Toirdelbach Ua Briain

Toirdelbach Ua Briain

Toirdelbach Ua Briain (1009–14 July 1086), anglicised "Turlough O'Brien", was King of Munster and effectively High King of Ireland. A grandson of Brian Bóruma, Toirdelbach was the son of Tadc mac Briain who was killed in 1023 by his half-brother Donnchad mac Briain.

For the first forty years of his life nothing is known of Toirdelbach. It was not until the 1050s that he found allies in Connacht and in Leinster, particularly the powerful King of Leinster Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó, who would aid his claims to be ruler of Munster. It took perhaps ten years of sustained attack to remove his uncle Donnchad from power, and send him into exile, and to place Toirdelbach in power in Munster as Diarmait's faithful ally.

On Diarmait's death Toirdelbach took over the reins of power, establishing himself as ruler of more than half of Ireland. While not a great military leader, he was a capable politician whose influence extended as far north as Ulaid and who made and unmade Kings of Connacht. He died after more than two decades in power, following a lengthy illness, still in control of events. His son Muirchertach Ua Briain would be the leading king of his day, and his grandson Toirdelbach Ua Conchobair would be greater yet.

Background

Brian Bóruma was the first man to establish himself as High King of Ireland by force of arms alone in many centuries. Previous men reckoned High King had belonged to the great Uí Néill kindred, that large group of families who claimed to descend from Niall of the Nine Hostages, which dominated much of central and northern Ireland from the 7th century onwards. No king from the south, where Brian's kindred, the hitherto rather obscure Dál gCais of the region of Tuadmumu (north Munster), had come close to dominating Ireland since the time of Feidlimid mac Crimthainn in the early 9th century, and none had been included in the more widely accepted lists of High Kings in historic times. [Byrne, "Irish Kings and High Kings", pp. 181, 227 & 266–267.]

Brian, building on his own resources, and those of the Viking towns of the south such as Limerick and Cork first took control of Munster, overthrowing the domination of the Eóganachta, a kindred which had dominated the kingship of Munster as effectively as the Uí Néill had dominated the High Kingship, and for just as long. With the Uí Néill disunited, and the resources of Munster, Brian first brought the Uí Néill High King Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill to recognise him as an equal, and then to acknowledge him as the master of Ireland. Brian met his death at the Battle of Clontarf on 23 April 1014—Good Friday—fighting against the King of Leinster and his allies. In myth and medieval pseudohistory, as exemplified by the "Cogadh Gaedhil re Gallaibh" written in the time of Toirdelbach's son, this battle would become the last and greatest between the Irish and the Vikings and Brian the greatest of all Irish kings. [Hudson, "Viking Kings", pp. 86–90 & 95–104; Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", pp. 266–268.]

Family quarrels

Toirdelbach was the son of Tadc mac Brian, son of Brian Bóruma, and Mór, daughter of Gilla Brigte Ua Maíl Muaid of Cenél Fiachach. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach".] His father was killed in 1023, probably on the orders of his half-brother Donnchad mac Briain who thereby made himself king of Munster. [Bracken, "Donnchad"; "Annals of Innisfallen" AI 1023.3; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1023.4; "Chronicon Scotorum", CS 1023.] Donnchad, while he successfully retained control of Munster for four decades, was never able to achieve the same success as Brian. Epigraphic evidence shows that he aimed to be king of Ireland, and perhaps considered himself to be such, but the annalists and later historians recognised no such pretensions. [Bracken, "Donnchad".]

As for Toirdelbach, the annals record nothing of him until the 1050s, at which time he was seeking, and finding, outside assistance against his uncle. Donnchad's main rivals were Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó, King of Leinster from 1042, and Áed in Gaí Bernaig, King of Connacht from 1046. Diarmait in particular was a serious threat; allied with Niall mac Eochada, King of Ulster, he installed his son Murchad as ruler of Dublin in 1052, driving out Donnchad's brother-in-law and ally Echmarcach mac Ragnaill. From the beginning of the 1050s onwards, Donnchad came under sustained attack from both Áed and Diarmait. Toirdelbach first joined with Áed in the early 1050s, raiding into Tuadmumu in 1052 and inflicting a heavy defeat on Donnchad's son Murchad in Corco Mruad, the north-west of modern County Clare in 1055. By 1058 Toirdelbach had gained Diarmait's support, for he was present when Diarmait, the Leinstermen and the Osraige drove Donnchad from Limerick, which he burned so that it would not fall into the hands of his enemies, and defeated him at Sliabh gCrot in the Galtee Mountains. [Bracken, "Donnchad"; Hudson, "Diarmait"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1051.7, AI 1053.2, AI 1055.3, AI 1057.5 & AI 1058.4; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1052.1, ALC 1055.3 & ALC 1058.3. Bracken suggests that "it is likely that [the] concerted attacks on Munster about 1054 were the result of Toirdelbach Ua Briain's intrigues".]

