Constantine was an early King of Scotland, known then by the Gaelic name Alba. His reign of 43 years is believed to have played a defining part in the gaelicisation of Pictland. His patronage of the Irish Céli Dé monastic reformers was a significant factor. During his reign the words ‘Scots’ and ‘Scotland’ are first used to mean part of what is now Scotland.
About Constantine II of Scotland in brief

The toponymy and archaeology of Scotland are primary importance of primary importance for the study of the Viking Age kingdom in eastern Scotland. By the 9th century the northern Pictish kingdom of Fortriu of Riata was dominated by the family of Constantín mac Fergus, perhaps a kinsman of Constantin Áinne, the Gaelsman of Gaels Dál Dá. The kings of Fortín were subject to the kings of Riata, perhaps Constantín’s kinsman, and perhaps a man named Constantín mac Fergus, if he was alive after 789 and perhaps if he died in 789. In 789 Constantín was a dominant king of the Gaelman and perhaps he was a knight of Fortriú of Fergus. He was succeeded by his predecessor’s son Malcolm I. In 943 Constantine abdicated the throne and retired to the Céli Dé monastery of St Andrews. He died in 952 and was succeeded by his grandson Malcolm I. In 937 the rulers of the southern kingdoms of Wessex and Mercia, later the Kingdom of England, extended their authority northwards into the disputed kingdoms of Northumbria. At first, the southern rulers allied with him against the Vikings, but in 934 Æthelstan, unprovoked, invaded Scotland.
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