Malcolm II
King of Scotland
Máel Coluim mac Cináeda
c.954–November 25, 1034
Father: Kenneth II, King of Scotland (?-995)
Mother: UNKNOWN
Wife: UNKNOWN
Children:
Bethoc of Scotland (?-?)
Pedigree:
Malcolm I of Scotland
|Kenneth II of Scotland|
| |____________________
|
|--Malcolm II of Scotland
|
| ____________________
|____________________|
|____________________
Colleen Keenan's 28th and 29th great-grandfather
NOTE: Malcolm II was the "first cousin of his predecessor, King Kenneth III (Cináed mac Duib),
who was murdered by Malcolm at the Battle of Monzievaird in 1005.
His rule was contested for ten years during the reign of Kenneth III but Malcolm
finally gained the throne after Kenneth's death. It appears that he only ruled part
of Scotland during his reign, in opposition to leaders from Moray such as Findláech
mac Ruadrí (d. 1020, probably father of Macbeth), and Máel Coluim mac Máel Brigte
(d. 1029), both of whom were also called kings of Alba (and therefore Scotland) in
the Irish annals, though neither are called kings of Scotland in modern texts. In 1006,
Malcolm was defeated by Northumbrian forces at Durham. The English then became
preoccupied with the Danish allowing Malcolm to march south, avenging the loss at
Durham by winning the Battle of Carham against the Anglo-Saxons in 1018 and, thereby,
regaining Lothian. Thirteen years later, however, Canute, king of England, Denmark, and
Norway, travelled to Scotland. What happened is lost to time, but claims that Malcolm
submitted to Canute seem very unlikely. However, Canute seems to have recognised
Malcolm's possession of Lothian.
In the west, Malcolm made an alliance with King Owen the Bald of Strathclyde and together
they defeated King Canute at the Battle of Carham in 1018. At the same time, the marriage
of his daughter to Sigurd the Stout, Norse Earl of Orkney, extended Malcolm's influence
to the far north. He battled to expand his kingdom, gaining land down to the River Tweed
and in Strathclyde. When King Owen died without an heir, Malcolm claimed Strathclyde for
his grandson, Duncan. This caused dissent throughout the Kingdom of Strathclyde which
resulted in Malcolm's murder at Glamis in 1034. He was buried on the Isle of Iona shortly
after.
As the last of the House of Alpin, he did not have any sons to succeed him. He, therefore,
arranged good marriages for his daughters. One daughter married Earl Sigurd of Orkney and
their son Thorfinn brought the lands of Caithness and Sutherland under the control of the
King of Alba. His elder daughter, Bethoc, married Crínán, the Abbot of Dunkeld and their
son became Duncan I, who succeeded Malcolm upon his death in 1034."
SOURCE: en.wikipedia.org
HOME
INDEX OF SURNAMES
HTML created by Colleen Fair Keenan on 11/27/2005 .
EMAIL