The enormous mass of materials which exists for the early history of Ireland, various as they are in critical value, may be seen in Mr. O’Curry’s “Lectures on the Materials of Ancient Irish History”; and they may be conveniently studied by the general reader in the “Annals of the Four Masters,” edited by Dr. O’Donovan. But this is a mere compilation (though generally a faithful one) made about the middle of the seventeenth century from earlier sources, two of which have been published in the Rolls series. One, the “Wars of the Gaedhil with the Gaill,” is an account of the Danish wars which may have been written in the eleventh century; the other, the “Annals of Loch Ce,” is a chronicle of Irish affairs from the end of the Danish wars to 1590. The “Chronicon Scotorum” (in the same series) extends to the year 1150, and though composed in the seventeenth century is valuable from the learning of its author, Duald Mac-Firbis. The works of Colgan are to Irish church affairs what the “Annals of the Four Masters” are to Irish civil history. They contain a vast collection of translations and transcriptions of early saints’ lives, from those of Patrick downwards. Adamnan’s “Life of Columba” (admirably edited by Dr. Beeves) supplies some details to the story of the Northumbrian kingdom. Among more miscellaneous works we find the “Book of Rights,” a summary of the dues and rights of the several over-kings and under-kings, of much earlier date probably than the Norman invasion; and Cormac’s “Glossary,” attributed to the tenth century and certainly an early work, from which much may be gleaned of legal and social details, and something of the pagan religion of Ireland.
Chapter I
the English conquest of Britain
449-577
[Sidenote: Old England]
For the fatherland of the English race we must look far away from England itself. In the fifth century after the birth of Christ the one country which we know to have borne the name of Angeln or the Engleland lay within the district which is now called Sleswick, a district in the heart of the peninsula that parts the Baltic from the northern seas. Its pleasant pastures, its black-timbered homesteads, its prim little townships looking down on inlets of purple water, were then but a wild waste of heather and sand, girt along the coast with a sunless woodland broken here and there by meadows that crept down to the marshes and the sea. The dwellers in this district, however, seem to have been merely an outlying fragment of what was called the Engle or English folk, the bulk of whom lay probably in what is now Lower Hanover and Oldenburg. On one side of them the Saxons of Westphalia held the land from the Weser to the Rhine; on the other the Eastphalian Saxons stretched away to the Elbe. North again of the fragment of the English folk in Sleswick lay another kindred tribe, the Jutes, whose name is still preserved in their district