In the eleventh century, the Scottish kingdom was a politico-ethnic patchwork of Scots, Picts, Angles, and Britons. |
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The non-English parts of the UK have ten million Gaels, Celts, Picts, Irish, Scots and Vikings. |
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Ancient Scots and Picts erected a 10 ft tall standing stone at the site to commemorate the historic act. |
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King Angus MacFergus of the Picts commanded a mixed army of Scots and Picts who were fighting an army of Saxons from Northumbria. |
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The Picts are probably the oldest native inhabitants of Britain, yet almost nothing is known about them. |
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In the 9th cent., Gaels and Picts were finally united under a Gaelic king, probably of mixed parentage. |
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The Picts, to most people outside Scotland, are a totally mysterious and marginal dement in the ancient population of northern Britain. |
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The distinctive blue dye used by the Picts to tattoo themselves came from the woad plant, which grows wild in the North of Britain. |
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In 367, the Scots and Picts ignored agreements made with Rome and attacked the frontier. |
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I think it is Tacitus who records that at the time he visited Britain the Picts of Galloway were anthropophagists. |
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Hadrian was also known for building a wall to defend Roman Britain from the Scottish Picts to the North. |
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Constantine, fearing interception by the western Caesar, Flavius Valerius Severus, hastened to Britain to aid his father against the Picts. |
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His recommendations were the Picts or the Minoans, because hardly anything was known about them and you could spend a happy lifetime of speculation. |
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Or did the Vikings make these combs specifically to trade with the Picts? |
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Three peoples were involved, the Scots from Ireland, the Picts from eastern Scotland, and the Attacotti, a people of unknown but presumably northern origin. |
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Only the Picts, possibly, diverged from the European pattern of male descent with their apparently matrilinear succession to the kingship, though this is much debated. |
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A small, dark, contentious people known as the Picts held sway over the islands until the eighth and ninth centuries, when Viking invaders arrived. |
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In the east were the Picts, whose kingdoms eventually stretched from the river Forth to Shetland. |
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In the 3rd and 4th centuries, the city was under attack from Picts, Scots, and Saxon raiders. |
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In the east were the Picts, who fell under the leadership of the kings of Fortriu. |
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Oswiu's extension of overlordship over the Picts and Scots is expressed in terms of making them tributary. |
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The Gaels, known to the Romans as Scoti, also carried out raids on Roman Britain, together with the Picts. |
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The greatest danger was always posed by the Picts from who lived on the far side of the Scottish rivers, the Forth and the Clyde. |
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From the 4th century, Britain was again increasingly the target of attacks by Saxons, Picts and Scots. |
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Ninian's work was carried on by Palladius, who left Ireland to work among the Picts. |
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The Picts no longer attacked Hadrian's Wall directly but circumnavigated it by sea. |
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The panegyrist, Claudian, reported that the West Roman magister militum, Stilicho, led a campaign against the Picts and Scots at Hadrian's Wall. |
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The southeast continued to be defended by the troops of the dux in Eburacum against attacks by the Picts and Scots. |
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During the late third and fourth centuries, Roman Britain had been raided repeatedly by Franks, Saxons, Picts, and Scots. |
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A feigned retreat by the Picts drew the Northumbrians into an ambush at Dun Nechtain near the lake of Linn Garan. |
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In 686 Wilfrid was recalled to Northumbria after the death of Ecgfrith in battle with the Picts. |
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One of these was founded at Abercorn on the south coast of the Firth of Forth, and Trumwine was consecrated as Bishop of the Picts. |
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He then defeats the Picts and Scots before creating an Arthurian empire through his conquests of Ireland, Iceland and the Orkney Islands. |
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His claim to the Fortrean Kingship came through his paternal grandfather, King Nechtan of the Picts. |
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The Picts were one of four political groups in north Britain in the early 8th century. |
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In 734 Talorgan mac Congussa was handed over to the Picts by his brother and drowned by them. |
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The Britons are immediately besieged by attacks from Picts, Scots and Danes. |
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The Picts and Northumbrians laid siege to Dumbarton Rock, and extracted a submission from Dumnagual. |
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The Kenneth of myth, conqueror of the Picts and founder of the Kingdom of Alba, was born in the centuries after the real Kenneth died. |
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Pictland was named after the Picts, whom, as we have said, Kinadius destroyed. |
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The Gaels, the Picts and the Britons have their respective origin myths, like most medieval European peoples. |
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The Venerable Bede tells of the Scotti coming from Spain via Ireland and the Picts coming from Scythia. |
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He was granted land on the island of Iona off the Isle of Mull which became the centre of his evangelising mission to the Picts. |
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The kingdom's independent existence ended in the Viking Age, and it eventually merged with the lands of the Picts to form the Kingdom of Alba. |
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Jackson, in The Problem of the Picts, who considered some of them to be Pritenic but had reservations about most of them. |
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The Romans referred to these peoples collectively as Picti Picts, meaning Painted Ones. |
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Meanwhile, the Picts, Saxons and Scoti continued their raids, which may have increased in scope. |
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Pytheas, however, rightly knows what is now Scotland as part of Britain, land of the Picts, even though north of Ierne. |
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Latterly, Orkney was settled by the Picts although the archaeological evidence is sparse. |
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Their name is the Irish equivalent of Priteni, an ancient name for the Celtic Britons, and was sometimes used to refer to the Picts. |
