History
In 1120, Fiachna was born the first son of Dombnall mac Hoireabard
(or mac Francis depending on the source).(1) Dombnall
was chief huntsman and harborer to Fergus mac Donnel, Lord of Galloway,
and not surprisingly, his cousin. The family dwelt in Kirkcudbright,
the high seat of the Lords of Galloway.
At that time Galloway was mostly independent of the control of the
Scottish throne, a distinction lost during the rules of Fergus' sons,
Uhtred and Gilbert, whose sibling rivalry helped weaken their power
enough for the Scottish king to effectively take control. Fergus did
as he pleased despite the wishes of King Alexander and his successor/brother
David, though Fergus often joined the Scottish king's forays and raids
into Northumbria. (2)
When Fiachna was eight, he was sent live and study in the monastery
at Whithern with his great-uncle Georas, acting bishop of Galloway.
(3) Like Fiachna's father, Georas believed strongly
in the ancient traditions of his Pictish ancestors and despaired of
their passing. So although Fiachna studied Latin, Gaelic, and English,
he also studied what remained of his ancestral language and Pictish
history. His uncle foresaw the coming Anglicization of Scotland and
tried to prepare Fiachna to benefit from this change which was already
well rooted in the surrounding lands; Anglic traditions had been encroaching
on Celtic Scotland since the sixth century, and Norman influence had
increased its speed. The Gallowegian Lord Fergus even married an illegitimate
daughter of Henry I of England. (4)
Fiachna's great uncle Georas died in 1131, and in 1134, Gilalden was
made bishop in Whithern by Thurstan, archbishop of York. Soon after
the arrival of Gilalden, Fiachna left the monastery at Whithern and
returned to the Kirkcudbright court. Now 14, he found himself in the
position of translator for Fergus in dealings with the Anglicized Scots
and other foreigners who came ever more frequently. It was they who
gave Fiachna his Anglic nickname: Theodend, 'translator', which slurring
and accents corrupted to Theaten (spelled variously). (5)
His given name appears only once in an early pipe roll listing Fergus'
household and servants. Fergus was so pleased with his early service
that he awarded him an estate that included his birthplace beside the
Water of the Girvan (read: Award of Arms).
These events probably began the germination of Pictish nationalism
which came to dominate Theaten's life.
During the next few years King David and his subjects made frequent
raids into England, but Fergus held back to see what success the Scottish
king had. When the Scots did well in two campaigns, Fergus gathered
men at Christmastide 1137 and joined the third assault on Northumbria.
Theaten went as well. Fergus forbade Theaten to fight unless in immediate
danger, instructing him to stay close and not be killed because he was
more valuable as a negotiator than a warrior, considering his stature
and training. Fergus had Theaten arrayed in a captured hauberk and helm
to compliment the short sword and broad Celtic shield his father had
given him, just in case. (6)
Although skirmishes occasionally reached him, Theaton did avoid death,
but mostly because Fergus and his guard fought off the enemy. Theaton
would not have been as well off if it weren't for the fact that at each
battle the Scots were advancing and held the field. Fergus did allow
him to join attacks on villages and helpless farmers, and in the general
rapine that followed each victory, he accumulated some wealth in booty.
This all ended August 21, 1138 at the Battle of the Standard near Northallerton.
In this battle, Fergus demanded that his troops be allowed to form the
van of the Scotch army or he would withdraw them from the field. David
allowed him this since he needed the men to keep his force much larger
than that of the defending English. Notably, David's other generals
felt the move was unwise. Fergus and his Picts (the Gallowegians) and
Theaton among them (Fergus was using every man) charged the line of
English spearmen braced on a rise. As the Picts ran screaming at their
line, the English archers let forth a hail of arrows; many Picts dropped
in their tracks. Theaton reached the English shield wall only to have
his own shield pulled from his arm. He would have been killed had not
a friend been close at hand to strike down the spearman who leaned forward
too far to take an easy target. In a panic, Theaton grabbed the spear
as the English man fell and ran backwards with the other Scots/Picts
around him. He stabbed at a pursuer (possibly wounding him, but possibly
just tripping him) and escaped with those Scots who survived.
That battle was such a route for Scots and allies that Theaten had
to abandon all he had gained and made his way home with only a hauberk
and spear to show. He lost his helmet in the fray. Fergus later replaced
it with a Norse helm garnered during a successful repulsion of Scandinavian
adventurers. However, Theaten did gain one thing: a Welsh noble family
allied to Fergus awarded him some lands for his generous service to
them during the campaigns (read: Order of the Dreamstone).
Theaten's experience at the Battle of the Standard led him to believe
he was naturally adept with the spear. He took up the poleaxe for its
cutting as well as thrusting capabilities and gave up on shields. He
is also mentioned as having been partial to bows, especially the light
crossbow depicted in Pictish carvings, (7) and
sword styles that disregard shields.
