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  1. Godred's greatest impact on history may have been his founding of the Crovan dynasty, his patrilineal descendants who ruled in the Isles for almost two centuries. Godred was an important maternal ancestor of Clann Somairle, a family that held power in the Isles centuries after the final extinction of the Crovan dynasty.

  2. Oct 6, 2023 · Godred Crovan (Old Irish: Gofraid mac meic Arailt, Gofraid Méranech; Guðrøðr [1]%29 (died 1095) was a Norse-Gael ruler of Dublin, and King of Mann and the Isles in the second half of the 11th century. Godred's epithet Crovan may mean "white hand" (Middle Irish: crobh bhan). [2]

  3. The Crovan dynasty, from the late 11th century to the mid 13th century, was the ruling family of an insular kingdom known variously in secondary sources as the Kingdom of Mann, the Kingdom of the Isles, and the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles. The eponymous founder of the dynasty was Godred Crovan, who appeared from obscurity in the late 11th ...

  4. Godred Crovan , known in Gaelic as Gofraid Crobán, Gofraid Meránach, and Gofraid Méránach, was a Norse-Gaelic ruler of the kingdoms of Dublin and the Isles. Although his precise parentage has not completely been proven, he was certainly an Uí Ímair dynast, and a descendant of Amlaíb Cúarán, King of Northumbria and Dublin.

  5. Crovan fought alongside the Norse King Harald Hardrada at the battle of Stamford Bridge in 1066. When they were defeated by King Harold of England and Hardrada killed, Crovan escaped to Islay. Islay legend tells that Crovan destroyed a great dragon which was terrorising the island. He anchored his ship in Loch Indaal and laid a path of spiked ...

  6. Godred Crovan. Godredus I Krovuan. King of The Sudrik. Godred's name as it appears on folio 50v of British Library Cotton Julius A VII (the Chronicle of Mann): "Godredus Crouan". King of The Sudrik. Reign. 17 May 1070 – 21 March 1099. Coronation.

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  8. The next recorded king was Godred Crovan's son Olave Godredsson, also known as "the Red" to the Highlanders and " Bitling " to the Norwegians, the latter apparently on account of his small size.

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