In 1060 Donnchad attempted to divide his enemies by submitting to Áed. [Bracken, "Donnchad"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1059.7.] This was unsuccessful as Áed attacked again in 1061, razing the Dál gCais fortress at Kincora and burning their church at Killaloe. [Bracken, "Donnchad"; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1061.5; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1061.5.] Injury was added to insult when Diarmait brought an army, and Toirdelbach in his train, to Munster in 1062. Donnchad's son Murchad led the unsuccessful resistance, and even when Diarmait returned to Leinster, Toirdelbach defeated his kinsmen. By 1063, Donnchad was beaten. Deposed, he went on pilgrimage to Rome where he died the following year. Diarmait installed Toirdelbach as a puppet king in Munster. [Bracken, "Donnchad"; Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Hudson, "Diarmait"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1063.6 & 1064.5; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1064.3; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1064.4.]

Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó

Following Donnchad's deposition, Toirdelbach was one of Diarmait's key allies, particularly in Diarmait's final years when his authority was challenged within Leinster. In 1066 Diarmait and Toirdelbach each paid 30 ounces of gold to the king of Ciarraige Luachra of West Munster for his help in assassinating their enemies. In 1067 they campaigned together to defeat and kill the king of Ciarraige Luachra. ["Chronicon Scotorum", CS 1066; Hudson, "Diarmait".] Toirdelbach's nephew Murchad son of Donnchad was killed in 1068 while raiding in the midlands. ["Amnals of Innisfallen", AI 1068.2; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1068.3.]

The "Annals of Innisfallen" record to Toirdelbach as a law-maker, reporting that in 1068: "A law and ordinance was made by Tairdelbach Ua Briain-and no better law was enacted in Mumu for along time—with the result that neither cow nor horse was housed [at night] but allowed to wander at will." ["Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1068.4.] In the same year, and perhaps related to this law-making, Máel Ísu mac Amalgada, "comarba Pátraic" or abbot of Armagh and successor of Saint Patrick, visited Munster for the first time and received "his full visitation, both in tribute and offerings". ["Annals of Ulster", AU 1068.2.]

Toirdelbach's ally and protector Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó faced increasing difficulties in his final years, difficulties which led Toirdelbach to intervene on Diarmait's behalf against his enemies in Leinster. Diarmait's sons Murchad and Glúniairn died in 1070, leaving the succession uncertain and disputed. [Hudson, "Diarmait"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1070.2 & AI 1070.3; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1070.2 & AU 1070.12.] Later in 1070 Toirdelbach took an army into Leinster, carrying off hostages, and receiving the submission of the king of Osraige. [Hudson, "Diarmait"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1070.8 & AI 1070.9.] Toirdelbach had to return to Leinster again in 1071 open warfare broke out between Diarmait's grandson Domnall, Murchad's son, and his nephew Donnchad, son of Domnall Remair. The annal states that the hostages Toirdelbach took were handed over into the keeping of Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó. [Hudson, "Diarmait"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1071.2 & AI 1071.3.] Toirdelbach was not idle on his own account in these years. He led an army on a raid into the midlands in 1071, and had his soldiers build wooden bridges across the Shannon, evidently for military purposes, at "Áth Caille" (perhaps modern O'Briensbridge) and Killaloe. ["Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1071.5 & 1071.7.]

Diarmait visited Munster in 1071, distributing gifts. Diarmait had earlier given Toirdelbach treasures which included Brian Bóruma's sword, and "the standard of the king of the Saxons". This among Diarmait's last recorded acts before his death in battle on 7 February 1072. [Hudson, "Diarmait"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1068.5 & AI 1071.6. Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", p. 277, presumes that Brian's sword was that which had been recovered from the battlefield at Clontarf and that the standard was a Welsh one taken by Harold Godwinson in his campaigns for King Edward the Confessor; Hudson, "Viking Pirates", p. 157, suggests it may have been King Edward's own standard. At any event, the standard is presumed to have been brought to Ireland by the exiled sons of Harold.]

