Person:Olaf I Godredsson (1)

Olaf I Godredsson "Bitling (the dwarf)" _____, of Man and the Isles
b.Abt 1080 Isle of Man
d.29 Jun 1153 Isle of Man
  1. Lagmann Godredsson _____1070 - Abt 1104
  2. Harald _____1078 - 1099
  3. Olaf I Godredsson "Bitling (the dwarf)" _____, of Man and the IslesAbt 1080 - 1153
  • HOlaf I Godredsson "Bitling (the dwarf)" _____, of Man and the IslesAbt 1080 - 1153
  • WAffraic of Galloway1100 -
  1. Godred IV Olafsson _____, of Man and the IslesBef 1143 - 1187
  2. Rögnvaldr Óláfsson
  • HOlaf I Godredsson "Bitling (the dwarf)" _____, of Man and the IslesAbt 1080 - 1153
  • WIngebiorg Haakonsdottir1106 - 1152
m. 1116
  1. Ragnhild Olafsdatter _____Abt 1117 & 1127 - 1200
  2. Gudroed Olaffsen of Man and the isles (Goudroed the Black), II1153 - 1187
Facts and Events
Name[2] Olaf I Godredsson "Bitling (the dwarf)" _____, of Man and the Isles
Alt Name Olaf the Red _____
Gender Male
Birth[1] Abt 1080 Isle of ManHouse of Crovan
Marriage to Affraic of Galloway
Marriage 1116 ,Orkney Islands,Orkney,Scotlandto Ingebiorg Haakonsdottir
Death[1][2] 29 Jun 1153 Isle of Man
Reference Number? Q3008316?
Title (nobility)[2] King of Man
Questionable information identified by WeRelate automation
To fix:Born after mother died


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Óláfr Guðrøðarson (died 29 June 1153) was a twelfth-century King of Mann and the Isles. As a younger son of Guðrøðr Crovan, King of Dublin and the Isles, Óláfr witnessed a vicious power struggle between his elder brothers in the aftermath of their father's death. At some point, the young Óláfr was entrusted to the care of Henry I, King of England, and like the contemporaneous Scottish monarchs, Alexander I and David I, Óláfr appears to have been a protégé of the English king. As King of the Isles, Óláfr contracted marital alliances with neighbouring maritime rulers. Although he appears to have overseen successful military operations to reclaim the northernmost territories once controlled by his father, he may have witnessed the loss of authority in Galloway as well. Like his counterpart David I, Óláfr was a reformer and moderniser of his realm. However, his four-decade reign ended in abrupt disaster when he was assassinated by three nephews in 1153. Following the ensuing power struggle, Óláfr's son Guðrøðr overcame the kin-slayers, and assumed the kingship of the Kingdom of the Isles.

The Isles—an archipelagic region roughly incorporating the Hebrides and Mann—was ruled by Guðrøðr Crovan for over two decades until his death in 1095, whereupon his eldest son Lǫgmaðr assumed control. Warring soon broke out between factions supporting Lǫgmaðr's younger brother Haraldr, which led to the intervention and encroachment of Irish power into the region. After a short period of Irish domination, the region lapsed into further conflict which was capitalised on by Magnús Óláfsson, King of Norway, who led two military campaigns throughout the Isles and surrounding Irish Sea region at about the turn of the twelfth century. Magnús dominated these regions until his death in 1103, whereupon control of the Isles appears to have fragmented into chaos once again.

Rather than allow ambitious Irish powers fill the power vacuum, Henry I appears to have installed Óláfr on the throne at some point between 1112 and 1115, about the time that Domnall mac Taidc relocated from the Isles to Ireland. Óláfr is recorded to have spent his youth at Henry I's court, and Óláfr's later religious foundations reveal that he was greatly influenced by his English upbringing. In the second quarter of the eleventh century, Óláfr founded Rushen Abbey, a reformed religious house on Mann. He further oversaw the formation of the Diocese of the Isles, the territorial extent of which appears to reveal the boundaries of his realm. Óláfr is recorded to have had at least two wives: Ingibjǫrg, daughter of Hákon Pálsson, Earl of Orkney; and Affraic, daughter of Fergus, Lord of Galloway. The unions seem to reveal that Óláfr shifted from an alliance with Orkney to that with Galloway. Not long after his marriage to Affraic, one of Óláfr's daughters married Somairle mac Gilla Brigte, Lord of Argyll, an emerging power in the region.

Although Óláfr's reign is recorded to have been peaceful, there is reason to suspect that his own succession was uncertain. In 1152, Guðrøðr travelled to Norway and rendered homage to Ingi Haraldsson, King of Norway. At about this time, the Diocese of the Isles was incorporated within the recently elevated Archdiocese of Niðaróss. Whilst this strengthened Norwegian links with the Isles, it secured the ecclesiastical independence of Óláfr's domain, and safeguard his secular authority in the region. Nevertheless, before Guðrøðr returned to the Isles, three sons of Haraldr confronted Óláfr, and demanded a share of the kingdom before slaying him. Although the three men appear to have taken significant steps to counter military intervention from Galloway, they were soon after crushed by Guðrøðr, who returned to the region strengthened by Norwegian military might. Óláfr's descendants went on to reign as kings of the Isles for over a century.

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Olaf I Godredsson. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

Olaf I The Red Godredson (Olaf Bitling, Olaf Klining), appointed viceroy by King Magnus of Norway, styled as King of Man, married to 1 Ingibiorg, daughter of Earl Hakon of Orkney, 2 Elfrica of Galloway, from his first marriage sprang Ragnhildis, wife of Sumarlidhi Höld progenitor of Clan Donald after a peaceable reign of about 40 years. In 1140 an insurrection broke out but but was calmed with the help of Sumarlidhi Höld, he was treacherously murdered by the sons of his natural brother Harold, anno 1143, and was succeeded by his only lawful son. 1143-1158 GODRED II Ochraidh Godred II The Black (Godfrey) OLAFSON, King of Man, son of Olaf and Elfrica of Galloway, married to Phingola (Fionghuala) Maclochlan, reigned until in 1158 his brother in law Sumarlidhi Höld (Somerled) defeated him heavily in a sea batlle and tried to establish his son Dugall as King of the Isles. In 1164 on Somerled's death he returned from Norway.

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Olaf I Godredsson, in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Baldwin, Stewart. The Kings of the Isle of Man. (GEN-MEDIEVAL/soc.genealogy.medieval)
    Table 5.