Chronological Synchronisation of the Irish Annals

 

D.P. Mc Carthy

 

Department of Computer Science, Trinity College, Dublin 2.

 

 

Date

Edition History

1 Mar. '99

First edition to accompany publication of PRIA 98C(1998)203-55. Collation covered the years AD 306-722

1 Sep. '99

Second edition - collation extended to the years AD 1-722 and now includes Bede's Chronicon Maiora. Tables divided into c. 70K byte units to facilitate Web downloading and on-going maintenance.

Restoration of the Chronological Integrity of AT/CS

In the paper ‘The Chronology of the Irish Annals’ published in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 98C(1998) 203-255, to which this document serves as an appendix, I established that the ferial data preserved in the annals of Tigernach (AT) and the Chronicon Scottorum (CS) represent the oldest stratum of chronological apparatus in the Irish annals; note that all page, section, figure and appendix references in this article are to this paper unless otherwise stated. These ferial data thereby offer us the most plausible basis on which to recover the original chronology of the early medieval annals. The earliest known example of this chronological apparatus occurs in the Paschal tract De ratione paschali of Anatolius of Laodicea, which was cited by Rufinus in the early fifth century in his edition of Eusebius’ Ecclesiastical History, and it appears that Rufinus subsequently employed it in the composition of a chronicle, as is discussed in D.P. Mc Carthy ‘The Status of the pre-Patrician Irish Annals’, Peritia 12 (1998)98-152. The same apparatus was employed shortly afterwards by Sulpicius Severus in his composition of his Paschal table, the latercus, and then subsequently in the sixth century S. Columba extended Rufinus’ Chronicle, and this extension was continued by his successor abbots at Iona at least up until the middle of the seventh century. The ferial data in AT and CS are found to commence at the Incarnation and to continue, with occasional errors in the placing of bissextile years, up until AD 424 where a sudden disruption to the ferial sequence occurs, followed by another 208 years of cogent ferial data; this entire sequence is tabulated in Appendix 1, and see the section The ferial sequence of AT/CS from the Incarnation to the seventh century, pp.221-3, for the relevant discussion. When the chronological accuracy of this ferial structure was examined for those events with independently-known AD dates it was shown in The chronological accuracy of AT/CS, pp. 223-9, that:

1.

Seven kalends had been removed at AD 425-431.

2.

Five kalends had been removed between AD 612-635.

3.

One kalend had been removed between AD 635-664.

4.

The ferial data between AD 1-63 and AD 397-424 inclusive are properly synchronised with the Julian calendar.

5.

From AD 425 onward every fourth ferial datum had been decremented by one, excepting for the seventeen inclusive years from AD 524-540, which are correctly synchronised to the Julian calendar.

The purpose of this section is to use this information to restore the chronological integrity of both AT and CS, and thus to provide a uniform chronological structure for the collation of all the other annal collections.

Up until AD 424 there is no difficulty about this and we simply use the Annus Kalendae defined from the sequence of kalends tabulated in Appendix 1 from 1.1 to 16.4 inclusive, see the section The ferial sequence of AT/CS from the Incarnation to the seventh century, pp.221-3. These data are mostly derived from AT, but from 12.28 to 13.22 they are taken jointly from AT and CS, and from 13.23 to 16.4 from CS alone. Immediately following AD 424 we must restore the first seven kalends for the years AD 425-431 which is then to be followed by the sequence of kalends in Appendix 1 from 16.5 to 22.17. In this way all of the events from AD 432-612 are restored to their appropriate AD years, cf. Table 5, p. 225. Next, regarding the five kalends which have been removed from the twenty four years AD 612-635, we immediately encounter the difficulty that we have no means of discovering from exactly where in this interval the kalends were removed. In this circumstance the best we can do is to distribute the restored kalends uniformly over the whole interval and, since 24÷5 » 5, they should be placed at intervals of five years commencing one half-interval after AD 612. Hence we restore the eighth kalend at AD 614 and the remaining four at AD 619, 624, 629 and 634 respectively. Finally, for the remaining kalend which was removed somewhere between AD 655-664, since again we do not know precisely from whence it was omitted, the median postion at AD 659 is the best we can do. To summarise these restorations:

1.

Restored kalends nos. 1-7 placed at AD 425-431.

2.

Restored kalends nos. 8-12 placed at AD 614, 619, 624, 629, 634

3.

Restored kalend no. 13 placed at AD 659.

