- [ˈoːˌlɑːvz̠ ˈɡuðˌrøðsˌson]; Old English: Ánláf; Old Irish: Amlaíb mac
Gofraid; died 941) was a Hiberno-Scandinavian (Irish-Viking)
leader who
ruled Dublin...
-
Gofraid is an
Irish masculine given name,
arising in the Old
Irish and
Middle Irish/Middle
Gaelic languages, as Gofhraidh, and
later partially Anglicised...
-
Gofraid ua Ímair or
Guthfrith of Ivar (Old Norse: Guðrøðr [ˈɡuðˌrøðz̠], Latin: Guthfridus, fl. from AD 918
until death in 934) was a Hiberno-Scandinavian...
-
Gofraid, King of
Lochlann was a key
figure in the
emergence of
Norse influence in
Scotland and one of the
early Kings of the
Isles and of that dominated...
- of Ireland. In 920
Sitric left
Dublin for Northumbria, with his
kinsman Gofraid ua Ímair
succeeding him as king in Dublin. That same year
Sitric led a...
-
Godred Crovan (died 1095),
known in
Gaelic as
Gofraid Crobán,
Gofraid Meránach, and
Gofraid Méránach, was a Norse-Gaelic
ruler of the
kingdoms of Dublin...
- Lochlann,
identified in the non-contemporary
Fragmentary Annals of
Ireland as
Gofraid. The
Fragmentary Annals name
Auisle and Amlaíb
Conung as his brothers....
-
Gofraid mac Amlaíb meic
Ragnaill (died 1075) was a late eleventh-century King of Dublin.
Although the
precise identities of his
father and grandfather...
- (died ?)
Gofraid mac
Sitric (died 1036)
Cellach ingen Sitric (died 1042)
Gofraid ua Ímair (died 934)
Alpdann mac
Gofraid (died 927) Amlaíb mac
Gofraid (died...
- and
defeated Sitriuc's
brother Gofraid.
According to
William of Malmesbury, Amlaíb fled to
Ireland while his
uncle Gofraid made a
second unsuccessful attempt...