Page:The reign of William Rufus and the accession of Henry the First.djvu/175

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No recorded movement in Scotland.

Movements in Wales.

State of Wales.

Rhys restored by a fleet from Ireland. earlier in the year, events of some importance had been happening in other parts of the island. We are almost tempted to take for granted that so great a stir in northern England as that which accompanied the banishment of the Bishop of Durham must have been accompanied or followed by some action on the part of King Malcolm of Scotland. None such however is spoken of. But the stirs on the Western border had been taken advantage of by the enemies of England on that side. We have seen that British allies played a part on the side of the rebels in the attack on Worcester. Further north, independent Britons deemed that the time was come for a renewal of the old border strife. When Earl Hugh of Chester and the Marquess Robert of Rhuddlan took opposite sides in a civil war, it was indeed an inviting moment for any of the neighbouring Welsh princes. The time seems to have been one of even more confusion than usual among the Britons. The year after the death of the Conqueror is marked in their annals as a special time of civil warfare, in which allies were brought by sea from Scotland and Ireland. Rhys the son of Tewdwr, of whom we have already heard,[1] was driven from his kingdom by the sons of Bleddyn, and won it again by the help of a fleet from Ireland.[2] Men were struck by the vast rewards in money and captives with which he repaid his naval allies, who are spoken of as if some of them were still heathens.[3] These movements

  1. See N. C. vol. iv. pp. 502, 675.
  2. Ann. Camb. 1087. "Resus filius Teudur a regno suo expulsus est a filiis Bledint, scilicet Madauc, Cadugan, et Ririt. Resus vero ex Hibernia classem duxit et revertitur in Britanniam." The Brut is to the same effect.
  3. Ib. "Ingentem censum captivorum gentilibus et Scotis filius Teudur tradidit." The Brut for "gentiles et Scoti" has "Yscotteit ar Gúydyl," marking the Gwyddyl as heathen Ostmen. This is the most common use of the word in the British writers; but we can hardly think that the Scots here spoken of are Scots in the elder sense.