Early Medieval Ireland, 400-1200This impressive survey is the first volume in a major new six-volume series, the Longman History of Ireland, under the General Editorship of Steven G. Ellis. It offers the most up-to-date account of the early history of Ireland from the coming of Christianity to the first stages of the Norman settlement. In it, Daibhi O Croinin describes Ireland's emergence from the darkness of prehistory into the brilliant light of her 'Golden Age', as the 'Island of Saints and Scholars', and the subsequent evolution of a society comparable in achievement and sophistication with any in early medieval Europe. He examines the myths, and the reality behind them, that have gathered around Ireland's role in the formation of the 'First Europe', and he reassesses the contribution of Irish monks and scholars to that achievement. Discussions provide the social, political, religious, legal and institutional background - in many respects unique to Ireland, and very different in kind from what was going on elsewhere in Europe at the time - against which Dr O Croinin describes (for the first time in one comprehensive and authoritative volume) Ireland's transformation from a tribal society to a feudal state. |
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Page 89
... LAND AND THE LAW With partible inheritance a distinctive feature of the law , there must always have been pressure on kin - groups to provide sufficient land to maintain the legal status of ... LAND , SETTLEMENT AND ECONOMY Land and the law.
... LAND AND THE LAW With partible inheritance a distinctive feature of the law , there must always have been pressure on kin - groups to provide sufficient land to maintain the legal status of ... LAND , SETTLEMENT AND ECONOMY Land and the law.
Page 143
... land for three generations was reduced to the rank of senchléthe , the next rank above slavery . Such a person , a hereditary serf , was part of his lord's property , and if the lord sold his land or otherwise transferred ownership ...
... land for three generations was reduced to the rank of senchléthe , the next rank above slavery . Such a person , a hereditary serf , was part of his lord's property , and if the lord sold his land or otherwise transferred ownership ...
Page 144
... land in his own right , and the word used , orba ( inheritance ' ) , shows that he could pass on that land to his sons . The law in fact requires that a man possess some land if he is to have full legal status . The fintiu ( ' kin - land ...
... land in his own right , and the word used , orba ( inheritance ' ) , shows that he could pass on that land to his sons . The law in fact requires that a man possess some land if he is to have full legal status . The fintiu ( ' kin - land ...
Contents
Introduction | 8 |
The beginnings of Irish history | 14 |
Kingdoms peoples and politics AD400800 | 41 |
Copyright | |
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abbot Adomnán Aéd Anglo-Saxon annalist Annals of Ulster appear archaeological Armagh battle Bieler Binchy Bischoff bishop Book of Armagh British Cáin Celtic Charles-Edwards Christian clerics client Clonmacnois Columbanus commentary computus Connaught Cummian Dál Dál nAraidi Dál Riata death Donnchadh Dublin earliest early Irish law early medieval ecclesiastical Ériu evidence fact grammar Hiberno-Latin Iona Irish churches Irish history Irish kings Irish schools Irish society Kelly Kenney kingdom kingship land language Lapidge later Latin law texts law tract Leinster letter lord Lucas Mac Neill Maél manuscript Meath medieval Ireland monastery monastic monks Muirchertach Munster native Norse Ó Corráin Ó Cróinín O'Brien O'Connor ogam Old Irish paruchia Patrick perhaps period ploughing Plummer poem political quotation record reference remarkable rival Roman royal saint scholar script settlement seventh century sick-maintenance sixth century Sletty sources Stokes surviving Thurneysen Tírechán tradition Turlough Uí Dúnlainge Uí Néill Ulaid Viking Vita Columbae writing