<h2>CHAPTER X<br/> SCANDINAVIAN INFLUENCE IN IRELAND</h2>
<p>At the time of the Viking invasion of Ireland
the various provincial kingdoms were held in loose
confederation under the authority of the <i>ardrí</i> or
high king, but these kingdoms stood in constantly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
shifting relations of friendship and hostility towards
one another, and were themselves often split into
factions under rival chieftains. There was no
national army like the English <i>fyrd</i>. Rather it
consisted of a number of tribes, each commanded by
its own chief, and though the chief owed allegiance
to the king, the bond was a frail one. The tribe was
further divided into <i>septs</i> and the army was utterly
lacking in any cohesive principle. It is no wonder
that for many years the Irish showed themselves
quite unable to cope with the attacks of forces so
well organised as those of the Norse and Danish
Vikings.</p>
<p>In vivid contrast to the chaos in political and
military organisation stand the missionary enthusiasm
of the Irish church and the high level of education
and culture which prevailed among her clergy and
<i>literati</i>. In the Orkneys and the Shetlands such
names as Papa Westray or Papa Stronsay bear witness
to the presence of Irish priests or <i>papae</i> as the
Norsemen called them. Irish anchorites had at one
time settled in the Faroes (<i>v. supra</i>, p. <SPAN href="#Page_6">6</SPAN>), and
when the Norsemen first settled in Iceland (c. 870)
they found Irish monks already there. The monastic
schools of Ireland were centres of learning and
religious instruction for the whole of Western Europe,
while Irish missionaries had founded monasteries in
Italy, Switzerland, Germany and France.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Unfortunately religion and culture seem to have
been almost entirely without influence on the body
politic, and as the Vikings had at least in the early
days no respect for the religion or the learning of
the Irish nation there was nothing to prevent them
from devastating Irish monasteries and carrying off
the stores of treasured wealth which they contained.
No plunder was more easily won, and it was only
when they themselves had fallen under Christian
influences and had come to appreciate Irish literary
and artistic skill that they showed themselves
more kindly disposed towards these homes of
learning.</p>
<p>One feature must at once strike the observer who
compares the Viking settlements in Ireland with
those in England, viz. that Viking influence in
Ireland is definitely concentrated in the great coast
towns—Dublin, Wexford, Waterford, Cork and
Limerick—and the districts immediately around
them. Irish place-nomenclature bears very definite
witness to this fact. <i>Ford</i> in Strangford and
Carlingford Loughs, Waterford and Wexford is O.N.
<i>fjǫrðr</i>, a fjord, -<i>low</i> in Arklow and Wicklow is O.N.
<i>ló</i>, 'low-lying, flat-grassland, lying by the water's
edge.' The O.N. <i>ey</i>, an island, is found in Lambey,
Dalkey, Dursey Head, Ireland's Eye (for Ireland's Ey),
Howth is O.N. <i>höfuð</i>, 'a head,' Carnsore and Greenore
Point contain O.N. <i>eyrr</i>, 'a sandy point pushing out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
into the sea.' Smerwick contains the familiar O.N.
