History-PreHistory
The earliest settlers arrived around 7,000 BC in
the mesolithic or middle stone-age period. They arrived in the
north across the narrow strait from Britain. These people were
mainly hunters.Colonists of the neolithic, or new stone-age,
period reached Ireland around 3,000 BC. These were farmers who
raised animals and cultivated the soil. Many remnants of their
civilization - houses, pottery, implements - have been excavated
at Lough Gur in Co. Limerick and some can be seen at the folk
park now developed around the lakeside site. The neolithic
colonists were largely self-sufficient but engaged in a limited
form of trading in products such as axe-heads.
Many of their religious monuments have survived,
the most impressive of which is the great megalithic tomb at
Newgrange in Co. Meath.Prospectors and metalworkers arrived about
2,000 BC. Metal deposits were discovered and soon bronze and gold
objects were being manufactured. Many artifacts made by these
bronze-age people have been found, among them axe-heads, pottery
and jewellery. About 1,200 BC another movement of people reached
Ireland, producing an even greater variety of weapons and
artifacts. A common type of dwelling in use at this time was the crannóg,
an artificial island, pallisaded on all sides, constructed in the
middle of a lake.
The people who made the greatest impact on
Ireland were the Celts. The earliest waves of Celtic invaders may
have reached the country from central Europe as early as the 6th
century BC with subsequent groups arriving up to the time of
Christ. The Celts belonged linguistically to the great
Indo-European family. They soon came to dominate Ireland and the
earlier settlers.The Celtic culture of the La Tène civilization
- named after a Celtic site in Switzerland - reached Ireland
around the 2nd century BC.
Celtic Ireland was not unified politically, only
by culture and language. The country was divided into about 150
miniature kingdoms, each called a tuath. A minor king
ruled a tuath, subject to a more powerful king who ruled a
group of tuatha, who was in turn subject to one of the
five provincial kings. This political situation was very fluid,
with constant shifts in power among the most important
contenders.
Celtic Ireland had a simple agrarian economy. No
coins were used and the unit of exchange was the cow. People
lived on individual farms and there were no towns. Society was
rigidly stratified into classes and was regulated by the Brehon
Laws, an elaborate code of legislation based largely on the
concepts of the tuath as the political unit and the fine,
or extended family, as the social unit.
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