Toirdelbach was the chief beneficiary of Diarmait's death, the "Annals of Innisfallen" recording that:

Toirdelbach Ua Briain went to Osraige and Leinster, burned Uí Cheinnselaig and brought away much booty and cows, and took hostages from it as well as from Leinster. And the foreigners gave him the kingship of Dublin, and he made prisoner the sons of Domnall, son of Máel na mBó, in Dublin, and brought back the hostages of Osraige on that occasion. ["Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1072.4, similarly AI 1072.6.]
Conchobar Ua Máel Shechnaill, king of Mide, was murdered the next year, and Toirdelbach took advantage of this to ravage the midlands, followed by an expedition to Connacht where he obtained hostages from both the Uí Conchobair and the Uí Ruairc. ["Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1073.2, AI 1073.3 & 1073.4; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1073.1 & ALC 1073.2; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1073.2 & AU 1073.4.] He divided Leinster between various rivals, a policy of divide and rule which would serve him well. In Dublin he installed one Gofraid mac Amlaíb meic Ragnaill, perhaps a kinsman of Echmarchach mac Ragnaill, as his client king. [Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", pp. 277–278; Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Hudson, "Viking Pirates", p. 162.]

A campaign in 1075 directed against the Uí Néill and their allies in the north turned out less well. Toirdelbach's son Muirchertach was defeated by the Airgíalla near Áth Fhirdia (modern Ardee, County Louth) with heavy loss. ["Annals of Ulster", AU 1075.2; Bracken, "Toirdelbach".] At more or less the same time Gofraid was banished from Dublin by Toirdelbach, seemingly replaced by Domnall son of Murchad son of Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó, who ruled for only a short time before he died, and was replaced by Toirdelbach's son Muirchertach. With Muirchertach securely installed in Dublin, and another son, Diarmait, ruling over Waterford, Toirdelbach was master of half of Ireland. ["Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1075.2, AI 1075.3 & AI 1075.4; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1075.1 & AU 1075.4; Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Hudson, "Viking Pirates", p. 167.]

The wider world

While Toirdelbach's son Diarmait, ruler of Waterford, raided Wales in 1080, in general Toirdelbach is seen as less interested in matters outwith Ireland than his protector Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó, or his son Muirchertach. [Hudson, "Viking Pirates", p. 176.]

It was during Gofraid's short reign over Dublin, on 6 May 1074, that Donatus, first archbishop of Dublin died. This led the archbishop of Canterbury, Lanfranc of Pavia, to take an interest in Irish matters. Lanfranc, basing himself, he said, on Bede's writings, had already assured Pope Alexander II that Dublin formed part of the province of Canterbury and that it was for him to consecrate the new bishop. He also wrote to the Irish kings concerned, being careful not to cause offense. His letter to Toirdelbach calls him "magnificent king of Ireland", a title which might seem the more impressive had Lanfranc not also addressed Gofraid of Dublin as "glorious king of Ireland". [Hudson, "Viking Pirates", pp. 162–163; Bracken, "Toirdelbach".]

The "Annals of Innisfallen" report that "five Jews came from over sea with gifts to Toirdelbach, and they were sent back again over sea". ["Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1079.3.] The meaning and significance of this event is unclear. Hudson remarks that " [i] f the delegation wanted [Toirdelbach] 's approval for settling in Ireland they were disappointed". Bracken suggests that if this was the intention of the delegation, the otherwise astute Toirdelbach missed a significant opportunity to strengthen his position. [Hudson, "Viking Pirates", p. 168; Bracken, "Toirdelach".]

Divide and rule

Toirdelbach employed the policy of divide and rule to maintain control of Leinster and to prevent the emergence of a rival in Connacht. In the north, he supported the Ulaid to weaken the Cenél nEógain kings of Ailech. This policy was successful in keeping Leinster pacified, but was less successful in dealing with the Cenél nEógain of the north and the kings of Connacht in the west. [Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", p. 278; Bracken, "Toirdelbach". For Ulster, see "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1078.5, the arrival of the deposed Donn Sléibe Ua hEochada at Toirdelbach's court, & AI 1081.5, Áed Meránach Ua hEochada's submission to Toirdelbach.]

