-
Maccus mac
Arailt (fl. 971–974), or
Maccus Haraldsson, was a tenth-century King of the Isles.
Although his
parentage is uncertain,
surviving evidence suggests...
-
Gofraid mac
Arailt (died 989), in Old
Norse Guðrøðr
Haraldsson [ˈɡuðˌrøðz̠ ˈhɑrˌɑldsˌson], was a
Scandinavian or Norse-Gael king. He and his
brother Maccus...
- Ímar mac
Arailt (died 1054) was an eleventh-century
ruler of the
Kingdom of
Dublin and
perhaps the
Kingdom of the Isles. He was the son of a man named...
- Ó h
Arailt is a
masculine surname in the
Irish language. The name
translates into
English as "descendant of
Arailt". The
surname originated as a patronym...
- and
likely a
member of the Uí Ímair kindred. He was a son of
Gofraid mac
Arailt, King of the Isles.
Ragnall and
Gofraid flourished at a time when the Kingdom...
- Ímair (pre 927-?) Amlaíb mac
Gofraid (pre 935-941)
Maccus mac
Arailt (980-?)
Gofraid mac
Arailt (?-989)
Gilli (Hebridean earl) (990-?)
Ragnall mac Gofraid...
- 937)
Aralt mac
Sitric (died 940)
probably Maccus mac
Arailt (died 984/7)
probably Gofraid mac
Arailt (died 989)
Ragnall mac
Gofraid (died 1005) Lagmann...
-
accorded Haraldr various patronymic names in
English secondary sources:
Arailt mac Amhlaíbh,
Aralt mac Amlaíb Duib,
Harald Olafsson,
Harald Óláfsson, Harald...
- 914–921) to 921? Gebeachan, King (?–937)
Maccus mac
Arailt, King (fl.971–974)
Gofraid mac
Arailt, King (?–989) Gilli,
Chieftain (990–?)
Kingdom of Northumbria...
-
entered a
nunnery in widowhood. Two individuals,
Maccus mac
Arailt and
Gofraid mac
Arailt, who were
active throughout the
Irish Sea
region in the 970s...