155000Where did Irish Originate?

155000

Where did Irish Originate?

The earliest people identified as “Irish” date back to 2,300 years ago. Since then, the first traces of the evolution of the Celtic language into Old Irish appeared in Ireland. The island has since developed a culture, political structure, customs, and laws that are markedly different from those of Great Britain and neighboring mainland countries. I think it’s fair to say that these people are of modern Irish descent.

Who were these first Irishmen? where are they from? Nobody really knows. For a long time, historians have compared the so-called Celts to the Ratna culture that emerged in Central Europe in previous centuries and spread outward to most of Europe and even through the Balkans. Anatolia.

The Celtic language seems to have appeared at the same time as the sophisticated Ratner technique. It is, therefore, reasonable to assume that the Ratner “Celts” conquered and replaced the original inhabitants of most of Europe, including the western fringes and islands, where their Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and Breton descendants flourished until today.

The only thing that can be added is that, linguistically, the Irish Celts seem to belong to a different language family, and by extension, the ethnocultural, with the Britons of pre-Anglo-Saxon Britain also known as the Britons) of the Kyle Special branch. These Celts were of course also called Gaels.

To this day, this division still exists between two branches of the isolated Celtic language family, the Britton language family – Welsh and Breton; the Goidrian language family or Gaelic – Scottish Gaelic and Irish, in fact, the historic national language of Scotland, and the regional language of the Highlands and Islands today, and the name of the people, can actually be attributed to Irish settlers from Ulster in the 5th and 6th centuries.

So far, what is now Scotland, which the Romans called Caledonia, was inhabited by a mysterious confederation of Celtic tribes called the Picts. Little is known about the Picts, but it is generally thought that they spoke a Brighton Celtic language similar to Welsh.

Like the Angles and Saxons in England, the Gaels from Ireland became the dominant ethnolinguistic group in Scotland, likely assimilating the Picts and other Celts north of the Foyle Mountains.

Think exactly where the original Gaelic people of Ireland came from and who lived on the island before them. But beyond that, like Scots, Welsh, and English, Irish ancestry varies, and much of what old folklore says has to be taken with a grain of salt.

Besides Irish Gaelic and earlier Bronze and Stone Age settlers, there were of course other waves of immigration: Celtic Britons, there is limited evidence that British Celtic tribes established some degree in Ireland The presence of the people on the island brought attraction to the later Gaelic settlement of Scotland.

Norwegians – Just like Scotland and England, Viking raids have plagued Ireland in the Dark Ages, and at times the Vikings built up a sizable political presence in each country. In Ireland they established Dublin, Watford, and Wexford.

However, their political power was broken by Irish king Brian Boru at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014. In any case, like Scotland and England, the Vikings of Denmark, Norway and Sweden undoubtedly left their genetic imprint in Ireland.

After the invasion of Ireland in 1169 and 1171 AD, British and Norman’s colonists came to Ireland, initially settling near Dublin. Many, probably most, Irish whose surnames begin with Fitz are, at least in part, descendants of this group. They eventually adopted the Irish Gaelic language and customs, became more Irish than Irish, and when Britain imposed its Protestant Reformation on Ireland, they found themselves on the same side as Catholic Gaelic natives.

Protestant plantation owners, mainly Scots – this was an effort by the King of England after the Protestant Reformation, and later the dual monarchy of England and Scotland, to colonize Catholic Ireland and convert it into a Protestant state. Most of the settlers, mainly Scottish Presbyterians, settled on the land confiscated in Ulster.

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