Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Constantine's death in 952 is recorded by the Irish annals, who enter it among ecclesiastics. His son Indulf would become king on Malcolm's death. The last of Constantine's certain descendants to be king in Alba was a great-grandson, Constantine III (Constantín mac Cuiléin).
The Annals of Tigernach report that Constantine was killed in a battle between the Scots in 997: "A battle between the Scots, in which fell Constantine son of Culannan, king of Scotland, and many others." Another entry of the same year reports the death of Máel Coluim I of Strathclyde, though it is unclear if the two deaths were connected.
"Constantine's Cave" – also known as the Nigra Specus ("Black Cave") – at Balcomie near Crail in Fife, Scotland: the supposed death place of Causantín. In 875, the Chronicle and the Annals of Ulster again report a Viking army in Pictland; the Annals of Ulster say that "a great slaughter of the Picts resulted". [20]
The Duke of Edinburgh was a first cousin of Constantine’s father, King Paul I. William is even a godfather to one of Prince Pavlos’ children, Constantine Alexios.
Prince William and King Constantine. Tim Rooke/Shutterstock Prince William’s godfather King Constantine II — the last Greek monarch and Prince Philip’s nephew — has died at age 82. Queen ...
Constantine II, King of Alba Ildulb mac Causantín , anglicised as Indulf or Indulph , [ 1 ] nicknamed An Ionsaighthigh , "the Aggressor" [ 2 ] (died 962) was king of Alba from 954 to 962. He was the son of Constantine II ; his mother may have been a daughter of Earl Eadulf I of Bernicia , who was an exile in Scotland.
The late King Constantine of Greece, who died in January 2023, was William’s godfather. The palace would not provide any further details why William will miss the event, ...
Causantín or Constantín mac Fergusa (English: "Constantine son of Fergus") (789–820) was king of the Picts, in modern Scotland, from 789 until 820. He was until the Victorian era sometimes counted as Constantine I of Scotland; the title is now generally given to Causantín mac Cináeda.