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However, most scholars do not regard the Cruthin as Britons or Picts, and a distinction was maintained by medieval Irish authors. |
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It has thus been suggested that the Cruthin and Picts were the same people or were in some way linked. |
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The Picts are often said to have practised matrilineal kingship succession on the basis of Irish legends and a statement in Bede's history. |
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Bede states that Columba, a Gael, used an interpreter during his mission to the Picts. |
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The archaeological record provides evidence of the material culture of the Picts. |
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Mungo was brought up by Saint Serf who was ministering to the Picts in that area. |
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As with most peoples in the north of Europe in Late Antiquity, the Picts were farmers living in small communities. |
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The Angles and the Saxons called the indigenous population 'Britons' irrespective of them being Brythons, Goedels or Picts. |
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First were the Cruithni Picts, followed by the Goedels and the Brythons, each superimposing their language and culture on the other. |
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In Boston, where fans are sports savvy, I would expect something akin to contests between the Romans, Visigoths and Picts. |
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The early Picts are associated with piracy and raiding along the coasts of Roman Britain. |
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The Picts are often said to have tattooed themselves, but evidence for this is limited. |
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In 937, Irish pirates sided with the Scots, Vikings, Picts, and Welsh in their invasion of England. |
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Initially, their arrival seems to have been at the invitation of the Britons as mercenaries to repulse incursions by the Hiberni and Picts. |
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At the beginning of recorded history, the islands were inhabited by the Picts, whose language was Brythonic. |
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When the Norsemen arrived, probably in the 10th century, the county was inhabited by the Picts, but with its culture subject to some Goidelic influence from the Celtic Church. |
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The latter were later called Picts or Caledonians by the Romans. |
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When the Romans withdrew behind Hadrian's Wall in 164 AD, they left the Votadini as a client kingdom, a buffer zone against the Picts in the north. |
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Constantine was able to spend a year in northern Britain at his father's side, campaigning against the Picts beyond Hadrian's Wall in the summer and autumn. |
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After his promotion to emperor, Constantine remained in Britain, driving back the tribes of the Picts and secured his control in the northwestern dioceses. |
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Most of Scotland until the 13th century spoke Celtic languages and these included, at least initially, the Britons, as well as the Gaels and the Picts. |
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At that time, Ireland was populated by a people known as Hiberni, the northern third or so of Great Britain by a people known as Picts and the southern two thirds by Britons. |
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The native Picts, according to the medieval writer Bede, were converted in two stages, initially by native Britons under Ninian, and subsequently by Irish missionaries. |
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The Picts were a tribal confederation of peoples who lived in what is today eastern and northern Scotland during the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval periods. |
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Picts are attested to in written records from before the Roman conquest of Britain to the 10th century, when they are thought to have merged with the Gaels. |
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Picts are assumed to have been the descendants of the Caledonii and other tribes that were mentioned by Roman historians or on the world map of Ptolemy. |
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Archaeology gives some impression of the society of the Picts. |
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However, before the Gaelic presence could establish itself the Picts were gradually dispossessed by the Norsemen from the late 8th century onwards. |
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From a historical perspective, wars were frequently internecine, and Britons were aggressors as well as defenders, as was also true of the Angles, Picts, and Gaels. |
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Arthurian literature differed from conventional version of the legend by treating Arthur as a villain and Mordred, the son of the king of the Picts, as a hero. |
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The Caledonians were initially considered to be a group of Britons, but were later distinguished as the Picts, a related people who nonetheless spoke a Brittonic language. |
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In the late 3rd century the Picts and Scots changed their attack tactics. |
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Traditionally the kingdom has been seen as centred on central Scotland, equivalent to the Kingdom of the Southern Picts, with a heartland perhaps in Strathearn. |
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Soon after, the Picts rose in rebellion against Northumbrian subjugation at the Battle of Two Rivers, recorded in the 8th century by Stephen of Ripon, hagiographer of Wilfrid. |
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The Picts under leadership of Bridei, feigned retreat and drew Ecgfrith's Northumbrian force into an ambush on Saturday 20 May 685 at a lake in mountains near Duin Nechtain. |
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Battles between the Picts and the Britons of Alt Clut, or Strathclyde, are recorded in 744 and again in 750, when Kyle was taken from Alt Clut by Eadberht of Northumbria. |
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In the year of the Lord's incarnation 756, king Eadberht in the eighteenth year of his reign, and Unust, king of Picts led armies to the town of Dumbarton. |
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Hence the change in styling from King of the Picts to King of Alba. |
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Later, the idea of Picts as a tribe was revived in myth and legend. |
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The Picts in northern Scotland were outside the applicable area. |
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In 740, a war between the Picts and the Northumbrians is reported. |
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Pictish is the extinct language, or dialect, spoken by the Picts, the people of eastern and northern Scotland from the late Iron Age to the Early Middle Ages. |
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He suggested that Columba's use of an interpreter reflected his preaching to the Picts in Latin, rather than any difference between the Irish and Pictish languages. |
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And both Azorian, fourth at Cheltenham last week, and Fairyhouse winner King Of The Picts need to improve significantly if they are to trouble Sizing Granite. |
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