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King Of Scots Fergus Mor MAC ERC
- Born: 434, Dalraida, Scotland
- Marriage: Unknown
- Died: 501 at age 67
General
Notes:
131st King of Ireland
Famous
Scots - Fergus Mor Mac Erc (c.434 - c.501)
Born in approximately 434
AD, Fergus Mor Mac Erc is considered the father of the Royal lines of Scotland
and thus the father of Scotland itself. Fergus was the first Scottish based King
of Dalriada, a country split by the sea, with a base in Ireland (the area of now
County Antrim, Ireland) and territory also in the western portions of what is
now Scotland.There are two legends concerning the origins of Scottish Dalriada
(also known as Scotia Minor). One tells of a famine that caused the tribe of the
Dal Riada to move into northern Ireland and parts of western Scotland. The other
says that the Dal Riada moved north in Ireland because of famine and then
aligned themselves with the Picts in Northern Ireland, thus gaining the right to
settle in the Pict land of Caledonia (now called Scotland). In either case the
settlement of Alba by the Irish Scotti apparently started around the second
century AD. By the late fourth century, the Scotti had attained enough strength
to draw the attention of the Picts. They were soon attacked and in retaliation
Niall of the Nine Hostages, the High King of Ireland, landed with a sizeable
force to punish the Picts. The little colony of Scottish Dalriada was saved and
slowly gained strength over the next one hundred years. It is during the late
fifth century that Fergus Mor (Big or Chief?) Mac (son of) Erc arrived in
Scottish Dalriada.
Fergus Mor was the son of Erc, King of Irish Dalriada.
By right, Fergus became King of Dalriada in about 498 AD. He soon moved his seat
of power from Ireland to Scotland. The reasons for this are sketchy, some claim
it was due to pressure that forced the move to protect his kingdom. While others
say that Scottish Dalriada was beginning to feel its oats and Fergus moved to
maintain control of his kingdom. In either case, when he arrived, Fergus brought
with him a large Niallan host of warriors and all the trappings of the kingdom.
The Stone of Destiny, also known as the Stone of Scone is said to have been one
of those items.
With his arrival, Scottish Dalriada or Scotia Minor was
now a force to be reckoned with. Fergus consolidated his power in the new lands
until his death in c. 501 AD. His successors continued his efforts until c. 576,
when Dalriada was strong enough to petition and successfully split from its
mother country in Ireland. This seat of power eventually combined with the
Empire of the Picts and later with Strathclyde and Lothian to form the modern
country of Scotland.
Even though Fergus Mor did little that is notable in
his lifetime besides this move, he is considered the father of all the Royal
lines of Scotland and thus the father of Scotland itself. When a male line of
kings died, the new line was based from a female descendant of Fergus Mor. In
Scottish history there is no bloodline more impressive, as it ran through the
royal houses of Alpin, Dunkeld, Bruce, Stewart and Hanover. These kings
originally ruled a small island kingdom that successfully managed itself into
the modern day Great Britain.
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