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The Story Of Ireland And Her Church - From The Earliest Times To The Present Day (1899) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R873
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The Story Of Ireland And Her Church - From The Earliest Times To The Present Day (1899) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER II. HISTORICAL EPOCHS. IT is only necessary to draw
attention to a few of the more eminent pagan monarchs of the
Milesian race, and note one or two epochs in the history of the
country which in some degree are connected with the introduction of
Christianity. Almost contemporaneously with the founding of the
Milesian monarchy, the Picts settled in North Britain. The reign of
Ollamh Fodhla is considered one of the chief epochs in Irish
annals. He is said to have instituted at Tara?which at a later age
became the capital of Ireland?a triennial convention of princes,
Druids, and chiefs, at which laws were made, and the national
records kept by the bards were corrected and registered. The book
in which they were said to be registered was known in later times
as The Psalter of Tara, to which Bishop Cormac's Psalter of Cashel
was indebted for much of its contents. Laws were also made by which
trades and professions became hereditary in families, and special
coats of arms were granted to the most distinguished chiefs as a
reward of merit and an incentive to valour. The only device
hitherto borne on the Milesian banner was a dead serpent, and the
rod of Moses, which their Gadelian ancestors had adopted in Egypt.
Queen Macha of the Golden Hair and her husband Kimbay, King of
Ulster, built the famous rath and palace of Emania, about 300 years
before the Christian era. They were situated about a mile and a
half from Armagh,1 and their erection is considered by some writers
as the earliest authentic event in our national history. The large
mound and enclosures cover about eleven acres. It is now called
Navan 2 Fort, a name in which is still preserved its original
designation. This ancient palace?which was destroyed about the
middle of the fourth century?was the chief res...
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