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The Present and the Past in Medieval Irish Chronicles (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,619
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The Present and the Past in Medieval Irish Chronicles (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in Celtic History
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A new analysis of a vital source for the history of Ireland and
Scotland in the middle ages. Ireland has the most substantial
corpus of annalistic chronicles for the early period in western
Europe. They are crucial sources for understanding the Gaelic world
of Ireland and Scotland, and offer insights into contacts with the
wider Christian world. However, there is still a high degree of
uncertainty about their development, production, and location prior
to 1100, which makes it difficult to draw sound conclusions from
them. This book analyses the principal Irish chronicles, especially
the "Annals of Ulster", "Annals of Tigernach", and the Chronicum
Scotorum, identifying their inter-relationships, the main changes
to the texts, and the centres where they were written in the tenth
and eleventh centuries - a significant but neglected period. The
detailed study enables the author to argue that the chroniclers
were in contact with each other, exchanging written notices of
events, and that therefore the chronicle texts reflect the social
connections of the Irish ecclesiastical and secular elites. The
author also considers how the sections describing the early
Christian period (approximately 431 to 730 AD) were altered by
subsequent chroniclers; by focussing on the inclusion of material
on Mediterranean events as well as on Gaelic kings, and by
comparing the chronicles with other contemporary texts, he
reconstructs the chronicles' contents and chronology at different
times, showing how the accounts were altered to reflect and promote
certain views of history. Thus, while enabling readers to evaluate
the sources more effectively, he also demonstrates that the
chronicles were sophisticated and significant documents in
themselves, reflecting different facets of contemporary medieval
society and their shifting attitudes to creating and changing
accounts of the past. Dr Nicholas Evans is an Honorary Research
Fellow at the University of Glasgow.
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