In the Hebrides, Håkon's fleet linked up with the forces of king Magnus of Man and king Dougal of the Hebrides. After establishing control of the Hebrides, king Håkon anchored his fleet by the Isle of Arran in the Firth of Clyde, where he was approached by envoys from the Scottish king, opening peace talks which sent the kings Magnus and Dougal with 40 ships up Loch Long and into Loch Lomond with a part of the fleet to loot. The main body of the fleet moved closer to the mainland, between the islands of Cumbrae and Largs.
Håkon sailed North. His vassals Magnus and Dougal went back to their own holdings, and Håkon went to the Orkneys for the winter. Most of his leidang-fleet sailed back to Norway. Håkon fell ill while staying in the Bishop's Palace in Kirkwall and died on 15 December 1263. In 1265 negotiations between Scottish envoys and Håkon's successor, King Magnus the Law-mender led to agreement that suzerainty over the Hebrides and Man was to pass to the Scottish king, in return for a lump sum of 4000 marks and subsequently 100 marks annually in perpetuity. This was confirmed in the Treaty of Perth signed in 1266. Norway retained control over the Orkneys. Scotland also confirmed Norwegian sovereignty over Shetland and Orkney. Meanwhile, in Westminster, the first elected English parliament (Montfort's Parliament) conducts its first meeting in the Palace of Westminster, now also known as the Houses of Parliament. Before August - Future King Edward I of England escapes captivity in the hands of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester.
SODOR (the Isles, based at Peel on the Isle of Man, later to subject to England, and secondarily at Snizort on Skye, recognising Scotland) in 1275 a Scottish candidate recognising Nidaros, by 1292 taxed within Scottish church. Iona had bishops proposed as the centre of the Scottish part in 1498, established in 1617. Orkney (Kirkwall): part of Kingdom of Norway till 1468, then by marriage contract to Kingdom of Scotland (which is still its position) and province of St. Andrews, 1472; its Earl as Earl of Orkney and Caithness previously had dual allegiance to Norway and Scotland.
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