- and
other northern Iron Age tribes.
Their territory is
referred to as "
Pictland" by
modern historians.
Initially made up of
several chiefdoms, it came...
- king of the
Picts to king of Alba, is part of a
broader transformation of
Pictland and the
origins of the
Kingdom of Alba are
traced to Constantine's lifetime...
- Chináeda, and
Clann Chinaeda meic Ailpín, was the kin-group
which ruled in
Pictland,
possibly Dál Riata, and then the
kingdom of Alba from
Constantine II (Causantín...
- Vikings. The kingdom's
independence ended sometime after, as it
merged with
Pictland to form the
Kingdom of Alba.
Latin sources often referred to the inhabitants...
- such
thing happened for
another few centuries.[6][dubious – discuss] That
Pictland had
Gaelic kings is not in question. One of the earliest, if not the earliest...
-
sixth century, the area that is now
Scotland was
divided into
three areas:
Pictland, a
patchwork of
small lordships in
central Scotland;: 25–26 the Anglo-Saxon...
-
History & Folklore.
Retrieved 27
February 2024. Woolf,
Pictland to Alba. Woolf, From
Pictland to Alba, pp. 163-164 McGuigan, Neil (2015). "Ælla and the...
-
Caledonia to
Pictland,
Edinburgh University Press (2009) ISBN 978-0-7486-1232-1 Alex Woolf, The New
Edinburgh History of
Scotland Vol. 2, From
Pictland to Alba...
- north-eastern Britain, the
lands of the
kingdom of
Northumbria and the
former Pictland, are
limited and late,
those for the
areas on the
Irish Sea and Atlantic...
- pp. 227–242. From
Caledonia to
Pictland,
Scotland to 795,
James E. Fraser, 2009,
Edinburgh University Press From
Pictland to Alba, 789-1070, Alex Woolf...