. The stones display significant Scandinavian influences, and are traditionally associated with a legendary king, variably known as Owain Caesarius. It is possible that this figure refers to Owain Foel, or any of the tenth- and eleventh-century Cumbrian kings who bore the same name. Owain Foel's death date is unknown. Although it is possible that he died at the battle, or else soon after, there is no specific evidence that he was indeed killed or mortally wounded. In fact, he could well have lived and reigned long afterwards. Whatever the case, it may have been upon his death that Máel Coluim mac Cináeda seized control of the kingdom. If the latter had indeed done so in the near aftermath of Carham, such an acquisition would have taken place at the height of his power. Certainly, the fourteenth-century
Annals of Tigernach records a ravaging inflicted upon Britons that year by the English and the Scandinavians of
Dublin. Another historical episode that may cast light upon the fate of the Cumbrian realm concerns an assembly of northern kings in about 1031. Specifically in about 1031, the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records a concord between Knútr, Máel Coluim mac Cináeda,
Mac Bethad mac Findlaích, and
Echmarcach mac Ragnaill. The fact that no Cumbrian king is recorded at this royal assembly seems to reveal that no such king reigned by this date, and may indicate that the Cumbrian realm then formed part of the Scottish
Kingdom of Alba. The rationale behind the meeting of the four kings is uncertain. One possibility—amongst many—is that it concerned the collapse of the Kingdom of Strathclyde, and perhaps had something to do with the recorded ravaging of 1030. as it appears on folio 39r of Oxford Bodleian Library Rawlinson B 489 (the
Annals of Ulster). Another aspect of the uncertainty surrounding the kingdom is the obituary of
Suibne mac Cináeda, a man styled King of the . The Gaelic term appears to have been applied to a population of mixed Scandinavian and
Gaelic ethnicity, first recorded in the ninth century. Some of the earliest evidence of the seems to indicate that the original territory of this population group was located in the
Firth of Clyde region and nearby
Cowal. By the twelfth century, the terminology appears to have encompassed the region south and west of
Clydesdale and
Teviotdale—specifically
Ayrshire,
Dumfrieshire,
Wigtownshire, and
Kirkcudbrightshire—and afterwards came to be territorially confined within the boundaries of
Galloway. As such, the appear to have expanded deep into what had formerly been Cumbrian-controlled territories. There is reason to suspect that this encroachment was connected to the eleventh-century decline and demise of the Kingdom of Strathclyde. Such an expansion could have taken place with the demise of Owain Foel himself. The
patronym borne by Suibne is the same as that of the reigning Máel Coluim mac Cináeda. This patronym could be evidence that the two were brothers, and that Suibne had instead been placed upon the throne in a region occupied by the . If Suibne and Máel Coluim mac Cináeda were indeed brothers, another possibility is that Suibne's title is evidence that Máel Coluim mac Cináeda seized the vacated Cumbrian kingship and installed Suibne as king over the Cumbrians. Such a move may explain the Scots' failure to immediately exploit their victory over the English in 1018, and could indicate that the Scottish king's resources were instead projected against the vulnerable Cumbrian realm. (not to be confused with
Eadwulf Cudel (Eadwulf III)) as it appears on folio 157r of British Library Cotton Tiberius B I: "". In the words of the pseudo-prophetic twelfth-century
Prophecy of Berchán, Máel Coluim mac Cináeda was ("enemy of Britons"). Whether this description reflects genuine animosity between him and the Kingdom of Strathclyde is unknown. In 1038,
Eadwulf of Bamburgh is stated by
Historia regum Anglorum to have attacked certain unspecified Britons. Whilst it is conceivable that this source is evidence that at least some Cumbrians were still independent by this date, another possibility is that these particular people were under overlordship when attacked by the English. Owain Foel could have lived into the 1050s. In 1054,
Siward, Earl of Northumbria invaded Alba and defeated the reigning Mac Bethad. According to the twelfth-century texts
Gesta regum Anglorum, and
Chronicon ex chronicis, Siward set up a certain
Máel Coluim—identified as the son of the king of the Cumbrians—in opposition to Mac Bethad. Máel Coluim appears to have been a member of the Cumbrian royal dynasty, and may well have been a descendant of Owain Foel himself: perhaps a son or grandson. The Gaelic personal name borne by this man could be evidence of an ancestral link with the ruling Scottish
Alpínid dynasty: perhaps a matrilineal link to Owain Foel's confederate at Carham, Máel Coluim mac Cináeda. If the Máel Coluim of 1054 was indeed a member of Owain Foel's family, one possibility is that the Scots had deprived him of the Cumbrian kingship following Owain Foel's demise, and that Siward installed him as king over the Cumbrians following the English victory against Mac Bethad. Another possibility, suggested by the account of events dictated by
Chronicon ex chronicis, is that Siward installed Máel Coluim as King of Alba. If Máel Coluim was indeed placed upon the Scottish throne, one possibility is that Owain Foel was still reigning as King of Strathclyde. ==Notes==