The ancient Kings of Ireland were descended from King Milesius of Spain, the grandson of Breoghan (Brian), King of Galicia, Andalusia, Murcia, Castile and Portugal. Milesius, a great general/king, was instrumental in defending Egypt from the King of Ethiopia. Milesius turned his attention northward to Ireland to fulfill an ancient Druidic prophecy. He sent an army to explore this fertile island. On finding that his son had been murdered by the three resident Irish Kings (the Danans), Milesius gathered another army to take his revenge on the Irish. He died before he embarked on the trip. His remaining eight sons conquered Ireland.
Heremon, eldest son of Milesius, reigned in Ireland for fourteen years, along with his brothers Heber, Ir, and Ithe. They named the land Scota or Scotia, their mother’s name, the land of the Scots. This name would later be taken by the Irish King Colla in 357 when he was exiled to Scotland, leaving the name ‘Ir-land’, land of Ir, youngest of the four sons of Milesius, to the Emerald Isle. The four Irish kingdoms eventually broke into five separate nations under the High King, or Ard Righ. These royal lines would later produce such great kings as the 4th century King Niall of the Nine Hostages who died in France while cutting off the retreat of the Romans from Britain, and King Brian Boru who died in the Battle of Clontarf in 1014, finally expelling the Vikings from Dublin and Ireland.
called a ‘patronymic’ name, which means it is derived from the first name Alan which means ‘little rock’. The name was popular in Bittany where St Alan was once a bishop.
shown as a bar of alternating metal and coloured cloth.
from the Dalriadan tribe which inhabited the west coast of Scotland. The name comes from the given (first) name Alexander which was introduced to Scotland by Queen Margaret who heard the name while in the Hungarian Court where she was raised. She named her first son Alexander and he went on to become king of Scotland following the detah of King Malcolm III in the late 11th century.
shield and these depend on the status of the bearer:
is an ‘Achievement’. The design shown on the shield is the Coat of Arms, and the design on top of the helmet is the Family Crest – sometimes there is no crest and 5 feathers are shown instead.