voyaging from
Egypt, as depicted in a 15th-century manuscript of the
Scotichronicon of
Walter Bower; in this version Scota and Goídel Glas (Latinized as Gaythelos) are wife and husband.
Edward J. Cowan traced the first mention of Scota in literature to the 12th century. Scota appears in the Irish chronicle
Book of Leinster, in a
redaction of the
Lebor Gabála Érenn. The 9th-century
Historia Brittonum contains the earliest surviving version of the Lebor Gabala Erenn story (centred on an unnamed
Goídel Glas), but this earliest version does not mention Scota even indirectly. The
Lebor Gabála Érenn states that Scota was the mother of
Goidel Glas, the eponymous ancestor of the Gaels. This Scota was the daughter of an Egyptian pharaoh named
Cingris, a likely reference to Pharaoh Chenchres from the kings list of
Jerome (who is called
Akenkheres in Egyptian records). She marries Goidel's father
Niul, son of
Fénius Farsaid (the inventor of letters and legendary ancestor of the Phoenicians). Niul son of Fénius returns to
Babylon as part of an effort to study the
confusion of languages. He is a scholar of languages and is invited by Pharaoh Cingris to Egypt to take Scota's hand in marriage. Scota and Niul's son, Goídel, who was saved by a prayer from
Moses after being bitten by a snake, is said to have created the
Gaelic language by combining the best features of the 72 languages then in existence. In Fordun's early Scottish version, Gaythelos, as he calls Goídel Glas, is the son of "a certain king of the countries of Greece, Neolus, or Heolaus, by name", who was exiled to Egypt and took service with the Pharaoh, marrying Pharaoh's daughter Scota. The
Lebor Gabála Érenn describes him as a
Scythian, yet the famed Irish genealogist
John O'Hart notes that Niul's father was a Phoenician, the brother of the legendary
Cadmus. Other twelfth-century sources state that Scota was the wife of Geytholos (Goídel Glas), rather than his mother, and was the founder of the
Scots and
Gaels after they were exiled from Egypt. Other manuscripts of the
Lebor Gabála Érenn contain a legend of a Scotia who was the wife of Goidel's descendant
Míl Espáine of ancient
Iberia. This
Scotia's Grave is a famous landmark in Munster. The Gaels, known in Gaelic as
Goídel and in Latin as
Scoti, are said to be named after Goidel and Scota. However, historians say they were characters created to explain the names and to fit the Gaels into a historical narrative. ==Scota and the Stone of Scone==