Wars Of The Irish Kings: A Thousand Years Of Struggle, From The Age Of Myth Through The Reign Of Queen Elizabeth I

$37.65 New In stock Publisher: Crown
SKU: DADAX0812932331
ISBN : 9780812932331
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Wars of the Irish Kings: A Thousand Years of Struggle, from the Age of Myth through the Reign of Queen Elizabeth I

Wars of the Irish Kings: A Thousand Years of Struggle, from the Age of Myth through the Reign of Queen Elizabeth I

For the first thousand years of its history, Ireland was shaped by its monasteries and its wars. The artistic flourishing of the monasteries has received a good deal of attention, but the violent and varied wars have in recent years gone unremembered. In Wars of the Irish Kings, David Willis McCullough has turned back to the earliest accounts of these struggles to present a rich tapestry of Ireland's fight for its identity.Beginning with the legends of ancient wars and warriors, moving through a time when history and storytelling were not separate crafts, into a time when history was as much propaganda as fact, Wars of the Irish Kings tells of tribal battles, foreign invasions, Viking raids, family feuds, wars between rival Irish kingdoms, and wars of rebellion against the English.This collection is peopled with familiar names: Cuchulain, Finn MacCool, Brian Boru, Mad King Sweeney, Strongbow, Edward and Robert Bruce, Queen Elizabeth I and Lord Essex, Hugh O'Donnell, and Hugh O'Neill.Battles formed the legends and history of the land: the Da Dannan meet the Fir Bolgs near Sligo, Brian Boru faces the Vikings at Clontarf in Dublin Bay, High King Rory O'Connor confronts the English invaders near Waterford, O'Briens battle the English (and other O'Briens) at Dysert O'Dea near Limerick, guns are carried for the first time in battle at Knockdoe near Galway, the Bruces from Scotland and their Irish allies overwhelm the English at Connor in Ulster, and Hugh O'Neill ambushes General Bagenal near Armagh. The book ends near Cork in 1601 when the English defeat O'Neill and his Spanish allies at Kinsale.Common people as well as kings appear in these pages. A foot soldier in the early days of gunpowder accidentally sets off a disastrous explosion, a harper's disembodied head is sent by error to the king of England, who displays it as that of the king of Ireland, and a Welsh camp follower named Alice is given the job of executing Irish captives during the English invasion.The sources for these stories and many more range from ancient manuscripts telling of mythical battles to a seventeenth-century siege diary. There are excerpts from such Irish literary masterpieces as The Cattle Raid of Cooley (The Tain), the monumental Annals of the Four Masters, passages from Gerald of Wales's account of the English conquest in the twelfth century, pages from an Icelandic saga, and even a blistering letter from Queen Elizabeth I to her inept commander in Ireland ("You do but piece up a hollow peace . . . ").The result is a surprisingly immediate and stunning portrait of an all-but-forgotten time that forged the Ireland to come.From BooklistIreland's long history of struggle against conquerors is evident in this fantastical collection of myths, stories, and legends. This is a fascinating mixture of mythology and actual historical events as recorded by monks who determined what they thought were of significance: war and the activities of kings. Figures from early Irish literature--Cuchulain, Finn MacCool, and St. Patrick the snake remover--are among the heroes doing battle against a succession of invaders, from the Vikings and the Scots to the British. The Irish love of storytelling and a real history of resistance to conquerors are woven into these lushly told tales: gods and mortals engaged in petty jealousies and grand revenge, a king foretelling the future by placing a thumb under his knowledge tooth, and enemies disarmed by sorcery. Each section is introduced with historical background information to help the reader sort fact from myth, as much as can be done, but with a decided appreciation of the exuberance of the stories. Lovers of Irish and medieval literature will relish this book. Vanessa BushCopyright

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