- Causantín
mac Cináeda (Modern Gaelic: Còiseam
mac Choinnich; c. 836-877) was a king of the Picts. He is
often known as
Constantine I in
reference to his...
- Áed
mac Cináeda (Modern
Scottish Gaelic: Aodh
mac Choinnich; Latin: Ethus; Anglicized: Hugh; died 878) was a son of Cináed
mac Ailpín (Kenneth
MacAlpin)...
- Máel
Coluim mac Cinaeda (Modern
Scottish Gaelic: Maol
Chaluim mac Choinnich;
anglicised Malcolm II; c. 954 – 25
November 1034) was King of Alba (Scotland)...
- all of
these have male and
female forms depending on the bearer, e.g. all
Mac-
names become Nic- if the
person is female. Some of the
Scottish Gaelic surnames...
- the
Highland Clearances in Inverness-shire,
Coinneach MacChoinnich (1758–1837), a poet from Clan
MacKenzie who was born at
Castle Heather, then
known as...
- Sgùrr Mhic
Choinnich is a
mountain on the Isle of Skye in Scotland. It is in the
Black Cuillin range of
mountains and is
classified as a Munro. Like all...
-
Beinn Ruigh Choinnich is a hill
which overlooks the port of
Lochboisdale on the east
coast of the
island of
South Uist in the
Outer Hebrides Scotland...
- Bannerman, pp. 92–94,
identifies this
Gartnait with
Gartnait son of Áedán
mac Gabráin,
founder of the "genus Gartnait" of Skye. Woolf, "Pictish matriliny...
-
state of the
Kingdom of Scotland.
According to tradition,
Kenneth I
MacAlpin (Cináed
mac Ailpín) was the
founder and
first King of the
Kingdom of Scotland...
-
reign of
Kenneth MacAlpin
begins what is
often called the
House of Alpin, an
entirely modern concept. The
descendants of
Kenneth MacAlpin were divided...