''Irish Kings and High Kings'', London, 1973,]
Sacred High Kings
Early Irish kingship was
sacred in character. In some early Irish sources, High Kings can gain their power through a marriage to, or sexual relationship with, a
sovereignty goddess. The High King is free from blemish, enforces symbolic ''buada'' (prerogatives) and avoids symbolic ''
geasa'' (
taboos).
According to 7th- and 8th-century law tracts, a hierarchy of kingship and clientship progressed from the ''rí tuaithe'' (king of a single
petty kingdom) through the ''ruiri'' (a ''rí'' who was overking of several petty kingdoms) to a ''rí ruirech'' (a ''rí'' who was a provincial overking). (See
Rí.)
Each king ruled directly only within the bounds of his own petty kingdom and was responsible for ensuring good government by exercising ''fír flaithemon'' (rulers' truth). His responsibilities included convening its ''óenach'' (popular assembly), collecting taxes, building public works, external relations, defence, emergency legislation, law enforcement, and promulgating legal judgment.
The lands in a petty kingdom were held
allodially by various ''fine'' (
agnatic
Patrilineality, also known as the male line, the spear side or agnatic kinship, is a common kinship system in which an individual's family membership derives from and is recorded through their father's lineage. It generally involves the inheritanc ...
kingroups) of freemen. The king occupied the apex of a pyramid of clientship within the petty kingdom. This pyramid progressed from the unfree population at its base up to the heads of noble ''fine'' held in immediate clientship by the king. Thus the king was drawn from the dominant ''fine'' within the ''cenél'' (a wider kingroup encompassing the noble ''fine'' of the petty kingdom).
The kings of the
Ulster Cycle are kings in this sacred sense, but it is clear that the old concept of kingship coexisted alongside
Christianity for several generations.
Diarmait mac Cerbaill, king of Tara in the middle of the 6th century, may have been the last king to have "married" the land. Diarmait died at the hands of
Áed Dub mac Suibni; some accounts from the following century state that he died by the mythic
Threefold death appropriate to a sacral king.
Adomnán
Adomnán or Adamnán of Iona (, la, Adamnanus, Adomnanus; 624 – 704), also known as Eunan ( ; from ), was an abbot of Iona Abbey ( 679–704), hagiographer, statesman, canon jurist, and saint. He was the author of the ''Life of Co ...
's ''Life'' tells how Saint
Columba
Columba or Colmcille; gd, Calum Cille; gv, Colum Keeilley; non, Kolban or at least partly reinterpreted as (7 December 521 – 9 June 597 AD) was an Irish abbot and missionary evangelist credited with spreading Christianity in what is toda ...
forecast the same death for Áed Dub. The same Threefold Death is said in a late poem to have befallen Diarmait's predecessor,
Muirchertach macc Ercae, and even the usually reliable
Annals of Ulster
The ''Annals of Ulster'' ( ga, Annála Uladh) are annals of medieval Ireland. The entries span the years from 431 AD to 1540 AD. The entries up to 1489 AD were compiled in the late 15th century by the scribe Ruaidhrí Ó Luinín, ...
record Muirchertach's death by drowning in a vat of wine.
A second sign that sacred kingship did not disappear with the arrival of Christianity is the supposed lawsuit between
Congal Cáech, king of the
Ulaid, and
Domnall mac Áedo
Domnall mac Áedo (died 642), also known as Domnall II, Was an Irish king and son of Áed mac Ainmuirech and his consort Land, the daughter of Áed Guaire mac Amalgada of Airgíalla. Domnall was High King of Ireland from 628 until his death. He be ...
. Congal was supposedly blinded in one eye by Domnall's bees, from whence his byname Cáech (half-blind or squinting), this injury rendering him imperfect and unable to remain High King. The enmity between Domnall and Congal can more prosaically be laid at the door of the rivalry between the
Uí Néill and the kings of Ulaid, but that a king had to be whole in body appears to have been accepted at this time.
Succession order
The business of Irish succession is rather complicated because of the nature of kingship in Ireland before the
Norman take-over of 1171. Ireland was divided into a multiplicity of kingdoms, with some kings owing allegiance to others from time to time, and succession rules (insofar as they existed) varied. Kings were often succeeded by their sons, but often other branches of the dynasty took a turn—whether by agreement or by force of arms is rarely clear. Unfortunately, the king-lists and other early sources reveal little about how and why a particular person became king.
To add to the uncertainty, genealogies were often edited many generations later to improve an ancestor's standing within a kingdom, or to insert him into a more powerful kindred. The uncertain practices in local kingship cause similar problems when interpreting the succession to the high kingship.
The High King of Ireland was essentially a ceremonial, pseudo-federal overlord (where his over-lordship was even recognised), who exercised actual power only within the realm of which he was actually king. In the case of the
southern branch of the Uí Néill, this would have been the
Kingdom of Meath
Meath (; Old Irish: ''Mide'' ; spelt ''Mí'' in Modern Irish) was a kingdom in Ireland from the 1st to the 12th century AD. Its name means "middle," denoting its location in the middle of the island.
