Gartnait II: Diferenzas entre revisións
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{{Enuso}}
'''Gartnait son of Domelch''' (died 595) was a [[king of the Picts]] from 584-595.
The [[Pictish Chronicle]] king lists contained in the [[Poppleton Manuscript]] have Gartnait following [[Bridei I of the Picts|Bridei son of Maelchon]] whose death ''c''. 584 is recorded by the [[Irish annals]]. Gartnait's death is noted in the ''[[Annals of Tigernach]]'' ''c''.599 and the king lists have him succeeded by [[Nechtan nepos Uerb]].<ref>Anderson, ''Early Sources'', [loc. wanting]; Anderson, ''Kings and Kingship'', pp. 231–233, table D & p. 248; Evans, ''Royal succession'', p. 15, table 1; Charles-Edwards, ''Chronicle of Ireland'', volume 1, pp. 114 (584:3) & 120 (599:3).</ref>
Some versions of the king list associate Gartnait with the foundation of the [[monastery]] of [[Abernethy, Perth and Kinross|Abernethy]], although other variants associate this either with Nechtan nepos Uerb or the similarly named pre-historic king [[Nechtan Morbet|Nechtan son of Erp]].<ref>Anderson, ''Early Sources'', [loc wanting]; Anderson, ''Kings and Kingship'', pp. 64–65, 92–96 & 266; Fraser, ''Caledonia to Pictland'', p. 134; Smyth, ''Warlords & Holy Men'', pp. 82–83.</ref>
[[John Bannerman (historian)|John Bannerman]] proposed that this Gartnait was to be identified with the son of [[Áedán mac Gabráin]] found in the genealogies known as ''Cethri Primchenela dail Riata'' attached to the ''[[Senchus fer n-Alban]]'', and furthermore with the Gartnait whose kin were active on the [[isle of Skye]] during the 7th and early 8th centuries.<ref>Bannerman, ''Studies'', p.92–94; Smyth, ''Warlords and Holy Men'', p. 70.</ref> [[T. F. O'Rahilly]] had earlier rejected the identification of "Gartnait son of Áedán" with the eponym of the Skye kindred who is called Gartnait son of Accidán in the Irish annals.<ref>Anderson, ''Kings and Kingship'', pp. 154–155; Smyth, ''Warlords and Holy Men'', pp. 79–80; Charles-Edwards, ''Chronicle of Ireland'', volume I, p. 146 (649:4).</ref> The most recent study, by [[James E. Fraser (historian)|Fraser]], rejects the existence of Gartnait son of Áedán outright, presuming this person to have been a genealogical fiction created in the early 8th century to bolster the ambitions of [[Cenél nGartnait]], descendants of Gartnait son of Accidán, to rule in [[Kintyre]].<ref>Fraser, ''Caledonia to Pictland'', pp. 204–205 & 250.</ref>
== Notas ==
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