- to
identify which of the
three known sons of Ímar (Bárid,
Sichfrith or
Sitriuc) – if any – was the
father of Sitric. One
possible reason for the lack...
-
Gofraid mac
Sitriuc, were late eleventh-century
rulers of the
Kingdom of the Isles.
Although one
source states that
Gofraid mac
Sitriuc's father was named...
- Amlaíb mac
Sitriuc ("Amhlaeibh, son of Sitric") or Olaf Sigtryggsson, was the son of
Sigtrygg Silkbeard, the Hiberno-Norse King of Dublin, and Sláine...
- and a
member of the Uí Ímair.
Sitriuc succeeded his
brother Sichfrith as King of
Dublin in 888. For most of
Sitriuc's reign, and for the
decade preceding...
-
Sigtrygg II
Silkbeard Olafsson (also Sihtric,
Sitric and
Sitrick in
Irish texts; or
Sigtryg and
Sigtryggr in
Scandinavian texts) was a Hiberno-Norse king...
-
father Sitriuc (d. 927),
Ragnall (d. 921),
Gofraid (d. 934), Ímar (d. 904) and Amlaíb (d. 896)—were
brothers rather than cousins. Amlaíb's
father Sitriuc first...
-
comprising Gofraid,
Sitriuc, Cacht, and Echmarcach, it is
possible that—following the
Dublin ascendancy of the Uí Briain—
Sitriuc and his Uí
Briain allies...
- from Ireland's Eye on
Anglesey and Britain. Cammán may be
identical to
Sitriuc Cam, an
individual who in 962 made a
naval attack on Uí Cholgain, but was...
-
identifiable as sons of Ímar.
These are Bárid (d. 881),
Sichfrith (d. 888), and
Sitriuc (d. 896), all
three of whom
reigned as King of Dublin. Five individuals...
- as
being a son of Amlaíb mac
Gofraid (d.941), as well as
possibly being Sitriuc Cam, who was
defeated in
battle by Amlaíb Cuarán two
years later. In 960...