The passage in the
Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib describing Ivar's arrival and kingship in Munster: There does, however, survive a very similar passage, found not in any surviving version of the
Cogad but in another tract entirely, preserved by
Duald Mac Firbis in the 17th century. Its date is uncertain, and it may or may not come from a lost version of the
Cogad. Most of the following is also mentioned in the epic, following the above passages, but there is much expanded. The following account at least gives the appearance of being a summary, but this is probably not what it is: ,
Norwegian. That Ivar or the Norse in general may have been attempting the actual takeover of some part of Munster possibly finds support in the Annals of Inisfallen: {{cquote|
[AI972.1:] The banishment of [Norse] soldiers from Munster; and the three ordinances, viz., the banishment of the [Norse] soldiers, the banishment of the foreigners from Limerick, and the burning of the fortress, were enacted by the counsel of the nobles of Munster, namely, Mathgamain and Faelán and the son of Bran, and others. }} The term used here for the Norse soldiers is
súaitrech "mercenary" and so the passage has been taken by Charles Doherty to refer to the practice of billetting the hired contingents of a standing army, as was common in later times. What is peculiar about this passage is the extent of cooperation between the Gaelic kings. Here the sworn rivals Mathgamain and Máel Muad (the son of Bran) are actually found working together, the only known occasion in their careers. They are joined by one Faelán of uncertain identity, whose mention may either refer to a king of the
Déisi Muman who actually died in 966, and who the
Cogad alleges Ivar actually killed, or to an
abbot of Emly later mentioned dying in 980. Notably Emly was attacked by Ivar or his relations in 968 not long after the Norse loss in the
Battle of Sulcoit in 967, and possibly in retaliation for the Dál gCais plundering of Limerick. The above account, however, is dated five years after Sulcoit in the Annals of Inisfallen, and is in fact the first entry following the lacuna beginning in mid 969, so we do not know what events have preceded it in the past two and a half years, assuming it is correctly placed. Ivar is first mentioned by name in the surviving annals in early-mid 969, which record that "Beólán Litil and his son were killed by Ímar of Luimnech." The identity of this person is not completely certain but he is assumed to be identical with the
Uí Néill king of
Lagore (Loch Gabor) or Southern
Brega whose death, without cause given, is recorded in several other annals in the same year.
Clare Downham notes that this puts Ivar and the Limerick Norse active all the way out in the neighborhood of
Dublin and says that Beolán was an ally of the
King of Dublin, namely
Olaf Cuaran. The
Cogad also records this killing but provides no motive, simply mentioning it immediately after Ivar's return to Limerick, allegedly from Britain, with a second great fleet. After his alleged expulsion sometime following Sulcoit the author of the
Cogad states Ivar and a certain "Amlaíb, son of Amlaíb" attempted the conquest of Britain, but without success, with Amlaib being killed by the king of Britain (unnamed). Having returned to Limerick and killed Beolán (or vice versa), Ivar is said to have then "made many spoils and battles." No other record of these survives, if this properly counts as one, and we must wait til 972 for the Annals of Inisfallen to pick up again. ==Economics and the city-state==