- Maccus mac Arailt
Maccus mac Arailt (died 984x987?) or Maccus Haraldsson was a
Scandinavia n orNorse-Gael king. He and his brother Gofraid were active in the lands around theIrish Sea in the 970s and 980s. Maccus's name is sometimes incorrectly given as Magnus; it is instead a name of Old Irish origin.Maccus and Gofraid are usually assumed to be members of the
Uí Ímair , a kin group tracing its descent fromÍmar (died 873), sometimes identified with thesaga -characterIvar the Boneless . Their father Aralt or Harald is usually identified with the Aralt mac Sitric, king of Norse-GaelLimerick , who was killed inConnacht in 940. This identification would make Aralt and Gofraid nephews ofAmlaíb Cuarán , theKing of Dublin . An alternative proposal, advanced byBenjamin Hudson , makes Gofraid and Maccus sons of aViking chief named Harald who was active inNormandy , but this has received little support.The first record of Maccus may be in 971 when the "
Brut y Tywysogion " records an attack on Penmon inWales , site of an important church, by "Marcus" son of Harald. Welsh annals record an attack onAnglesey two years later by a son of Harald. The "Brut y Tywysogion" states that it was Maccus's brother Gofraid who led this attack. That same year, 973, Maccus is listed byJohn of Worcester andWilliam of Malmesbury as one of the kings present in attendance with KingEdgar of England at the meeting atChester . Maccus is called "king of many islands", suggesting that he ruled over theHebrides , and perhaps also theIsle of Man , although this last is uncertain. Maccus is listed as a witness to a charter of King Edgar which is dated to around this time, [http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=808 S 808] , but this is generally thought to be a late forgery.The "
Annals of Innisfallen " record the plundering ofScattery Island and the captured ofÍmar of Limerick by "the son of Harald" in 974. The "Annals of the Four Masters " name Maccus as the son of Harald in question and add that "the lawmen of the Isles" accompanied him on this expedition, again suggesting links to the Hebrides.Maccus may appear again in 982, joining Gofraid in an attack on Wales. In 984 the brothers came to
Waterford , where they joined up withBrian Bóruma ,king of Munster , their combined armies and fleets attackingDublin . After this, Maccus disappears from the chronicles.An unnamed son of Harald won a battle on the Isle of Man in 987, but whether this was Maccus or Gofraid is unclear. No children of Maccus are known.
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