With these thirteen restorations we find that all the events in the interval AD 612-664 for which we have independent AD dates are restored either precisely or very closely to these dates, as may be seen from the following table:

 

 

 

Event

Synchronised

AD

Independent

AD

Independent

Authority

Isidore’s Chronica Maiora

616

615

ODCC

Volcano of AD 627

626

627

Mc Carthy & Breen

Baptism of Edwin

626

627

Bede HE v.24

Lindisfarne founded

635

635

ODCC

Heracleonas reigned

641

641

Enc. Brittannica

Death of Fursey

649

650

Farmer

Death of Aidan

651

651

Bede HE v.24

Death of Penda

655

655

Bede HE v.24

Death of Cumine Fota

662

661

Walsh & Ó Cróinín

Eclipse of 1 May 664

664

664

Mc Carthy & Breen

As may be seen all these events are placed under the synchronised AD to within one year of their independently known AD dates. It should be noted that restoration of these six kalends has absolutely no effect on the sequence of the annals' record of events, and furthermore, the close correspondence between the synchronised and independent AD suggests that, over these years, both the intervals between these events and the synchronised AD data are accurate to within about two years. After AD 664, as discussed in Chronology of the other annals compared with AT/CS at p. 231, the evidence so far examined shows that AT/CS and AU preserve identical chronologies from AD 664 at least up until AD 722. The authorities cited above for the independent AD data are:

F.L. Cross & E.A. Livingstone (Edd.), The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (Oxford 1983).

D.P. Mc Carthy & A. Breen ‘An Evaluation of Astronomical Observations in the Irish Annals’, Vistas in Astronomy, vol 41, no. 1 (1997)117-138.

Bede’s Historia Ecclesiastica edited and translated by B. Colgrave and R.A.B. Mynors as Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English people (London 1991).

Encyclopaedia Brittannica 19(1970) 529-39.

D.H. Farmer The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford 1978).

M. Walsh & D. Ó Cróinín Cummian's Letter De controversia paschali and the De ratione conputandi, Pont. Inst. of Med. Studies (Toronto 1988)

Collation of the Annals’ Events

The aim of this collation is to place all annal material within the single chronological structure for which we have secure MS authority, namely that derived from kalends and ferial data of AT and CS. Prefixed to this collation is the synchronised AD followed by a kalend with the Julian ferial for that AD year, with the kalends of the bissextile years shown in bold; both this synchronised AD and its ferial are presented in a separate column and in italic, in order to emphasise that they both represent an editorial addition to the annals. Note that the AT/CS ferials are correctly synchronised to these Julian ferials over the years AD 1-63, 397-424 and 524-540 inclusive, and that from AD 432-612:

1.

Typically three out of four ferial data found in AT/CS are properly synchronised to the AD year.

2.

Nearly every fourth ferial data in AT/CS have been systematically decremented by one, and this decrement has been noted in the ‘Remarks’ column with the abbreviation ‘f.d.’.

I now discuss in turn the considerations arising in the collation of each of the annals; see also the section Chronology of the other annals compared with AT/CS, pp. 229-39 for other relevant details.Annals of Tigernach and Chronicon Scotorum

Since these are the primary witnesses to the chronology both their chronological and record tokens have been fully tabulated in the order in which they occur in each MS and, as far as possible, these tokens have been aligned by placing corresponding events on the same line of the collation. Very occasionally, because one source has re-sequenced the event, they cannot be aligned and in these cases an opinion is expressed in the Remarks column, based on the order of the events in other sources and sometimes textual details, as to which source has re-sequenced the event. As will be seen the re-sequencing is most frequent in CS where it appears to be the result of subsequent restoration of events omitted from the initial compilation. Where it has been found that either of these sources has either omitted or interpolated a kalend, then these have been restored in the conventional manner, ie. either [Kl.] or (Kl.). Regarding the practical matter of locating the full-text entry associated with any record token from AT, in Stokes’ edition from AD 488 forward the parallel AU entry may be used as an index since Stokes has listed cross references to AU and the other annals immediately ahead of each kalend, see page 204 of ‘The Chronology’ for an example. Before AD 358, i.e. for fragments one and two of AT, Stokes has no such cross references, so the page numbers from the (Felinfach 1993) edition of his work have been suffixed in italic to the token of the first kalend on that page, see for example AD 354. To locate entries in Hennessy’s edition of CS the synchronised AD may be employed as an index using Hennessy’s marginal AD as an approximate guide. Finally, since a chronological feature of the primary MS for CS is O’Flaherty’s AD annotations, which Henessessy reproduced fully as footnotes to his edition, these have been recorded in the ‘Remarks’ column, from which it will be seen that while generally they reconcile closely with the synchronised AD, on occasions they are erratic.