<i>vík</i> a bay or creek, while the Copeland Islands off
Belfast lough are the O.N. <i>kaupmannaeyjar</i>, 'the
merchants' islands.' All these are found on or off
the coast, while the number of Scandinavian names
found inland is extremely limited. The most interesting
perhaps is Leixlip on the Liffey, a name derived
from O.N. <i>laxahlaup</i>, 'salmon-leap.' Donegal, Fingall
and Gaultiere are Celtic names, but they mark
the presence of the northern <i>Gall</i> or foreigners,
while the -<i>ster</i> in Ulster, Leinster and Munster is
O.N. -<i>staðir</i> (pl. of -<i>staðr</i>, place, abode) suffixed to
the old Gaelic names of these provinces.</p>
<p>There was free intermarriage between Norse and
Irish (<i>v. supra</i>, p. <SPAN href="#Page_56">56</SPAN>), but the strength of the clan-system
kept the races distinct and there was no such
infiltration of the whole population as took place in
the English Danelagh. This system prevented any
such settlement of Norsemen upon their own farms
as took place in England, and the invaders lived
almost entirely in the coast towns and the districts
in their immediate neighbourhood, busying themselves
with trade and shipping.</p>
<p>Though the settlements were limited in their
extent, we must not underrate their influence on
Irish history generally. They gave the impetus there,
as elsewhere, to the growth of town life, and from
the period of Viking rule dates the origin of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
chief Irish towns. To them also was due the great
expansion, if not the birth, of Irish trade. Mention
has been made of the wealth of Limerick (<i>v. supra</i>,
p. <SPAN href="#Page_97">97</SPAN>), drawn chiefly from trade with France and
Spain, and the other towns were not behind
Limerick. The naval power of Dublin stretched from
Waterford to Dundalk, the Irish channel swarmed
with Viking fleets, and many of the shipping terms in
use in Gaelic are loan-words from the Norse.</p>
<p>It is probably to the trading activities of Vikings
from the chiefs ports of Ireland that we owe the
sprinkling of names of Norse origin which we find
along the Welsh coast from the Dee to the Severn—Great
Orm's Head, Anglesey, Ramsey I, Skokholm
Island, Flat Holme and Steep Holme, and to them
may be due the establishment of Swansea, earlier
<i>Sweinesea</i>, Haverfordwest and possibly Bideford, as
Norse colonies in the Bristol channel. We know in
later times of several Norsemen who were living in
Cardiff, Bristol, Swansea and Haverfordwest.</p>
<p>Norse influence in Ireland probably reached its
climax in the 10th century. The battle of Clontarf
offered a serious check and though there was still a
succession of Norse kings and earls in Dublin they
had to acknowledge the authority of the <i>ardrí</i>. The
line of Sigtryggr of the Silken Beard came to an end
by the middle of the 11th century, and the rulership
of Dublin fell into the hands of various Norse families<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
from other Irish settlements and from Man and the
Isles. From 1078-94 it was under the rule of the
great conqueror Godred Crovan from Man, and its
connexion with that kingdom was only severed finally
when Magnus Barefoot came on his great Western
expedition in 1103, and brought Man into direct
allegiance to the kings of Norway. Celtic influence
must have been strong in the Norse families themselves.
Several of the kings bear Gaelic names, and
it is probably from this period that such familiar
names as MacLamont or MacCalmont, MacIver, and
MacQuistan date, where the Gaelic patronymic prefix
has been added to the Norse names Lagmaðr, Ívarr
and Eysteinn. While Norse power in Dublin was on
the decline as a political force it is curious to note
that the vigorous town-life and the active commerce
instituted by the Norse settlers made that city of
ever-increasing importance as a centre of Irish life
and Irish interests generally, and there can be no
question that it was the Norsemen who really made
Dublin the capital city of Ireland.</p>
<p>The Norse element remained absolutely distinct,
not only in Dublin but also in the other cities in
which they had settled, right down to the time of
the English invasion in the 12th century. Frequent
mention is made of them in the records of the great
towns, and they often both claimed and received
privileges quite different from those accorded to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
native Irish or to the English settlers. They were
known to the latter as 'Ostmen' or 'Easterlings,' a
term which in this connexion seems to have ousted
the earlier <i>Norvagienses</i> or <i>les Norreys</i>, <i>les Norwicheis</i>.
The term 'Ostman' doubtless represents
O.N. <i>Austmaðr</i>, a man dwelling to the east. Exactly
how or where it first came to be applied to Norsemen
it is difficult to say. The word has left its mark in
Oxmanstown, earlier Ostmanstown, the district of the
city of Dublin assigned to the Ostmen by the English
invaders.</p>
<p>Learning and religion in Ireland suffered grievously
from Norse attack but not so sorely as in
England. There was never a time when so dark a
picture could have been drawn of Irish learning as
Alfred gives of the state of English learning when he
translated the <i>Pastoral Care</i>, and when once the
Vikings began to form settlements they were themselves
strongly affected by the wealth of literary and
artistic skill with which they found themselves brought
into contact. The question of Irish influence on
Norse mythology and literature is a much vexed one.
At present we are suffering from a reaction against
exaggerated claims made on its behalf some thirty
years ago, but while refusing to accept the view that
Norse legends, divine and heroic alike, are based on
a wholesale refashioning and recreating of stories
from Celtic saga-lore, it would be idle to deny that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
the contact between the two nations must have been
fertile of result and that Norse literature in form,
style and subject-matter alike, bears many marks of
Gaelic influence.</p>
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