Divided Gaels :Gaelic Cultural Identities in Scotland and Ireland 1200-1650

3.56 ( 9 Ratings by Goodreads)
Divided Gaels

Divided Gaels :Gaelic Cultural Identities in Scotland and Ireland 1200-1650

3.56 (9 Ratings by Goodreads)
hardback
Published: 15 January, 2004
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Description

In this detailed and absorbing study, Wilson McLeod challenges the familiar view that Gaelic Scotland and Gaelic Ireland formed a cultural unit during the late middle ages and early modern period. Many commentators have emphasized the strong cultural and political ties that bound the 'sea-divided' Gaels together during this era, when Scottish Gaels supplied crucial military forces to the Gaelic Irish chiefs, and poets and learned men travelled extensively between the two countries. Dr McLeod tests this view of a unified Gaelic 'culture-province' by examination of the surviving sources, especially formal bardic poetry. Although the evidence is patchy and occasionally contradictory, he is able to show that Ireland was culturally dominant. While Scottish Gaeldom attached great significance to the Irish connection, viewing Ireland as the wellspring of historical and cultural prestige, Irish Gaeldom, McLeod argues, perceived Scotland as distant and peripheral.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780199247226
ISBN10 0199247226
Number Of Pages 302
Item Weight 467 g
Product Dimensions 145 x 224 x 20 mm
Publisher / Reseller Oxford University Press
Format hardback
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Media Reviews

A valuable study of the late medieval period which makes extensive use of bardic poetry to challenge the accepted view of Gaelic Scotland and Ireland as representing a 'culture-province' during the later middle ages. * Sheila M. Kidd, The Year's Work In Modern Language Studies *

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