Crovan dynasty Until 1265 the Isle of Man formed part of the
Kingdom of the Isles, ruled by the
Crovan dynasty. The last member of that ruling family died in 1265 without a legitimate heir, and the Isle passed into the possession of
Alexander III, King of Scotland (d.1286). In 1266 sovereignty of the Isle of Man and the
Hebrides was formally transferred from the
King of Norway to King
Alexander III of Scotland (1241–1286). The heraldic era in England and Scotland started in about 1215, slightly earlier in Western Europe, and members of the Crovan dynasty are known to have borne ships and
lions on their
seals; they did not use a
triskeles. It is possible that the origin of the Manx
triskeles is a knotted device depicted on the coinage of their 10th-century
Viking predecessors on the Isle; however, that device is dissimilar to the Manx
triskeles, and the nearly 300-year gap between its use and the appearance of the Manx
triskeles suggests that there is no connection between the symbols. The most ancient name for Sicily (then a Greek province) was
Trinacria, meaning in Greek
three-cornered,
triquetra, referring to the triangular shape of the island. In 1250 the Germanic
Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, died after having ruled Sicily for 52 years. He was
King of Sicily from 1198,
King of Germany from 1212,
King of Italy and
Holy Roman Emperor from 1220 and
King of Jerusalem from 1225. His mother
Constance was Queen of Sicily and his father was
Henry VI of the
House of Hohenstaufen. Although there is no evidence that the
triskeles was used in Sicily in the 13th century, there is architectural evidence of its use in
Austria at that time, almost certainly relating to a personal emblem of Frederick, and almost certainly stemming from his Sicilian connection. Four years after Frederick's death the pope invested the Sicilian kingship in
Edmund Crouchback (died 1296), the second surviving son of
Henry III, King of England (died 1272), and for about ten years afterwards Edmund was styled "
King of Sicily". This familial connection between the Scottish royal family and the English rulers of Sicily might account for the introduction of a Sicilian
triskeles as a symbol of the Isle of Man. If so, it may well have been adopted as a means to reinforce the regime change on the island. ==See also==