At its greatest extent, it included all of ...
(now the counties of
Meath Meath may refer to:
General
* County Meath, Republic of Ireland
**Kingdom of Meath, medieval precursor of the county
** List of kings of Meath
** Meath GAA, including the intercounty football and hurling teams
** Diocese of Meath, in the Roman Cath ...
,
Westmeath and part of
County Dublin). High Kings from the northern branch ruled various kingdoms in what eventually became the province of Ulster.
In 1002, the high kingship of Ireland was wrested from
Mael Sechnaill II of the southern Uí Néill by ''
Brian "Boruma" mac Cennédig'' of the
Kingdom of Munster. Some historians have called this a "usurpation" of the throne. Others have pointed out that no one had a strict legal right to the kingship
and that Brian "had as much right to the high throne as any Uí Neill and... displayed an ability sadly lacking amongst most of the Uí Néill who had preceded him."
Brian was killed in the
Battle of Clontarf in 1014. Mael Sechnaill II was restored to the High Kingship but he died in 1022. From 1022 through the
Norman take-over of 1171, the High Kingship was held alongside "Kings with Opposition".
Early Christian High Kings
Even at the time the law tracts were being written, these petty kingdoms were being swept away by newly emerging dynasties of dynamic overkings. The most successful of these early dynasties were the
Uí Néill (encompassing descendants of
Niall of the Nine Hostages
Niall ''Noígíallach'' (; Old Irish "having nine hostages"), or Niall of the Nine Hostages, was a legendary, semi-historical Irish king who was the ancestor of the Uí Néill dynasties that dominated Ireland from the 6th to the 10th centuries. ...
, such as the
Cenél nEógain), who (as kings of
Tara) had been conquering petty kingdoms, expelling their rulers, and agglomerating their territories under the direct rule of their expanding kindred since the fifth century.
Gaelic and foreign, pagan and Christian ideas were comingled to form a new idea of Irish kingship. The native idea of a sacred kingship was integrated with the Christian idea in the ceremony of
coronation, the relationship of king to overking became one of ''
tigerna'' (lord) to king and ''imperium'' (
sovereignty) began to merge with ''dominium'' (ownership).
The
Church was well disposed to the idea of a strong political authority. Its clerics developed the theory of a high kingship of Ireland and wrote tracts exhorting kings to rule rather than reign. In return, the ''paruchiae'' (monastic federations) of the Irish church received royal patronage in the form of shrines, building works, land, and protection.
The concept of a high king was occasionally recorded in various annals, such as an entry regarding the death of
Máel Sechnaill mac Máele Ruanaid in 862 in the Annals of Ulster, which lists him as
''rí Érenn uile'' (king of all Ireland), a title which his successor
Aed Finliath apparently never was granted. It is unclear what political reality was behind this title.
Later High Kings
By the twelfth century, the dual process of agglomeration of territory and consolidation of kingship saw the handful of remaining provincial kings abandoning the traditional royal sites for the cities, employing ministers and governors, receiving advice from an ''oireacht'' (a body of noble counsellors), presiding at reforming synods, and maintaining standing armies.
Early royal succession had been by alternation between collateral branches of the wider dynasty, but succession was now confined to a series of father/son, brother/brother and uncle/nephew successions within a small royal ''fine'' marked by an exclusive surname.
These compact families (the
Uí Briain of Munster, the
Meic Lochlainn of the North, the
Uí Conchubhair
The O'Conor family (Middle Irish: ''Ó Conchubhair''; Modern ga, Ó Conchúir) are an Irish noble house and were one of the most influential and distinguished royal houses in Ireland. The O'Conor family held the throne of the Kingdom of Co ...
of Connacht) intermarried and competed against each other on a national basis so that on the eve of the
Anglo-Norman incursion of 1169 the agglomeration/consolidation process was complete and their provincial kingdoms divided, dismembered and transformed into fiefdoms held from (or in rebellion against) one of their number acting as king of Ireland.
See also
*
History of Ireland
*
List of High Kings of Ireland
*
List of Irish kingdoms
*
Lists of Irish kings
Notes
References
* ''
Lebor Gabála Érenn''
Geoghegan Clan* John Francis Byrne, 1973, ''Irish Kings and High Kings'', Dublin
* ''
Annals of the Four Masters''
*
Geoffrey Keating, 1636,
Foras Feasa ar Éirinn
High King Niall: the most fertile man in Ireland
* ''
The Times Online
''The Times'' is a British daily national newspaper based in London. It began in 1785 under the title ''The Daily Universal Register'', adopting its current name on 1 January 1788. ''The Times'' and its sister paper ''The Sunday Times'' (fou ...
'', The Times, 15 January 2006
* Laoise T. Moore et al.,
A Y-Chromosome Signature of Hegemony in Gaelic IrelandAm. J. Hum. Genet., 78:334–338, 2006
External links
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ireland, High King Of
Medieval Ireland
Cycles of the Kings
Irish mythology