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Chronicle and Melrose
The account in the Chronicle of Melrose names the place as the " Black Cave ," and John of Fordun calls it the " Black Den ".
* Chronicle of Melrose, a medieval chronicle likely written by monks at Melrose Abbey
* Anon., A Medieval Chronicle of Scotland: The Chronicle of Melrose, ed.
In 973, the Chronicle of Melrose reports that Kenneth, with Máel Coluim I ( Máel Coluim mac Domnaill ), the King of Strathclyde, " Maccus, king of very many islands " ( i. e. Magnus Haraldsson ( Maccus mac Arailt ), King of Mann and the Isles ) and other kings, Welsh and Norse, came to Chester to acknowledge the overlordship of the English king Edgar the Peaceable.
An entry in the Chronicle of Melrose describes " King Constantine, Culen's son, ... slain by the sword " at the mouth of Almond in Tegalere.
The Chronicle of Melrose places the battle near the River Avon.
These genealogies, perhaps oral in origin, were subjected to some regularisation by the scribes who copied them into sources such as the Chronicle of Melrose, the Poppleton Manuscript and the like.
The Chronicle of the Kings of Dál Riata names Eógan son of Muiredach as king after Muiredach, and the king-list in the Chronicle of Melrose includes him.
Some Scottish sources, including the Chronicle of Melrose, have Muiredach's son Eógan as his successor.
The Chronicle of Melrose and some versions of the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba say that Giric died at Dundurn in Strathearn.
The original monastery at Melrose is referred to in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle with the name Magilros.
It would appear that de Morville's superiority did not extend over the entire valley of Lauderdale which, by his own demarcation recorded in the Chronicle of Melrose, stopped at the Lauder burn south of the town.
From 1148 to 1170 he used the Melrose Chronicle ( edited for the Bannatyne Club in 1835 by Joseph Stevenson ) and a collection of letters bearing upon the Thomas Becket controversy.
Aside from the Chronicle of Melrose, the most significant of these sources are the works of Roger of Hoveden, and the material preserved in the writings of John of Fordun and Walter Bower.
Lochlann and his army met these men in battle on 4 July 1185 and, according to the Chronicle of Melrose, killed Gille-Patraic and a substantial number of his warriors.
The grant is mentioned by the Chronicle of Melrose, under the year 1193: These estates were very rich, and became attached to Melrose's " super-grange " at Mauchline in Kyle.

Chronicle and says
The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba says of Áed: " Edus held the same the kingdom for one year.
Seven years later the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba says: plundered the English as far as the river Tees, and he seized a multitude of people and many herds of cattle: and the Scots called this the raid of Albidosorum, that is, Nainndisi.
The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba says that Domnall reigned for four years, matching the notices in the Annals of Ulster of his brother's death in February 858 and his own in April 862.
One of the documents unsealed was the deposition of Hearst's Asher, who says that as of September 2006, his company had recorded cumulative losses of $ 330 million on its investment in the Chronicle, which it acquired in mid-2000.
Seven years later, the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba says: plundered the English as far as the River Tees, and he seized a multitude of people and many herds of cattle: and the Scots called this the raid of Albidosorum, that is, Nainndisi.
The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba says that Máel Coluim took an army into Moray " and slew Cellach ".
In an unusual entry, for the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle contains little on Scotland, it says that in 1078:
Bede says that Oswald held imperium for the eight years of his rule ( both Bede and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle say that Oswald's reign was actually considered to be nine years, the ninth year being accounted for by assigning to Oswald the year preceding his rule, " on account of the heathenism practised by those who had ruled that one year between him and Edwin "), and was the most powerful king in Britain.
" The Chronicle for Aug. 3 and 4, 1923, says the same thing the Examiner does, that Harding's body was taken from the Palace Hotel directly to the train depot at Third and Townsend.
The Mozarabic Chronicle of 754 says:
The compiler of this version of the Chronicle, manuscript E, called the Peterborough Chronicle, says:
The Chronicle of Alfonso III calls Pelagius a grandson of Chindasuinth and says that his father was blinded in Córdoba, again at the instigation of Wittiza.
The Great Chronicle, compiled 30 years later from the contemporary London municipal records, says the rumour of the princes ' death did not start circulating in London until after Easter of 1484.
* The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle which says he and his son arrived in Hampshire ( at Cerdic's Ore )
Chronicle of Higher Education says the university is one of 11 bachelor ’ s programs with more than two professors doing research under Fulbright auspices.
The Angles strengthened their influence over the area in 628, when ( says the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ), the West Saxons fought the ( Anglian ) Penda of Mercia at Cirencester and afterwards came to terms.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle says of Donald that he was expelled, while the Annals of Tigernach have him blinded by his brother.
The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba says: " In his time oppidum Eden ", usually identified as Edinburgh, " was evacuated, and abandoned to the Scots until the present day.
An early use in mainstream media is a San Francisco Chronicle article of September 14, 2002 in which former United Nations weapons inspector Scott Ritter says: " We may be able to generate support for an invasion among some of the Shiites and some of the Kurds, but to get to Baghdad you must penetrate the Sunni Triangle.
The Greyfriars ' Chronicle says that Hooper was " sometime a white monk "; and in the sentence pronounced against him by Stephen Gardiner he is described as " olim monachus de Cliva Ordinis Cisterciensis ," i. e. of the Cistercian house of Cleeve Abbey in Somerset.
In the San Francisco Chronicle review of the first season, John Carman says: " It's cross-generational, warm-the-cockles viewing, and it's a terrific show.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle says that Æthelred spent much of the 890s leading military campaigns in eastern England.
The thirteenth-century Chronicle of the Kings of Man and the Isles says that he was buried at the church of Saint Patrick in Down.

Chronicle and Domnall
The idea that Domnall II of Strathclyde was a son of Áed, based on a confusing entry in the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba, is contested.
Alex Woolf points that the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba, reports another location for the death of Domnall mac Ailpín: the palace of Cinnbelathoir.
The " Laws of Áed Eochaid's son " are mentioned by the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba in the reign of Áed's supposed great-grandson Donald MacAlpin ( Domnall mac Ailpín ): " In his time the Gaels with their king made the rights and laws of the kingdom are called the laws of Áed Eochaid's son, in Forteviot.

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