Irish people
This article's factual accuracy is disputed. |
Total population: | 85,000,000 | |
Significant populations in: |
Ireland: U.S.A.: | |
Language: | Irish, English | |
Religion: | Roman Catholic, Protestant | |
Related ethnic groups: |
Irish ethnicity is common in many western, especially commonwealth, countries. Many people are descended from Irish emigrants.
Descent
On the island of Ireland, most people consider themselves to be descended from a mixture of three broad groups: the nameless, prehistoric indigenous people(s) of the isles; the successive waves from continental Europe who arrived in the centuries BC (incorrectly referred to as the Gael); and subsequent groups (Vikings, Normans, English and Lowland Scots) who either invaded or settled Ireland from the Middle Ages onwards.
The names the ancient peoples of Ireland (creators of the Ceide Fields and Newgrange) used for themselves are not known, nor are their language(s). As late as the middle centuries of the first millennium AD the inhabitants of Ireland did not appear to have a collective name for themselves. Ireland itself was known by a number of different names – Banba, Fódla, Ériu by the islanders; Hibernia to the Romans; Ierne to the Greeks.
Likewise, the terms for people from Ireland – all from Roman sources – in the late Roman era were varied. They included Attacotti, Scoti, and Gael. This last word, derived from the Welsh gwyddell (meaning raiders), was eventually adopted by the Irish for themselves. However as a term it is on a par with Viking, as it describes an activity (raiding, piracy) and its proponents, not their actual ethnic affiliations. The general term Briton was sometimes applied to all the indigenous inhabitants of Britannias and Britanniae (i.e. of the British Isles) by the Romans.
The term Irish and Ireland is derived from the Erainn or Iverni, a people who once lived in what is now central and south Munster. Possibly their proximity to overseas trade with western Britain, Gaul and Hispania led to the name of this one people to be applied to the whole island and its inhabitants.
As may be perceived from the above, there was much ethnic diversity according to the historical inhabitants of Ireland. Or at the very least they perceived the situation as such. They included the Airgialla, Fir Ol nEchmacht, Delbhna, Fir Bolg, Érainn, Éoganacht, Mairtine, Conmaicne, Soghain and Ulaid. However, as the earliest Irish records demonstrate that they all shared a collective language and culture, in most cases these divisions may have being more apparent than real. Doubtless in many cases the divisions were of a purely dynastic or political dynamic.
The shared language and culture of these peoples is one that can be placed within the realm of the Celtic/Indo-European peoples. Yet intriguingly, recent Y-chromosome (male descent) DNA studies have shown that most Irish people (in addition to the Welsh, some Scots and English) are close genetic relatives of the Basque people, setting them all apart from most European peoples (mtDNA, or female descent shows their maternal ancestors to be of broad north European origin). No fully satisfactory explanation for this apparent contradiction between ethnic origins on the one hand, and language/culture on the other, has yet been put forth.
The Vikings were mainly Danes and Norwegians and despite their notorious reputation in Irish history, did not settle in particularly large numbers nor did they significantly alter the Irish polity. The arrival of the Normans brought Welsh, Flemish, Normans, Anglo-Saxons and Bretons, many of whom suffered the same fate as the Vikings, being assimilated in great numbers into Irish culture and polity by the 15th century. The late medieval era saw Scots gallowglass families of mixed Scots-Norse-Pict descent settle, mainly in the north; due to similarities of language and culture they too were assimilated. The Plantation of Ulster in the 17th century introduced great numbers of Scots, English as well as French Huguenots. Despite these divergent backgrounds most of their descendants consider themselves Irish first and last – even where they are aware of such ancestry – mainly due to their lengthy presence in Ireland. Historically, religion has played a more divisive role than ethnicity.
It is thought that the majority of the Irish population is descended from the initial settlers who arrived after the end of the last Ice Age.
Surnames
- See also: Irish name
It is common for some Irish surnames to be anglicised, meaning that they were changed to sound more English. This usually occurred with Irish immigrants arriving in the United States during the 19th and early 20th centuries.
It is also very common for people of Gaelic origin to have surnames beginning with "O" or "Mc" (less frequently "Mac" and occasionally shortened to just "Ma" at the beginning of the name). "O" comes from Ua (originally hUa), which means "grandson", or "descendant" of a named person. For example, the descendants of High King of Ireland Brian Boru were known as the O'Brien clan. "Mc" and "Mac", both Irish and Scottish surname prefixes (the Irish and Highland Scots sharing a similar Gaelic heritage), meant "son of"; many names also begin with this. Some common surnames that begin with O are: O Niell, O Brien, O Leary, O Shaugnessy, O Donnell, O Toole, O Meara, O Malley, O Hara, and O Bradaigh. Some names that begin with Mc are: McGroyn, McGuinty, McStiofain, McDonagh, McDonald, McGuinness, McGonigle, McGuire and many others.
"Fitz" is an Irish version of the Norman-French phrase "fils" meaning son. A few names that begin with Fitz are: FitzGerald, FitzSimmons, FitzGibbons, FitzPatrick and FitzHenry. Certain names that begin with Fitz were originally Irish, but were then Normanised through intermarriages and family alliances. For example, FitzSimmons came from MacSioman; Mac Giolla Padhraig became FitzPatrick.
In the late 12th and 13th centuries Norman, Welsh, Flemish and Breton peoples arrived in Ireland at the request of King Diarmait Mac Murchada of Lenister, and took over parts of the island. During the next three hundred years, they intermarried with ruling Irish clans, adopted Irish culture and the Irish language and as the English put it "became more Irish than the Irish themselves".
