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The secular history of the Isle of Man during the Celtic period remains mysterious: we have surviving trustworthy record of any event whatever before the incursions of the Northmen, since the exploits attributed to Baetan MacCairill, king of Ulster, at the end of the 6th century, which were formally supposed to have been performed in the Isle of Man, really occurred in the country between the Firths of Clyde and Forth. And it is clear that, even if the supposed conquest of the Menavian islands -- Man and Anglesey -- by Edwin of Northumbria, in 616, did take place, it could not have led to any permanent results; for, when the English were driven from the coasts of Cumberland and Lancashire soon afterwards, they could not well have retained their hold on the island to the west of these coasts. It is, however, possible that in 684, when Ecfrid laid Ireland waste from Dublin to Drogheda, he temporarily occupied Man.
The island was colonised from Ireland in the late part of the first millenium AD, and the main evidence of this is the Manx language, a form of Gaelic; before then there is evidence of a Welsh speaking people living there. One big historical argument is whether the present Manx language is a pre-Norse survival, or whether it was reintroduced after the Norse invasion.
It is said that the island was converted to Christianity by St Maughold (Maccul), an Irish missionary who gives his name to a parish. The island's name is derived from Mannanan, the Celtic equivalent of Neptune.
During the period of Scandinavian domination there are two main epochs -- one before the conquest of Man by Godred Crovan in 1079Events Halsten and Ingold I succeed Haakon the Red in Sweden. Ladislaus Herman succeeds Boleslaus II in Poland. William I of England establishes the New Forest. Constance of Burgundy founds a monastery in Burgos. Abbess Hildegarde of St. Ruprechtsberg mak, and the other after it. Warfare and unsettled rule characterise the earlier epoch; the later saw comparatively more peace.
Between about A.D. 800 and 815 the Vikings came to Man chiefly for plunder; between about 850 and 990, when they settled in it, the island fell under the rule of the Scandinavian kings of DublinThis article is about the city in Ireland. For other uses of the name, see Dublin (disambiguation). Dublin ( Irish: Baile Atha Cliath is the capital and largest city of the Republic of Ireland, located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mou; and between 990 and 1079, it became subject to the powerful earlThe title Earl of Orkney has been created several times in the Peerage of Scotland. The first grant was to Henry Sinclair in 1379. His descendant, William Sinclair, surrendered the earldom of Orkney in exchange for the earldom of Caithness. The next Orknes of Orkney.
The conqueror Godred Crovan was evidently a remarkable man, though little information about him is attainable. According to the Chronicon Manniae he subdued Dublin, and a great part of LeinsterLeinster ( Irish: Laighin is the eastern province of Ireland, comprising the counties of Carlow, Dublin, Kildare, Kilkenny, Laois, Longford, Louth, Meath, Offaly, Westmeath, Wexford and Wicklow. The traditional flag of Leinster has a golden harp against a, and held the Scots in such subjection that no one who built a vessel dared to insert more than three bolts. The memory of such a ruler would be likely to survive in tradition, and it seems probable therefore that he is the person commemorated in Manx legend under the name of King Gorse or Orry. The islands which were under his rule were called the Sullr-eyjar (Sudreys or the south isles, in contradistinction to the norSr-eyjar, or the north isles, i.e. the Orkneys and ShetlandsThe Shetland Islands (sometimes historically spelled Zetland formerly Hjaltland are one of 32 unitary council regions in Scotland and a Lieutenancy Area. It is a Scottish island group between the Orkney Islands and the Faroe Islands, north of mainland Sco, and they consisted of the HebridesThis article is about the Hebrides islands in Scotland. See also the New Hebrides for the islands constituting Vanuatu. The Hebrides are a spread-out and diverse group of islands off the west coast of Scotland, and in geological terms are composed of the, and of all the smaller western islands of Scotland, with Man. At a later date his successors took the title of Rex Manniae et Insularum ( King of Man and the Isles).
Olaf , Godred's son, was a powerful monarch, who, according to the Chronicle, maintained such close alliance with the kings of Ireland and Scotland that no one ventured to disturb the Isles during his time (1113 - 1152). His son, Godred (reigned 1153 - 1158), who for a short period ruled over Dublin also, as a result of a quarrel with Somerled , the ruler of Argyll, in 1156, lost the smaller islands off the coast of Argyll. An independent sovereignty was thus interposed between the two divisions of his kingdom.Early in the 13th century, when Reginald of Man (reigned 1187 - 1229) did homage to King John of England (reigned 1199 - 1216), we hear for the first time of English intervention in the affairs of Man. But a period of Scots domination would precede the establishment of full English control. During the whole of the Scandinavian period the isles were nominally under the suzerainty of the kings of Norway, but the Norwegians only occasionally asserted it with any vigour. The first to do so was Harold Haarfager about 885, then came Magnus Barfod about 1100, both of whom conquered the isles. From the middle of the 12th century till 1217 the suzerainty, owing to the fact that Norway was a prey to civil dissensions, had been of a very shadowy character. But after that date it became a reality and Norway consequently came into collision with the growing power of Scotland.