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An agenda for Irish history, 1978-2018

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2017

Extract

The celebration of the fortieth anniversary of the two societies, the Irish Historical Society and the Ulster Society for Irish Historical Studies, suggests that, having looked backwards over the achievements of the first forty years, we may look forward to what might be done in the comparable future.

The main achievements of these societies, the promoting of objective Irish history and the maintaining of a common cultural outlook on Irish history, were secured by the admission of Ireland as a cultural entity to the international historical organisation, the Comité International des Sciences Historiques.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 1978

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References

1 A paper read to the Irish Historical Society, 10 January 1978.

2 Since 1869 the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, commonly called the Historical Manuscripts Commission, had reported on State Papers and other historical material not in the public record offices, but preserved in private custody, in England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. More recently, in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, these activities led to the setting up of the National Register of Archives, which also cooperates with Dublin-centred institutions such as the National Library of Ireland and the Library of Trinity College, Dublin, as well as with the Public Record Office of Ireland.

3 Kenney, J. F., The sources for the early history of Ireland, an introduction and guide (New York, 1929), i, 84 Google Scholar.

4 Among these were: John Francis O'Doherty (Maynooth), James Carty (National Library of Ireland), James (Séamus) Pender (Royal Irish Academy), James Johnston Auchmuty (T.C.D.), Aubrey Osborn Gwynn (U.C.D.).

5 Reference may here be made to W. A. Goligher and W. E. Thrift (T.C.D.); T. Corcoran, Mary T. Hayden, E. MacNeill, J- M. O'Sullivan (N.U.I.); R. M. Henry, J. E. Todd (Q.U.B.).

6 McNeill, W. H., A world history (London, Oxford University Press 1967), p. 492 Google Scholar. See also the following works from the same author': and publisher's series. (‘Readings in World History’): with Schuyler Houser, Mediaeval Europe (1971); with Jean W. Sedlar, Classical Chine (1970), and China, India and Japan, the Middle Period (1972); with M. R. Waldman, The Islamic World (1973). The quotation is taken frorr McNeill's review of J. M. Roberts, The Hutchinson history of the world, in The Times Lit. Supp., 27 May, 1977 p. 655.

7 Henri d'Arbois de Jubainville, Le cycle mythologique irlandais et la mythologie celtique (Paris, 1884), trans. Best, R. I., The Irish mythological cycle and Celtic mythology (Dublin, 1903)Google Scholar. MacNeill, Eoin, ‘ The authorship and structure of the Annals of Tigernach ’ in Ériu, vii (1914), pp 30113 Google Scholar, and Celtic Ireland (Dublin, 1921). See also the drafts of many unpublished memoranda on Leabhar Gabhála and on the early annals among the MacNeill papers in the Archives Department, U.C.D. (L.A.i). Thurneysen, Rudolf, ‘ Zum Lebor Gabála ’ in Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie, X (19I5), pp 384-95Google Scholar and Die irische Helden und Königsage biszum siebzehnten Jahrhundert (Hallé, Saale, 1921). O'Rahilly, T. F., Early Irish History and Mythology (Dublin, 1947)Google Scholar. Walsh, Paul, ‘The Annals attributed to Tigernach’ in I.H.S., ii (1940), pp 154-9Google Scholar; ‘The dating of the Irish Annals ’, ibid, ii (1941), pp 355–75. Kathleen Mulchrone, Bethu Phátraic, the tripartite life of Patrick (Dublin, 1939). Binchy, D. A., ‘ St. Patrick and his biographers, ancient and modern ’, in Studia Hibernica ii (1962) especially pp 70-7Google Scholar. Reference may also be made to Hughes, Kathleen, Early Christian Ireland: introduction to the sources (London, 1972), particularly on the Book of Invasions, pp 275, 281–3Google Scholar.

8 Dumville, David N., ‘ Biblical apocrypha and the early Irish: a preliminary investigation ’, in Proc. R.I.A., vol. 73, sect. C, no. 8, (1973) pp. 299–338 Google Scholar.

9 Dillon, Myles, ‘ Lebor Gabála Érenn ’ in R.S.A.I. Journ., lxxxvi (1956), pp 62–72 Google Scholar. M. A. O'Brien, ‘ Irish origin legends ’ in Dillon, Early Irish Society (Dublin, 1954), pp 36–51. Marie-Louise Sjoested, Dieux et Hèros des Celtes, trans. Myles Dillon as Gods and Heroes of the Celts, (London, 1949). Francis John Byrne, ‘Tribes and tribalism in early Ireland ’ in Eiru, xxii (1971) 128–66. The Book of Rights (Lebor na Cert) may represent a more sophisticated Munster claim to rulership than Leabhar Gabhàla based as it was on Roman concepts of conquest. By contrast counter-obligations between kings and overkings suggest a contractual relationship in the south.

10 ‘Notes on the scripts and make-up of the Book of Leinster’ in Celtica, vii (1966), pp 1–31.

11 ‘Notes on the history of Lebor na hUidre’ in R.I.A. Proc. lxv, sect. c; (1957), pp 117–37; and ‘ On the collation of Lebor na hUidre ’ in Ériu, xxv (1974), pp 147–56.

12 O'Brien, M. A. (ed.), Corpus genealogiarum Hiberniae, i (Dublin, 1962)Google Scholar.

13 The Book of Leinster (formerly known as Lebar na Nuachongbhála), edited by O. Bergin, vol. i (Dublin, 1954), R. I. Best, and M. A. O'Brien, vol. ii (1956), iii (1957), iv (1965), v (1967).

14 Cambridge, 1933.

15 R.I.A. Proc, lxvi, sect. C (1968), pp 383–400.

16 See particularly, The Administration of Ireland 1172–1377 (Dublin, 1963).