-
Goidelic language male name,
probably derived from the
Brythonic language name
Ciniod. The
hypocoristic form may have been Cinadon. It is
represented by the later...
-
Ciniod (Scottish Gaelic: Cináed) was king of the Picts, in
modern Scotland,
ruling circa 843. His name is
given as
Kineth in the king
lists of the Pictish...
-
Ciniod, Cináed or Cinadhon, son of
Uuredech (Old Irish: Cináed mac Feradaig; English:
Kenneth son of Feradach), was king of the
Picts from 763
until 775...
-
Ciniod of the
Picts may
refer to:
Ciniod I of the
Picts (?-775)
Ciniod II of the
Picts (fl. 842)
Ciniod III of the
Picts (before 967–1005) This disambiguation...
- Cinioch,
named Cínaed mac
Luchtren or
Ciniod I, in the
Irish Annals, was king of the Picts, in
modern Scotland, from
circa 616 to 631, when his
death is...
- Cináed mac Duib (Modern Gaelic:
Coinneach mac D****bh; c. 966 – c. 25
March 1005),
anglicised as
Kenneth III, and
nicknamed An Donn ("the Chief" or "the...
- and Alpín are the
names of
Pictish kings in the 8th century: the
brothers Ciniod and
Elphin who
ruled from 763 to 780. Alpín's
alleged father Eochaid IV...
- on
modern readings of the sources.
Orthography is problematic. Cinioch,
Ciniod and Cináed all
represent ancestors of the
modern Anglicised name Kenneth...
- the
reign of "Pherath son of Bergeth". His sons may have
included Bridei,
Ciniod, and Drest, who
contested for
power in
Pictland with kin
groups led by Bruide...
- of the Picts, in
modern Scotland, from 842 to 843. Two of his brothers,
Ciniod and Drest, are also said, in the king
lists of the
Pictish Chronicle, to...