During the time Theaten served as Fergus' translator, 1134-1148, he
developed a reputation as a predatory courtier, especially with the
daughters of visiting nobles. Despite this, he aggressively courted
the daughter of an eccentric nobleman from Kintyre, Robert. Her name
was Breisis (a Greek name), and her father was a wide faring merchant
with several small ships. A partial diary by one of the court noblewomen
records that Breisis and Fiachna married after some six years of courting,
but that the courtship, the marriage, or family relations were not very
harmonious. Eventually, Fiachna was discovered with a powerful Norman
lord's wife. He fled court and disappears from Gallowegian records for
awhile. Nothing more is recorded of Breisis, her family, the Norman,
or his lady. (8)
Fiachna does not reappear in Galloway for four years; however, in 1150,
an odd record in Satsuma province of southern Japan raises interesting
questions. The court scribes record the winter arrival of a stranger
with white skin and blue eyes who claimed to have come from the farthest
West beyond China. He wore armor like that of the steppes dwellers,
wielded an unusual naginata, and carried a small, sideways bow. After
some months of study with the court scribes, this stranger learned to
converse haltingly in Japanese, and he took the name Shimazu Karasu.
(9) He gained enough favor in the local court
to be made a hatamoto (read: Grant of Arms). Then, he apparently departed
suddenly a year before a period of inter-clan warfare that would last
for decades began. (10) The last entry concerning
the stranger Karasu mentioned that he exhibited an overweening affection
for satsuma-imo and shochu. (11)
The Fiachna who reappears in Fergus's court after the four year absence seems different from the original courtier of earlier years. Instead of a womanizer, we see a family man. Church records in Whithern indicate the marriage a between a man named Fiachna and a woman named either Maut or Matilda (the two extant records differ), who may have been of a Northumbrian Saxon family. This is interesting considering Fiachna's distaste for those not true to his Pictish ancestry. Marginalia indicates that Fiachna's first son, Gradigh, was born about 1155. Later he would father two more children, another son and a daughter. As an odd side note, an 1153 pipe roll records court payments to a brewer named Maut MacAlpin, who may be the same woman. (12)
An 1155 Gallowegian pipe roll again finds Theaten in the service of Fergus.
The roll records his name as Sir Fiachna (indicating he had been elevated to the status of knight) and he oversaw the lands and villages of northern Galloway, known as Carrick. Also, a hidage record from 1158 indicates that Fiachna's holdings in Carrick had significantly expanded (read:
Pelicanate), but whether by the grace of Fergus or Malcolm is unclear.
In 1160, Fergus revolted against King Malcolm IV (13), which was quelled only with the help of the king's Norman vassals. Fiachna supported his lord and is noted as leading an effective contingent of archers and pikemen in this conflict (read: Broken Brank). Fergus, furious with the King's use of Norman "interlopers" to suppress the rebellion, rebelled again, and Malcolm needed three expeditions into Galloway to defeat him. Finally beaten, Fergus gave his kingdom to his sons and became a monk; he died the next year. (14) Then, his sons Gilbert and Uhtred began a reign of terror among themselves and the ruling families of Galloway.
A fragment of letter restored in Girvan indicates that Fiachna had watched Fergus slowly become more Anglicized, and passing the throne directly to his sons was a final affront to the Pictish tradition Fergus had once represented to Fiachna (though Fiachna continued to claim he loved Fergus like a father). It seems the stage was set for the next changes in Fiachna's life and allegiances.
During the transition after Fergus' abdication and death, Fiachna served as a chief official in Galloway (read: Meridian Kingdom Seneschal), likely hoping to keep the turmoil of the rebellions and the succession in check. Although he was successful on many levels (read: Order of the Bough), he failed to stem the overall tide of change, and with the births of his second son, Rogan, and of his daughter, Siúsaidh, he left office and retreated to the highlands of Carrick near the Water of Girvan, where he had been born. By 1165, Fiachna, now forty-five, had been mostly absent from court service for three years. With his part in Fergus' rebellions and his strained relations with the sons of Fergus, his influence and prestige waned and his lands were in jeopardy. He is recorded ceding some property to the Lord of Galloway, but how much and for what reasons is unknown. However, his family remained safe from the turmoil in the Gallowegian court.
Gilbert had Uhtred killed in 1174, but was himself too weak to stave
off the anglicizing of Galloway. Disgusted, Fiachna joined a band of
outlaws and other disenfranchised folk. He rose to a position of leadership
among them and limited their depredations to Anglo-Normans and those
Scots and Gallowegians who took too readily to the invading culture.
At this point Fiachna's old title reappeared as a name among the men
sent to catch him, as well as most everyone in the area. Theodend
'translator' was melded to theoftyn '(roughly) instructor of
thieves' or threotan 'to vex or confound'. The three terms became
intermingled in common speech, and the most common spelling of the result
is Theahtyn.
Gilbert died in 1185, and according to the Pictish tradition of tanistry,
(15) Uhtred's son Lachlan (also called Roland)
became Lord of Galloway. In 1190 Lachlan made his cousin Duncan mac
Gilbert Earl of Carrick, probably to maintain power without fighting
for his life. Sadly, during Lachlan's reign several Anglo-Norman bishops
held the bishopric at Whithern, and Pictish traditions vanished.
During the decades from Gilbert to Lachlan, Theahtyn tried vainly to
revive the traditions of his Pictish ancestors, but he could muster
only a small following. He became known as Theahtyn of Girvan and Theahtyn
the Pict. Sometime before 1200, he and his group disappear from all
records, and his fate is unknown. One Gallowegian legend states that
Theahtyn trafficked with the faeries and eventually joined them, perhaps
to return and trouble another age (but haven't we heard that before).
You can see that after 1165 the specifics of Fiachna's career and life become more vague. This vagueness reflects the parallels I draw between my mundane, SCA, and persona lives. I am only certain of what happens to Fiachna through age forty-four, at least for now.
Footnotes