مملكة ستراث‌كلايد

Coordinates: 56°N 4°W / 56°N 4°W / 56; -4
(تم التحويل من Kingdom of Strathclyde)
Kingdom of Strathclyde

Alt Clud
Cumbria
5th century–1030ح. 1030
The core of Strathclyde is the strath of the River Clyde. The major sites associated with the kingdom are shown, as is the marker Clach nam Breatann (إنگليزية: Rock of the Britons), the probable northern extent of the kingdom at an early time. Other areas were added to or subtracted from the kingdom at different times.
The core of Strathclyde is the strath of the River Clyde. The major sites associated with the kingdom are shown, as is the marker Clach nam Breatann (إنگليزية: Rock of the Britons), the probable northern extent of the kingdom at an early time. Other areas were added to or subtracted from the kingdom at different times.
العاصمةDumbarton and Govan
اللغات الشائعةCumbric
الحكومةMonarchy
الحقبة التاريخيةMiddle Ages
• تأسست
5th century
• Incorporated into the Kingdom of Scotland
1030ح. 1030
سبقها
تلاها
Simple Labarum.svg Sub-Roman Britain
Kingdom of Scotland
Today part ofScotland
  Dumfries and Galloway
  East Ayrshire
  North Ayrshire
  South Ayrshire
  South Lanarkshire
  North Lanarkshire
  East Renfrewshire
  Renfrewshire
  Glasgow City
  Inverclyde
  East Dunbartonshire
  West Dunbartonshire
  Argyll and Bute
  Stirling

Strathclyde (ويلزية: Ystrad Clud, "valley of the Clyde"), also known as Cumbria,[1] was a Brittonic kingdom in northern Britain during the Middle Ages. It comprised parts of what is now southern Scotland and North West England, a region the Welsh tribes referred to as Yr Hen Ogledd (“the Old North"). At its greatest extent in the 10th century, it stretched from Loch Lomond to the River Eamont at Penrith.[1] Strathclyde seems to have been annexed by the Goidelic-speaking Kingdom of Alba in the 11th century, becoming part of the emerging Kingdom of Scotland.

In its early days it was called the kingdom of Alt Clud, the Brittonic name of its capital, and it controlled the region around Dumbarton Rock.[2] This kingdom emerged during Britain's post-Roman period and may have been founded by the Damnonii people. After the sack of Dumbarton by a Viking army from Dublin in 870, the capital seems to have moved to Govan and the kingdom became known as Strathclyde. It expanded south to the Cumbrian Mountains, into the former lands of Rheged. The neighbouring Anglo-Saxons called this enlarged kingdom Cumbraland.[1] We do not know what the inhabitants called their polity, though it may have been referred to as “Cumbria.”[3]

The language of Strathclyde is known as Cumbric, which was closely related to Old Welsh. Its inhabitants were referred to as Cumbrians. There was some later settlement by Vikings or Norse–Gaels