, the first recorded
King of Alba, as it appears on folio 27v of Oxford Bodleian Library Rawlinson B 489. As for the Scottish kingdom, the succeeding king is identified as
Domnall mac Custantín by the
Chronicle of the Kings of Alba. Domnall's kingship is corroborated by the
Annals of Ulster and
Chronicon Scotorum which report his death in 900. The fact the
Chronicle of the Kings of Alba accords Domnall an eleven-year reign places the inception of his rule in 889 and therefore corroborates the eleven-year reign accorded to Eochaid. Prior to about this period, the Gaelic stood for "
Britain". In fact, the shifting terminology employed by various English, Irish, and Scottish sources may be evidence that the Pictish realm underwent a radical transformation during this period in history. ''): "". The excerpt refers to eighth century
Picts of the
Kingdom of the Picts. For example, the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle identifies the Irish as up until the 890s. By the 920s, this term came to be accorded to the people formerly regarded as Pictish (and last recorded as such in the 870s). As for the
Irish annals—specifically the hypothesised
Chronicle of Ireland—the terms and ("king of the Picts") are last accorded to the Picts and their kings in the 870s. In fact, the last Pictish king to be styled thus was Domnall's uncle, Áed. By the 900s, the terms ("men of Alba") and ("king of Alba") are utilised for these people. The
Chronicle of the Kings of Alba last utilises the term in the midst of Domnall's reign. Thereafter, the realm is called . of the
Kingdom of Alba. There is reason to suspect that the political and dynastic upheaval endured by the Pictish realm in the last quarter of the ninth century was the catalyst for a radically new political order based upon the reestablishment of the Alpínids in the kingship. Alternately, the transformation could have taken place specifically during the floruit of Giric and Eochaid. For instance, it is conceivable that Giric gained the throne by seizing upon the upheaval caused by the incessant Viking depredations that assailed Pictavia. At an earlier date, the Gaelic realm of Dál Riata appears to have crumbled under such pressures, and it is possible that Giric drew military power from this broken polity to forcefully seize the Pictish throne. In any case, the accommodation of significant Gaelic aristocratic power in the wavering Pictish realm could account for the eventual transformation of Pictavia into Alba. , as it appears on folio 28v of Oxford Bodleian Library Rawlinson B 489. The temporary exclusion of the Alpínids from the Pictish throne could well have meant that they endured exile in Ireland. Certainly, Domnall's paternal aunt,
Máel Muire ingen Cináeda, possessed significant Irish connections as the wife of two successive
kings of Tara—Áed Findliath and
Flann Sinna mac Maíl Shechnaill—and the mother of another—
Niall Glúndub mac Áeda. If Domnall and his succeeding first cousin,
Custantín mac Áeda, indeed spent their youth in Ireland prior to assuming the kingship of Alba, their Gaelic upbringing could well have ensured the continuation of Pictavia's Gaelicisation. and
Strathclyde, and the
Scandinavian and
Northumbrian territories in about 900. Furthermore, if the Pictish transformation indeed stems from the floruit of Giric and Eochaid, the new terminology could indicate that the
Kingdom of Alba was envisioned to include Pictish, Gaelic, British, and English inhabitants. Several king-lists allege that Giric subjugated Ireland and England during his reign, an outlandish claim that could instead evince a multi-ethnic northern alliance under his authority. As such, there is reason to suspect that — a term previously used for Britain — may have been meant to encapsulate a new political construction, a polity of "North Britain". == Legacy ==