AC - Annals of Clonmacnoise

As this collection has preserved practically no chronological structure the best we may do here is to collate the tokens of its recorded events against the same events found in AT/CS. These are found to be in virtually identical sequence, and hence the synchronised AD provides a chronology for this collection; the very occasional re-sequencing in AC has been noted in the Remarks column. To locate the full text of these tokens in Murphy’s edition of AC, the synchronised AD may be used as an approximate index against the frequent AD interpolations from O’Flaherty reproduced by Murphy. As well as this intermittent page references to events common to AT, CS and AC are given in italics following the ferial data.

AU - Annals of Ulster

When we try to collate AU’s record events against those of AT/CS we repeatedly find that they occur either under different years or in a different sequence within a year. In these circumstances it is quite impossible to collate AU’s record tokens in parallel with those of AT/CS. Fortunately Mac Airt and Mac Niocaill in their excellent edition of AU have numbered the records appearing within each year, and, since each year in AU is given an Annunciation AD running strictly serially from AU 431 to AU 1012, we may refer to each record uniquely by means of these numbers. For example, AU 432.1 refers to the record Patricius peruenit ad Hiberniam. Note it is essential that the MS Annunciation AD be used, because the marginal AD notation supplied by Mac Niocaill does not run serially, since it omits the number ‘488’ on page 55. By using these MS AD in this way as numerical record tokens, we may both refer uniquely to each event in AU and indicate simultaneously precisely its location in AU’s chronological structure. Furthermore we may re-position these tokens so that they align with the corresponding token in AT/CS. This is effective because practically all of the records found in AU up to the tenth century are also found in AT/CS and, in these circumstances, there is no need to reproduce the textual version of the record token since it already appears under one of AT, CS or AC. Of course, in the event that the record is unique to AU, we reproduce both the numeric and the textual record token. In this way we are able to show simultaneously for all the records found in AU their chronological position in AU and their chronological relationship to that of AT/CS.

AU’s own chronological apparatus found in the prima manu of TCD MS 1282 consists of the words Kl. Ian [or Ien] Anno Domini followed by the Annunciation AD year in Roman numerals; for example, the record of Patricius peruenit is preceded by:

Kl Ien. Anno Domini .ccccº.xxxº.iiº.

Because in the range of years AU 431-663 fairly long sequences of AU’s events are found to be closely parallel to those found in AT/CS it was decided to tabulate AU’s chronological tokens in full so as to explicitly display the chronological relationship between AT/CS and AU. This is initiated with AU 431 aligned with AD 431 and the alignment remains thus until AU 574 when AU commences its own restoration of the missing kalends. In this interval AD 431-573 it must be emphasised that, although the AU years appear to be synchronised with the AD years, because they are Annunciation years they are actually high by one year. For example, AU places Patricius peruenit at Anno Domini .ccccº.xxxº.iiº., which when converted to a Circumcision AD changing on 1 January, equals AD 433. AT/CS and AU finally reach proper synchronism at AD 660 and this is sustained thereafter, at least as far as AD 722. Between AD 493 and AD 536 a sequence of repeated shifts occurs in the chronological relationship, as has been fully discussed in pp. 232-6 of ‘The Chronology’. Between AD 573, where AU restores its first kalend, and AD 659 where we have restored the last kalend to AT/CS, the relationship between the two chronologies changes at each kalend restoration

.

AI - Annals of Inishfallen

The considerations when collating the records of AI are very similar to those of AU inasmuch as, up to at least the seventh century, it contains very few items not already found in AT/CS. Thus numerical record tokens, analogous to those described for AU and derived from Mac Airt’s edition, have been used; however, the following points should be borne in mind. Up to and including the arrival of Patrick, Mac Airt used the serial numbers §1-391 to uniquely label all the pre-Patrician records, so for these records I have used these numbers prefixed by the tag ‘I§’ to identify AI’s records. In the case where there is more than one record at a serial number, then these are distinguished serially by the extensions ‘.1’, ‘.2’ etcetera; where there is only one record this extension is omitted for the sake of compactness. For example, Jerome’s death is identified simply as I§340, whereas the synchronism on the death of Connculaind is identified as I§389.5, being the fifth record at I§389. After Patrick’s arrival Mac Airt endeavoured to supply an AD chronology in the margin of his edition based on that of AU, but faced great difficulties due to the level of chronological corruption inherent in AI. However, as these are the only practical means of indexing the post-Patrician events in his edition they have been used, analogously, with ‘I:’ prefixed. Thus I:434 refers to the entry Prima praeda Saxanorum ab Hibernia appearing in Mac Airt’s edition against his marginal ‘AD’ of 434. It should be noted that in his endeavour to follow AU's chronology Mac Airt has freely both interpolated and omitted kalends, as the following table, complete up until AI 760, illustrates:

