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قراءة كتاب The Testimony of Tradition

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The Testimony of Tradition

The Testimony of Tradition

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE TESTIMONY OF TRADITION.

BY THE SAME AUTHOR.

ANCIENT AND MODERN BRITONS: a Retrospect.
2 vols., demy 8vo, 24s.

ACCOUNTS OF THE GYPSIES OF INDIA. Collected
and Edited. With Map and 2 Illustrations.
Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d.

London : Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd.

THE BRUGH OF THE BOYNE, NEW GRANGE, COUNTY MEATH. (From the South.)

THE BRUGH OF THE BOYNE, NEW GRANGE, COUNTY MEATH.
(From the South.)



TESTIMONY OF TRADITION

BY

DAVID MacRITCHIE

AUTHOR OF "ANCIENT AND MODERN BRITONS"

WITH TWENTY ILLUSTRATIONS

LONDON
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO., Limited
1890


LONDON:
PRINTED BY WOODFALL AND KINDER,
70 TO 76, LONG ACRE, W.C.




PREFACE.

A large portion of this work has already appeared in the form of a series of articles contributed to the Archæological Review (Aug.-Oct., 1889, and Jan., 1890), but these have here undergone some alteration and have been supplemented to a considerable extent.

With regard to the correctness of the deductions drawn in the following pages from the facts and traditions there stated, there may easily be a difference of opinion. And indeed one writer, Mr. Alfred Nutt, in the course of a very learned dissertation on the Development of the Fenian or Ossianic Saga,[1] has expressed his dissent from the theories advanced in the articles referred to. It would be out of place to enter here into a consideration of the grounds of Mr. Nutt's objections, even if that did not demand an undue amount of space; but it may be pointed out that the articles upon which his criticism is based only state very partially the case which even the following more enlarged version is far from presenting fully. But what is of much greater importance is, that the theory which I have here endeavoured to set forth has the peculiar advantage of possessing a tangible test of its worth. What that test is will be readily seen by every reader. If the result of future archæological excavations should be to confirm tradition (as it is needless to say the writer of these pages believes will be the case), the question then will be one, not of interpreting tradition so that it may square with current beliefs, but of modifying or altering these beliefs, where they are distinctly in disagreement with tradition.



CONTENTS.

PAGE

Prefacev

CHAPTER I.

Shetland Finns—Orkney Finnmen—Finn Localities—Kayaks and Kayak-men—An Orkney Kayak of 16961-11

CHAPTER II.

"Zee-Woners"—Piratical Mer-folk—Landsmen and Mermen— Iberian Skin-boats—Boats made by Norway Finns—"Marine People" of the Hebrides—Probable Finns in Galloway12-25

CHAPTER III.

"Inhabitants of the Isles of this Kingdom"—The Isles in the Seventeenth Century—"Barbarous Men"26-32

CHAPTER IV.

Homes of the Finns—Norwegian Suzerainty33-38

CHAPTER V.

Finnish Influence in Norway39-42

CHAPTER VI.

The Feinne—The Battle of Gawra—The Feenic Confederacy43-50

CHAPTER VII.

Feens or Cruithné—Fin in the Kingdom of the Big Men— Dwarfish Tyrants

Pages