The Cenél nEógain, who appear to have had no widely-accepted candidates for the kingship, hit upon a candidate in the person of Conchobar Ua Briain, grandson of Toirdelbach's uncle Donnchad mac Briain and Toirdelbach's most obvious rival for the kingship of Munster. Conchobar was king for only a short time when he was murdered, along with his wife. His brother Cennétig was chosen to succeed him. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; "Annals of Innisfallen", 1078.3; "Annals of Ulster" AU 1078.3.]

In Connacht, three rival branches of the Uí Briúin, the Ua Conchobair, the Ua Flaithbertaig, and the Ua Ruairc, were in competition. Ruaidrí na Saide Buide of the Ua Conchobair was king of Connacht when he submitted to Toirdelbach in 1076. Toirdelbach deposed Ruaidrí in 1079 and replaced him with an Ua Ruairc, Áed son of Art Uallach. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Duffy, "Ruaidrí"; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1076.2; "Annals of the Four Masters", AFM 1079.10.]

The Ua Ruairc proved to be a threat to Toirdelbach and to their neighbours. Máel Sechnaill, king of Mide, submitted to Toirdelbach in 1080, perhaps for fear of Ua Ruairc. War broke out in 1084 between Toirdelbach and the Ua Ruairc, joined by Cennétig Ua Briain. Toirdelbach raided Mide, but while he was absent the Conmaicne, clients of the Ua Ruairc, raided Munster. A battle was fought at Monecronock, near modern Leixlip, on 19 October 1082 where Toirdelbach's sons Muirchertach and Tadc won, killing Domnall Ua Ruairc and Cennétig Ua Briain. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", p. 278; "Annals of the Four Masters", AFM 1084.8 & 1084.9; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1084.2; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1084.5 & 1084.6; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1084.5 & AU 1084.6.]

Death

Toirdelbach fell seriously ill in 1085 and lost his hair. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", p. 278.] The "Annals of the Four Masters", a late and not always reliable source, state that he had been ill for many years. ["Annals of the Four Masters", AFM 1086.9, states: "for he was not well since the head of Conchobar Ua Máel Shechnaill had been brought from Clonmacnoise", that is "c". 1073.] He may never have fully recovered from his earlier illness. The "Annals of Ulster" report that he "died in Kincora [near Killaloe] after great suffering and long repentance, and after receiving the Body of Christ and His Blood, on [14 July] in the seventy-seventh year of his age [1086] ". Rarely given to over-praising southern kings, this northern annal calls him "king of Ireland". The "Annals of Tigernach", another northern record, styles Toirdelbach "rí urmóir Erenn", "king of the greater part of Ireland". ["Annals of Ulster", AU 1086.4; "Annals of Tigernach", AT 1086.2.]

Toirdelbach was probably married three times. Dubchoblaig of the Uí Cheinnselaig, who died in 1088, was the mother of Diarmait, perhaps named for her kinsman and Toirdelbach's protector Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó. Derbforgaill of Osraige was the mother of Tadc and Muirchertach. No children of Gormlaith of Ua Fógarta are named and the mother of Toirdelbach's daughter Mór is not recorded. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; death of Gormlaith, "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1076.7; death of Derbforgaill, "Annals of Tigernach", AT 1098.1.]

Mór married Ruaidrí na Saide Buide. Her son Toirdelbach Ua Conchobair was one of the greatest kings of medieval Ireland. She died in 1088, perhaps coincidently the year in which a gloss to the "Annals of Ulster" records Toirdelbach's birth. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Duffy, "Ruaidrí"; "Annals of Tigernach", AT 1088.3; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1088.6.] Toirdelbach apparently planned to divide his lands between his three sons. Tadc survived him by only weeks, dying of natural causes at Kincora, after which Muirchertach and Diarmait disputed the succession. Diarmait was the loser, banished by his half-brother, and exiled with his mother's kin in Leinster. [Bracken, "Toirdelbach"; Hudson, "Viking Kings", p. 177; Ó Cróinín, "Early Medieval Ireland", pp. 2778–279; "Annals of Innisfallen", AI 1086.7; "Annals of Loch Cé", ALC 1086.3; "Annals of Ulster", AU 1086.4.]

Notes

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