 

Mac Airt’s AD

Interpolated

Omitted

AI 473-480

6 kalends

 

AI 482-485

2 kalends

 

AI 489-491

1 kalend

 

AI 509-511

1 kalend

 

AI 560A-B

 

2 kalends

AI 649-652

2 kalends

 

AI 667-669

1 kalend

 

AI 711-713

1 kalend

 

AI 744-747

2 kalends

 

AI 747a

 

1 kalend

Totals

16 kalends

3 kalends

This gives a good impression as to the level of chronological corruption inherent in AI and shows very clearly that Mac Airt’s marginal ‘AD’ cannot be regarded as an accurate serial count of the kalends in the MS. Given this degree of chronological corruption there is nothing to be gained by tabulating the kalends structure of AI against that of AT/CS and, accordingly, it has all been omitted with exception of a few kalends between AD 433-454 which preserve a mixture of ferial and lunar data. These chronological tokens from AI have been aligned with the corresponding token from AT/CS and prefixed with their location in Mac Airt’s edition; for example, 'I:440 K.ii.f.xii.l.' is a kalend with ferial .ii. and luna .xii. found at AI 440 and is synchronous with AT/CS at AD 440.

Annals of Boyle and Roscrea, the Dublin fragment and the Fragmentary Annals

Collation of all the remaining annal collections has been done along the lines described above for AI; that is, the serial numbers used in their published editions have been used with a single letter tag prefixed to the serial number to indicate the source from which it comes. Of these additional collections the only one to preserve chronological apparatus worth collating is AR, which, between the years AD 444-7, 571-7, 583-8 and 596-601, preserves marginal ferial data which are clearly cognate with the ferial data of AT/CS. These data have been collated in a style analogous to that of AI described above.

Bede's Chronicon Maiora

As discussed in detail in 'The Status' pp. 116-130 there are good reasons to believe that the pre-Patrician sections of AT and AI and Bede's Chronicon maiora (CM) all derive from a common source, identified as a chronicle compiled by Rufinus in the early fifth century. The structure and content of this source is best preserved in AT and AI, and in order to show explicitly the relationship between AT, AI and CM, all the entries found in common have been recorded by using the serial numbers of Jones' edition of CM, prefixed by the tag 'C:'

The complete list of tags and the edition with which the serial number is associated is as follows:

 

 

Tag

Annals of ... - Acronym

Edition

Example

I

Inishfallen - AI

Mac Airt

I:434.1 at AD 434

B

Boyle - AB

Freeman

B:146.1 at AD 440

R

Roscrea - AR

Gleeson & Mac Airt

R:91 at AD 445

D

Dublin fragment - DF

Mac Airt & Mac Niocaill

D:197 at AD 378

F

Fragmentary - FA

Radner

F:22 at AD 663

C

Bede - CM

Jones

C:545 at AD 643

The edition references are:

Mac Airt, S. The Annals of Inisfallen (Dublin 1951).

Freeman, A.M. ‘The Annals in Cotton MS Titus A xxv’ in Revue Celtique 41 301-30, 42 283-305, 43 358-84, 44 336-61, (1924-27).

Gleeson, D. & Mac Airt, S. "The Annals of Roscrea", Proc. Royal Irish Academy 59 C (1958)138-80.

Mac Airt, S. & Mac Niocaill, G. The Annals of Ulster to A.D. 1131, (Dublin 1983).

Radner, J.V. Fragmentary Annals of Ireland (Dublin 1978).

Jones, C.W. Bedae Venerabilis Opera, CCSL CXXIII B (Turnholt 1977).

Presentation and Status of the Collation

The collation has been implemented as a series of tables in Word 6.0 which are designed to print on an A4 page in landscape orientation so as to provide the maximum width for parallel tabulation. Time is considered to advance down the page and all the tokens placed on one line are taken to refer to the same event. As no horizontal lines are printed it is recommended that a ruler be used to ensure correct alignment for tokens widely separated across the table. For years when all the annal sources are available these are presented by columns as follows:

Column

Contents

1

Synchronised AD year

2

Julian ferial for the AD year

3

AT event tokens

4

CS event tokens

5

AC event tokens

6

AU event tokens

7

AI, AB, AR, DF, FA, CM event tokens

8

Remarks

In order not to have large areas of blank space between the event tokens when there are lacunae in any of the sources AT, CS, AC and AU, the collation has been split into a series of sub-tables based on these lacunae as follows:

 

 

Interval

Collates ...

