The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1963, Qupperneq 18

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1963, Qupperneq 18
16 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER 1963 seem to have constituted a separate professional class in Ireland during this period. It was their duty to (a) re- cord the achievements, wars and triumphs of kings, princes and chiefs; (b) preserve the genealogies and define the rights of the noble families; (c) as- certain and set forth the limits and extent of the sub-kingdoms and ter- ritories ruled over by the princes and chiefs. It may be of interest to quote a few names of great personalities who have studied under Irish teachers. St. Os- wald (d. 642), King of Bernicia, Northumberland studied ait the Irish school in Iona Island. He brought monks with hint from Iona and christianized his subjects. He ruled from 605 to 641. His close alliance with the Celtic church is the character- istic feature of his reign. He assigned to St. Aidan, Lindisfarne as his See. Aldfrith, king of Northumberland near the end of the seventh century, studied in Ireland. Archbishop Egbert, one of the fathers of die Anglo-Saxon church, also studied in Ireland at the time he lived in the Irish Cloister of Rathmel- sigi, or Milford, in the county of Louth. St. Dunstan (909-988) Arch- bishop of Canterbury and reformer of monastic life, king in all but name in the reign of Edred, was educated by the Irish monks of Glastonbury, Eng- land. St. Dunstan was one of the most highly educated men in England. Be- sides the usual education acquired by noblemen, he was proficient in paint- ing, calligraphy, making musical in- struments, bellfounding and as a com- poser of music. Dagbert II, afterwards king of Austria, sought and obtained education at Slane in Ireland for many years previous .to his call to the throne. Gertrude, the Abbess of Nivelles in Belgium, in the seventh century is said to have sent to Ireland for books and to have had the Irish Saints, Faillan and Ultan as her advisers. Alcuin, an Englishman, who was renowned in his age for learning, was the confidant, instructor and adviser of Charlemagne. He was the head of the court school which Charlemagne established in Aachen. He studied under Colgu in Ireland as well as under Archbishop Egbert in England. Many Irish scholars were famous for their knowledge and literary achieve- ments. Cummian, Abbot and bishop, combated .the errors about the pascal computations with an extent of learn- ing and wealth of knowledge amazing in a monk of the seventh century. Di- cuil, who wrote the best universal geo- graphy in the ninth century was edu- cated at Clonmacnois; while Fargal, the Abbot of Aghaboe, was even in those far off days teaching that the earth is round, centuries ahead of Copernicus (1473-1543), the Polish- German. The First Wave of Emigration from Norway to the West The Northmen commenced their raids in England and Ireland in 795 A.D. The waters which had been Ire- land’s protection for centuries, now be- came the highroads of the invaders. It seems certain .that the Norsemen had taken possession of the Scottish Islands before that date. Gradually they took possession of coastal places in Ireland, which first were only ports of call and markets, but later became stockaded enclosures. These places gradually grew into towns, the first towns in Ireland. Several times the Norsemen were driven away by the Irish, only to return again to establish a firm hold on the coastal towns. The first of the permanent places occupied by the Norsemen was Dublin (Dubh-
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