Niall of the Nine Hostages
Irish king
375 CE to 450 CE
Niall Noígíallach (Old Irish "having nine hostages"), or in English, Niall of the Nine Hostages, son of Eochaid Mugmedón, is an Irish king, the eponymous ancestor of the Uí Néill kindred who dominate Ireland from the 6th century to the 10th century.
The rise of the Uí Néill dynasties and their conquests in Ulster and Leinster are not reliably recorded but have been the subject of considerable study and attempts to reconstruct them.
Although generally supposed to be a historical personage, very little can confidently be said of Niall's life.
The sources for the details of Niall's life are genealogies of historical kings, the "Roll of Kings" section of the Lebor Gabála Érenn, Irish annals such as the Annals of the Four Masters, chronicles such as Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn, and legendary tales like "The Adventure of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon” and "The Death of Niall of the Nine Hostages".
These sources date from long after Niall's time and their value as history is limited at best.
Niall is placed in the traditional list of High Kings of Ireland.
His reign dates to the late 4th and early 5th centuries.
The Annals of the Four Masters dates his accession to 378 and death to 405.
The chronology of Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn broadly agrees, dating his reign from 368-395, and associating his raiding activities in Britain with the kidnapping of Saint Patrick (ca.
390-461).
However, the traditional roll of kings and its chronology is now recognized as artificial.
The High Kingship did not become a reality until the 9th century, and Niall's legendary status has been inflated in line with the political importance of the dynasty he founded.
Based on Uí Néill genealogies and the dates given for his supposed sons and grandsons, modern historians believe he is likely to have lived some 50 years later than the traditional dates, dying circa 450.
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The Christian revival of Celtic art, which borrows heavily from late Roman provincial and contemporary Anglo-Saxon designs, is rapidly transmitted to Ireland.
The Scots of Ireland from about 395 had begun attacking Roman Britain from Strathclyde south to Wales, devastating coastal settlements and carrying off thousands of captives into slavery.
According to later tradition, during one of his many raids on Britain, Niall of the Nine Hostages, high king at Meath, captured the future Saint Patrick, aged sixteen, and brought him in bondage to Ireland, where he serves as a swineherd.
Patrick will succeed in escaping to Britain many years later, but he will eventually return to Ireland and play an important early role in the conversion of the Irish to Christianity.
The fifth and youngest son of Eochaid Mugmedon, an Irish High King, and Cairenn Chasdubh (curly black), the enslaved daughter of Sachell Balb (Sachell the stammerer), a British king, Niall is the eponymous ancestor, through his sons Conall Gulban, Endae, Eogan, Coirpre, Lóegaire, Maine of Tethba, Conall Cremthainne and Fiachu Fiachrach, of the Northern and Southern Uí Néill dynasties, some of whom will hold power in Ulster until their defeat in the Nine Years War in 1603. (In January 2006, scientists suggested that Niall may have been the most fecund male in Irish history, and second only to Genghis Khan worldwide.)
There are various versions of how Niall gained his epithet, the oldest being that he had taken a hostage from each of the nine túatha or petty kingdoms of the Airgialla.
The later, better known story is that he had taken a hostage from each of the five provinces of Ireland (Ulster, Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Meath), and one each from the Scots, Saxons, Britons, and Franks (or one each from Dál Riata, Caledonia, Strathclyde and Northumbria).
Irish sources describe Niall's expeditions to Britain and France, and his reign, as given in the Irish Annals, which is roughly contemporaneous with the foundation of Dál Riata in Scotland by Irish migrants and the raids by "Scots" on late Roman and sub-Roman Britain.
Roman legions in Britain mutiny against Honorius and select Marcus as new emperor.
He may have risen to power as a reaction to the increasing raids from abroad at a time when the Empire is withdrawing troops from its distant provinces like Britain to protect its heartland.
There are too few troops capable of defending Britain at this time, as raiders such as Irish records of raiders like Niall of the Nine Hostages show.
Local troops, with ties to their home garrisons, are likely to have resisted being redeployed to Italy at a time of such instability in Britain; Marcus' elevation may have been a result of this or some other, unrecorded crisis.
The ruler of Gwynned, the most northerly of the Welsh kingdoms, expels the Scots, marking a turning point in the raids originating from Ireland, which now begin to diminish; after the death of King Niall a few years (or decades) later, they will cease altogether.
Eoghan mac Néill, son of Niall Noígiallach, is an Irish king who founds the kingdom of Ailech, later Tír Eoghain (modern County Tyrone) in the fifth century.
He is also the ancestor of the Cenél nEoghain dynasty and their septs (MacLaughlin, O'Neill, Corrigan, etc.).
Eogan is a close friend of Saint Patrick and receives Patrick’s blessing.
With his brother the high king Lóegaire mac Néill (d.462), he is one of the judges in a dispute over the succession to Amalgaid (d.440), king of Connacht, among his sons competing to rule their territory of Tir Amalgaidh in northwest Connacht.