AD 1-306

AT, AI, AB, DF, CM

AD 307-358

AT, CS, AC, AI, AB, DF, CM

AD 359-424

CS, AC, AI, AB, DF, CM

AD 425-487

CS, AC, AU, AI, AB, AR, CM

AD 488-722

AT, CS, AC, AU, AI, AB, AR, FA, CM

The collations for these intervals have been further subdivided in order to obtain Word and HTML files averaging about 70K bytes in size, in order to facilitate their downloading across the Web and their maintenance. At the present time (September 1999) the following are the extent and level of the collation of each source:

 

 

Annal

AD Range

Annal entries collated as tokens ...

AT

1-722

All chronological and record entries

CS

336-722

All chronological and record entries

AC

307-722

All record entries

AU

431-722

All chronological and record entries

AI

1-665

Largely only record entries found also in AT/CS

AB

1-722

All record entries

AR

431-700

All record entries

DF

1-387

All record entries

FA

572-722

All record entries

CM

1-722

All record entries found in the annals

The present range therefore stretches from the beginning of the Christian era up to the first lacuna in CS, and this range serves two purposes -

1.

It displays the total coverage of the annals from the beginning of the Christian era.

It displays as much detail as possible regarding the structure of the Iona chronicle

which is considered to extend up to c. AD 740

2.

Obviously the collation is deficient in the latter regard by about eighteen years, however, the amount of work required increases rapidly in the eighth century because the number of records per year increases substantially in the course of this century; this is also the reason why the present collation of AI is curtailed.

Applications of the Collation

The principle application for which the collation has been designed is to provide synchronised AD dating for all the events recorded in the annals; an application complementary to this is to provide efficient identification of parallel records of all events entered in the annals. Thus someone interested in the death of Baethéne, Columba’s successor as abbot of Iona, may establish at a glance that the synchronised date is AD 596 and that parallel entries occur in AT, CS, AC, AU, AR, AB, FA and the full text of all these entries may then be easily located and collated. It is to be hoped that this will facilitate the use of the annals for historical studies, which have hitherto been greatly impeded by the uncertainty attached to the dates inserted in the various published editions. For example, Mac Airt and Mac Niocaill’s edition of AU places Baethéne’s death at 598, Mac Airt’s edition of AI places it at 601, Murphy’s edition of AC offers no date, the published editions of AB and AR cite ‘AU 598’ which is AU’s MS Anno Domini incremented by one year, and finally Stoke’s edition of AT cites AU’s MS year as ‘AU.597’. As can be seen these published editions provide three different AD dates, all of which differ from the synchronised AD.

A second application of this collation is to use it to identify records of events unique to each source, since the token for such an event must stand on its own in a line. In this way it is straightforward, for example, to observe that AT presents a sequence of entries, which are also found verbatim in Bede’s Chronicon Maiora, at AD 492 (Trasamundus), 502 (Simacus P.), 526 (Iohannes) and 526 (Iustinus), to cite just a few of these. Similarly between AD 367-431 AI preserves, mostly uniquely, a sequence of extracts also found in Prosper’s chronicle. These unique records are important clues to the text history of the annal collection preserving them.

A third application of the collation is to use it to observe closely what material is in common and what is omitted between cognate annals. For example at AD 588, relative to both AT and AC, CS has omitted the battles of Leithrigh and Muighe and the obiit of Lughdach, so we may explore this to see whether a particular political outlook is implied by these omissions. Similarly at AD 622 CS omits the death of Ailella and the battle of Lindais from a long set of entries found otherwise fully in AT and AU. Historical evaluation of these omissions should sharpen considerably our knowledge of the editorial policy employed when CS was compiled. Similar methods may be applied to the smaller collections to identify what factors have influenced their compilation and hence to clarify their inter-relationships.

Conclusion

This article has set forth the rationale and the methods used to construct the following collation of the various annals over the years AD 1-722. This has been done, piecemeal, by the author and, while as much care as possible has been taken, given the sheer volume and complexity of the material it is virtually certain that it contains some omissions, mis-locations and mis-identifications. It will be greatly appreciated if these would be notified to him upon discovery, in order that the accuracy and the value of the collation may be enhanced. These may be emailed to him at mccarthy@cs.tcd.ie or posted to D.P. Mc Carthy, Department of Computer Science, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland.