By the twelfth century, when
The War of the Irish with the Foreigners (
Cogad Gaedel re Gaillaib) was composed to magnify the achievements of
Brian Bóruma, Turgesius had become a major figure.
Gerald of Wales, who may have had access to a version of this work, included similar accounts in his
Topographia Hibernica although these accounts are now not always deemed trustworthy. According to
The War of the Irish with the Foreigners, Turgesius was married to Ottar or Ota (commonly thought to be
Old Norse Auðr,
Odda or another name beginning in Odd-), who took possession of the cathedral at
Clonmacnoise and gave audiences seated on the great altar. This appears to be a reference to her being a
völva or performing
spæ. However, the Arabic account of the mission of
al-Ghazal to the Vikings calls the king's wife Nūd. ==See also==