Title: The history of Ireland and the Irish language
1The history of Ireland and the Irish language
2The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- We start in the late Bronze Age
- 1200 B.C. 800 B.C.
- A considerable wealth of bronze and gold is
present, an example of which is the great Clare
gold hoard
3The history of Ireland and the Irish language
A ring fort near Leacanabuaile
4The history of Ireland and the Irish language
A burial monument (dolmen) near Poulnabrone
5The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Ca. 700 B.C., the Celts arrived from parts of
Spain, Gaul and Britain - they brought the Iron Age to Ireland
6The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Under the Celtic influence, Ireland was organized
into a number of petty kingdoms, or clans - There were no urban centres, and the economic
basis of society was cattle rearing and
agriculture - The dwellings were built by the post-and-wattle
technique - Some were situated within the older protected
sites archaeologists call ring forts
7The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Irish as one of the oldest Celtic and historic
written languages of the British Isles and
Ireland has its earliest evidence preserved in
OGHAM inscriptions - There are dated from the 2nd to the 6th century
A.D.
8The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Since ca. 430 A.D. expansion of Christianity
- Traditions in the south and southeast refer to
early saints who allegedly preceded St. Patrick
- St. Patrick converted all the
- Irish to Christianity and got
- the status of national apostle
- feast day March 17
9The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- The Irish monasteries became notable centres of
learning and devotion - Irish scribes produced manuscripts written in the
clear hand known as Insular Minuscule
10The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Traditional Latin alphabet was adapted for the
native language - It is still used on road signs and public notices
throughout Ireland
11The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- The early Irish Church was strongly influenced by
the Brittonic (or Welsh) Church - Through this medium Irish came into contact with
the classical languages -
- Brittonic/Welsh Loans from Latin and Greek
(through Latin) - Massive phonological changes between the 5th and
6th centuries
12The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- ca 500 A.D. predominace of five tribal kingdoms
(Ulster, Munster, Connacht, Leinster, Meath) - Meath was eventuelly absorbed into Leinster
13The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- ca 500 A.D., five tribal kingdoms (Ulster,
Munster, Connacht, Leinster, Meath)
Munster
14The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- ca 500 A.D., five tribal kingdoms (Ulster,
Munster, Connacht, Leinster, Meath)
Ulster
Munster
15The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- ca 500 A.D., five tribal kingdoms (Ulster,
Munster, Connacht, Leinster, Meath)
Ulster
Connacht
Munster
16The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- ca 500 A.D., five tribal kingdoms (Ulster,
Munster, Connacht, Leinster, Meath)
Ulster
Connacht
Leinster
Munster
17The history of Ireland and the Irish language
Ulster Munster
The flags of the 4 provinces
Connacht Leinster
18The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- 7th 9th century, period of Old Irish
literacy - Well represented in a large number of textual
genres, as well as glosses (explanations) and
marginalia (notes on the margin of manuscript
texts) - It is the time with the widest geographical
spread of Irish speech in Ireland
19The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- High kings ruled in Ireland but with
opposition, meaning that they were not
acknowledged by a minority of provincial kings - The fact that power had been preserved at a local
level in Ireland enabled a maximum of resistance
to be made (decentralisation) - Viking invaders established maritime strongholds
(8th century)
20The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Viking contacts the result was
- lexical borrowing esp. seafaring
- 23.04.1014 Battle of Clontarf
- (outside Dublin)
- Munster vs. Leinster
- Munster won with much
- slaughter on both sides
- Vikings lost their influence
21The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Anglo-Norman invasion took place (1169 A.D.)
- Far-reaching political changes inspired the Irish
literati to undertake a new standardization of
their language - From the beginning of the 13th century, there was
a rigidly fixed written norm, often called
Classical Modern Irish, which was used as the
exclusive literary medium in Ireland and in
Gaelic-speaking Scotland for over four centuries
22The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- The Anglo-Norman Invasion led to a
nine-century-long series of adstratum contacts
between Irish and English - This included massive lexical borrowings and also
syntactic, morphological and phonological
modifications
23The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- 1264 A.D., the first Irish parliament was set up
- Anglo-Norman control was strengthened by the
creation of three new Anglo-Irish earldoms - Kildare, given to the head of the Leinster
Fitzgeralds - that of Desmond, given to the head of the Munster
Fitzgeralds - and that of Ormond, given to the head of the
Butlers, around Tipperary
24The history of Ireland and the Irish language
25The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- 15th 16th century linguistic borrowings of
popular nature (card-playing terminology) from
the continent (mostly French) - 1558 Elizabeth became Queen of England
- Her Irish policy had the distinction of having
reduced the country to obedience for the first
time since the invasion of Henry II (1169)
26The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- 1601 The Battle of Kinsale
- The Irish and the supporting
Spaniards were defeated by the English
(Lord Mountjoy) - The 1000 years old high-literary tradition of
Irish collapsed - The Irish standardised written language was
washed away
27The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Irish continued as the language of the greater
part of the rural population and, for a time, of
the servant classes in town - A general rebellion of the Irish in Ulster was
inevitable. It took place in October 1641 and
thousands of colonists were murdered or fled
28The history of Ireland and the Irish language
29The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- 1642 Gaelic Irish, Old English and royal
English settlers founded the Confederation of
Kilkenny aspiring a Catholic royalistic Ireland - in 1720 the Declaratory Act affirmed the right
of the British Parliament to legislate for
Ireland and transferred the powers of a supreme
court in Irish law cases to the British House of
Lords
30The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- Official national flag in the 18th century
- 1801 Ireland gets united with Great Britain to
the Unitded Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland(Act of Union)
31The history of Ireland and the Irish language
- 1.000.000 catholics died of starvation in The
Great Potato Famine (1846-1849) - Map shows Percent Change by County from 1841 -
1851