Gaelic kings: Domnall II to Alexander I '', by far the most common animal depiction on
Pictish stones, with unclear political or mythological meaning Domnall mac Causantín's nickname was
dásachtach. This simply meant a madman, or, in early Irish law, a man not in control of his functions and hence without legal culpability. The following long reign (900–942/3) of his successor
Causantín is more often regarded as the key to the formation of the Kingdom of Alba. The period between the accession of
Máel Coluim I and Máel Coluim mac Cináeda was marked by good relations with the
Wessex rulers of England, intense internal dynastic disunity and, despite this, relatively successful expansionary policies. In 945, king Máel Coluim I received
Strathclyde as part of a deal with King
Edmund of England, an event offset somewhat by Máel Coluim's loss of control in Moray. Sometime in the reign of king
Idulb (954–962), the Scots captured the fortress called
oppidum Eden, i.e.
Edinburgh. Scottish control of
Lothian was strengthened with Máel Coluim II's victory over the
Northumbrians at the Battle of Carham (1018). The Scots had probably some authority in Strathclyde since the later part of the ninth century, but the kingdom kept its own rulers, and it is not clear that the Scots were always strong enough to enforce their authority. The reign of King
Donnchad I from 1034 was marred by failed military adventures, and he was killed in a battle with the men of Moray, led by
Macbeth who became king in 1040. Macbeth ruled for seventeen years, peaceful enough that he was able to leave to go on
pilgrimage to
Rome; however, he was overthrown by
Máel Coluim, the son of Donnchad, who some months later defeated Macbeth's stepson and successor Lulach to become king Máel Coluim III. Máel Coluim's Queen Margaret was the sister of the native claimant to the English throne,
Edgar Ætheling. This marriage, and Máel Coluim's raids on northern England, prompted interference by the Norman rulers of England in the Scottish kingdom. King
William the Conqueror invaded and Máel Coluim submitted to his authority, giving his oldest son Donnchad as a hostage. From 1079 onwards there were various cross-border raids by both parties and Máel Coluim himself and Edward, his eldest son by Margaret, died in one of them in the
Battle of Alnwick, in 1093. Tradition would have made his brother
Domnall Bán Máel Coluim's successor, but it seems that Edward, his eldest son by Margaret, was his chosen heir. With Máel Coluim and Edward dead in the same battle, and his other sons in Scotland still young, Domnall was made king. However,
Donnchad II, Máel Coluim's eldest son by his first wife, obtained some support from
William Rufus and took the throne. According to the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle his English and French followers were massacred, and Donnchad II himself was killed later in the same year (1094) by Domnall's ally
Máel Petair of Mearns. In 1097, William Rufus sent another of Máel Coluim's sons,
Edgar, to take the kingship. The ensuing death of Domnall Bán secured the kingship for Edgar, and there followed a period of relative peace. The reigns of both Edgar and his successor
Alexander are obscure by comparison with their successors. The former's most notable act was to send a
camel (or perhaps an
elephant) to his fellow Gael
Muircheartach Ua Briain,
High King of Ireland. When Edgar died, Alexander took the kingship, while his youngest brother David became
Prince of Cumbria.
Scoto-Norman kings: David I to Alexander III , a pious and revolutionary Scoto-Norman king The period between the accession of
David I and the death of
Alexander III was marked by dependency upon and relatively good relations with the Kings of England. The period can be regarded as one of great historical transformation, part of a more general phenomenon, which has been called "Europeanisation". The period also witnessed the successful imposition of royal authority across most of the modern country. After David I, and especially in the reign of
William I, Scotland's Kings became ambivalent about the culture of most of their subjects. As
Walter of Coventry tells us, "The modern kings of Scotland count themselves as Frenchmen, in race, manners, language and culture; they keep only Frenchmen in their household and following, and have reduced the Gaels to utter servitude." This situation was not without consequence. In the aftermath of William's capture at
Alnwick in 1174, the Scots turned on the small number of
Middle English-speakers and
French-speakers among them.
William of Newburgh related that the Scots first attacked the Scoto-English in their own army, and Newburgh reported a repetition of these events in Scotland itself.
Walter Bower, writing a few centuries later about the same events confirms that "there took place a most wretched and widespread persecution of the English both in Scotland and Galloway". , known as
Guillaume le Lion. His title among the
native Scots was probably
Uilleam Garbh (i.e. "William the Rough"). The threat from the latter was so grave that, after their defeat in 1230, the Scottish crown ordered the public execution of the infant girl who happened to be the last of the MacWilliam line. According to the
Lanercost Chronicle: Many of these resistors collaborated, and drew support not just in the peripheral Gaelic regions of Galloway, Moray, Ross and Argyll, but also from eastern "Scotland-proper", and elsewhere in the Gaelic world. However, by the end of the twelfth century, the Scottish kings had acquired the authority and ability to draw in native Gaelic lords outside their previous zone of control in order to do their work, the most famous examples being
Lochlann, Lord of Galloway and
Ferchar mac in tSagairt. By the reign of Alexander III, the Scots were in a strong position to annex the remainder of the western seaboard, which they did following
Haakon Haakonarson's ill-fated invasion and the stalemate of the
Battle of Largs with the
Treaty of Perth in 1266. The conquest of the west, the creation of the
Mormaerdom of Carrick in 1186 and the absorption of the
Lordship of Galloway after the Galwegian revolt of
Gille Ruadh in 1235 meant that Gaelic speakers under the rule of the Scottish king formed a majority of the population during the so-called Norman period. The integration of Gaelic, Norman and Saxon cultures that began to occur may have been the platform that enabled King
Robert I to emerge victorious during the
Wars of Independence, which followed soon after the death of Alexander III. ==Geography==