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قراءة كتاب Phases of Irish History
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PHASES OF IRISH HISTORY
PHASES OF IRISH HISTORY |
BY EOIN MacNEILL Professor of Ancient Irish History in |
M. H. GILL & SON, LTD. |
First Edition 1919
Second Impression 1920
CONTENTS |
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page | ||
Foreword | vi | |
I. | The Ancient Irish a Celtic People | 1 |
II. | The Celtic Colonisation of Ireland and Britain | 31 |
III. | The Pre-Celtic Inhabitants of Ireland | 61 |
IV. | The Five Fifths of Ireland | 98 |
V. | Greek and Latin Writers on Pre-Christian Ireland | 133 |
VI. | Introduction of Christianity and Letters | 161 |
VII. | The Irish Kingdom in Scotland | 194 |
VIII. | Ireland's Golden Age | 222 |
IX. | The Struggle with the Norsemen | 249 |
X. | Medieval Irish Institutions | 274 |
XI. | The Norman Conquest | 300 |
XII. | The Irish Rally | 323 |
Index | 357 |
FOREWORD
The twelve chapters in this volume, delivered as lectures before public audiences in Dublin, make no pretence to form a full course of Irish history for any period. Their purpose is to correct and supplement. For the standpoint taken, no apology is necessary. Neither apathy nor antipathy can ever bring out the truth of history.
I have been guilty of some inconsistency in my spelling of early Irish names, writing sometimes earlier, sometimes later forms. In the Index, I have endeavoured to remedy this defect.
Since these chapters presume the reader's acquaintance with some general presentation of Irish history, they may be read, for the pre-Christian period, with Keating's account, for the Christian period, with any handbook of Irish history in print.
Eoin MacNeill.
I. THE ANCIENT IRISH A CELTIC PEOPLE
Every people has two distinct lines of descent—by blood and by tradition. When we consider the physical descent of a people, we regard them purely as animals. As in any breed of animals, so in a people, the tokens of physical descent are mainly physical attributes—such as stature, complexion, the shape of the skull and members, the formation of the features. When we speak of a particular race of men, if we speak accurately, we mean a collection of people whose personal appearance and bodily characters, inherited from their ancestors and perhaps modified by climate and occupation, distinguish them notably from the rest of mankind. It is important for us to be quite clear in our minds about this meaning of Race, for the word Race is often used in a very loose and very misleading way in popular writings and discussions. Thus we hear and read of the Latin races, the Teutonic race, the Anglo-Saxon race, the Celtic race. If these phrases had any value in clear thinking, they would imply that in each instance it is possible to distinguish a section of mankind which, by its inherited physical characters, differs notably from the rest of mankind. Now in not one of the instances mentioned is any such distinction known to those who have made the races of man the subject of their special study. There is no existing Latin race, no Teutonic race, no Anglo-Saxon race, and no Celtic race. Each of the groups to whom these names are popularly applied is a mixture of various races which can be