Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2017
The thesis defended in this contribution to Viking studies in the British Isles is simple and straightforward. It is argued that the Viking warrior Ragnarr Loðbrók was an historical personage. Tradition associates him with the area about the Kattegat and in particular with south Norway and Zealand where Ragnarr and his sons were the leaders of a large force of vikings. These were sea-kings rather than rulers of territories. Ragnarr flourished in the first half of the ninth century and died some time after 851. Amongst his many sons, three were famous: Ívarr inn beinlausi, Hálfdan and Ubbe. Ragnarr was the leader (or one of the leaders) of the Danish attack on the Irish Vikings, probably Norwegians, in 851 and his son Ívarr established himself as king of Dublin which he ruled jointly from 853 with one Óláfr, identical with the Vestfold king, Óláfr Geirstaðaálfr, who after years of campaigning in Ireland with Ívarr returned to Norway in or about 871.
* Scandinavian kings in the British Isles. By Alfred P. Smyth. Pp xii, 307. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1978. £10. (Oxford Historical Monographs).
1 Smyth, A. P., Scandinavian York and Dublin i (Dublin, 1975), p. 20 Google Scholar. The thesis of the present work is taken as proven in this book (pp 9-26).
2 Weibull, Lauritz, Nordisk Historia. Forskningar och undersökningar (Stockholm, 1948)Google Scholar which contains reprints of Weibull's major works published in 1911 and 1913; see further Medieval Scandinavia v (1972), pp 96-138.
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According to another ‘annal’ in the same collection, the utterly mythical Frothi hiri faemildae slew a dragon in north Jutland and conquered six of these countries and many others besides.
16 Bk Lein., v, 1322; Cogad, p. 18 § 20.
17 FA, p. 94 § 235.
18 A. P. Smyth, ‘ The Black Foreigners of York and the White Foreigners of Dublin’ in Saga-Book of the Viking Society xix (1972–6), pp 101-17.
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23 I propose to argue elsewhere that the term develops a quite different and specific meaning in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
24 All the annalistic entries except for a single one in A.U. are interpolations ; for the rest, the details derive from Cogad, Giraldus Cambrensis, Topographia Hiberniae (see James Stewart, ‘ The death of Turgesius ’ in Saga-Book of the Viking Society xviii (1970-71), pp 47-58) and Jocelin's Vita Patricii. The only reference to Turgesius in the genealogies (Bk Lec., 63 Vb 19 = B.B., 96b33) is an interpolation as may be shown by comparison with the earlier text in TCD H.2.7., 42a35 and derives directly from Cogad. For the rest, the story of Turges amongst the modern historians is a historiographical paradigm of accretion, speculation and confusion. Each historian has added his own ingredient to the stew and so has Dr. Smyth. His suggestion that Turges may have been responsible for the capture of Máel Brigte, king of Conaillne, in 831 has no basis.
25 That is to say that the Vikings arrived in Ireland ca 780 and immediately began a thorough and continuous ransacking of the country, a novel opinion to say the least of it; and since the same chronology and the same opinion in regard to Viking plundering is repeated later (p. 140), we must either regard such expressions as hyperbole (which has no place in a serious historical study) or consider them to reflect Dr Smyth's genuine but mistaken beliefs about such matters.
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31 The verse occurs in the lower margin in the main hand in H. I. 8; it is absent in Rawl. B 489.
32 Edited from RIA Stowe C iii 3.
33 The Academy, no. 909 (5 Oct. 1889), p. 224.
34 Byrne, Kings, p. 263.
35 One notes that while material is drawn from all four sources only two are referred to in the relevant footnote (p. 131, n. 16).
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49 Mac Neill, op. cit., pp 77-8.
50 Bk Lein., v 1324; Cogad, p . 26 § 15.
51 Marstrander, Bidrag, pp 74, 109.
52 R. W. McTurk, ‘ Ragnarr Loðbrók in the Irish annals? ’ p. 120 (where he points out that Æthelweard has been mistranslated by his editor).
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