Viking surnames:
- Archbold (Asbjorne)
- Calf? (Hascalf?)
- Cauley (Mac Olaf)
- Doyle (Dubh Gall)
- Harald (Haraldsson)
- Higgins (h-Uiginn, a Viking)
- MacCottor (Ottarsson)
- MacKitterick (Strigsson)
- Wood (Wode)
Norman/Norman-French surnames:
- Archdecon (le Ercedekne)
- Burke (de Burgh)
- Cheevers (La Chieve)
- Courcy (de Courcy)
- Nagle (de Nagle)
- FitzGerald (fitz Gerald)
- FitzHenry (fitz Henri)
- FitzStephen (fitz Stephen)
- Lacy (de Lacy)
- Loundon (de Loudon)
- Marmoin)
- Plunkett (Blanquet)
- Wall (de Laval)
Breton surnames:
- Brett (le Breton)
- Power (le Poer)
Flemish surnames:
- Baldwin (Baudoin)
- Fleming (le Fleming)
Welsh surnames:
- Breathnach (Welshman)
- Brannagh (Welshman)
- Caddell (ap Cadel)
- Cadogan (ap Cadwgn)
- Griffin (ap Gruffydd)
- Joyce (Sais)
- Merrick (ap Meruig)
- Penrose (ap Rhys)
- Rice (ap Rhys)
- Rerys (ap Rerys)
- Taffe (Daffydd)
Anglo-Saxon:
- Ayleward (Ailwerd)
- Barrett (Barat)
- Dolphin (Dolfin)
- Lawless (laighles)
- Sherlock (scirlog)
- Skerrett (Huscarl)
- White (Fwyte)
Normanised Gaelic surnames:
- FitzDermot (Mac Gilla Mo-Cholmoc)
- FitzPatrick (Mac Gilla Padraig)
Gaelicised Norman-era surnames:
- Mac Oisdealbhaigh (Costello - son of Josclyn de Nangle)
- Mac Feoris (Bermingham - son of Piers de Bermingham); anglicised as Corish
- Mac Gibbon (Gibbons - son of Gilbert de Burgh)
- Mac Seonin (son of John Oge de Burgh); anglicised as Jennings.
Recent history
In Northern Ireland almost half of the population are Protestant, whilst a large minority are Roman Catholic.
After Ireland became subdued by England in 1603 the English – under James I of England (reigned 1603–25), Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell (term 1653–58), William III of England (reigned 1689–1702) and their successors – began the settling of Protestant English and later Scottish colonists into Ireland, where they settled most heavily in the northern province of Ulster. However, they did not intermarry heavily or integrate with the native Irish like the Normans did centuries earlier.
Tens of thousands of native Irish were displaced during the 17th Plantations of Ireland from parts of Ulster and replaced by English and Scottish planters.
It is predominately religion, history and political differences (Irish nationalism versus British unionism) that divide the two communities, as many of the Scotch-Irish settlers are of Gaelic origin themselves and therefore related to their Irish Catholic neighbours. Conversely, most Irish people would have at least some English or Scottish ancestry.
In 1921, with the formation of the Irish Free State, six counties in the northeast remained in the United Kingdom as Northern Ireland.
"Ulster-Irish" surnames tend to differ based on which community families originate from. Ulster Protestants tend to have either English or Scottish surnames while Irish Catholics tend to have Irish surnames, although this is not always the case.
Irish diaspora
The Irish diaspora consists of Irish emigrants and their descendants in countries such as the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Argentina, South Africa and nations of the Caribbean. The diaspora contains over 80 million people.
There are also large Irish communities in some mainland European countries as well as Japan, Argentina and Brazil. The classic image of an Irish immigrant is led occasionally by racist and anti-Catholic stereotypes. Irish Americans number over 44 million. They are the second largest ethnic group in the U.S., after German Americans. Large numbers of Irish people immigrated to Latin America in the 18th and 19th centuries. Their descendents include Che Guevara and Bernardo O'Higgins.
Notable Irish people (selection)
- Brian Boru - King of Munster and High King of Ireland, killed 1014
- Diarmait mac Mail na mBo - King of Leinster, killed 1072
- Echmarcach mac Ragnaill, King of Dublin, ruler of the Irish Sea, died after 1061
- Johannes Scotus Eriugena, philosopher, died 877
- Maelruanaidh Mor mac Tadg, founder of the kingdom of Moylurg, fl. 956
- Niall of the Nine Hostages - ancestor of many Irish dynastys; died c.450/455
- Bertie Ahern - Irish Taoiseach since 1997
- Matthew Aylmer, 1st Baron Aylmer - Admiral in British navy, died 1720
- Pierce Brosnan - actor, played James Bond 1994-2005
- James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde - stateman and solider, died 1688
- Michael Collins (Irish leader) - rebel and politician
- Sir Eyre Coote, Commander-in-Chief, British forces, India; died 1783
- Olaf III Guthfrithson, King of Dublin, died 941
- Thomas Connellan - composer, died 1698
- The Corrs - Irish traditional/pop band
- Augusta, Lady Gregory - playwright, co-founder of Abbey Theatre, died 1932
- Colin Farrell, actor, born 1976
- Bob Geldof - singer and activist, born 1954
- Bridget Dowling Hitler - sister-in-law of Adolf Hitler
- James Hoban - designer of the White House, died 1831
- Sir William Johnson - Indian Agent in Colonial America, died 1774
- Geoffrey Keating - historian, died 1643
- Francis Ledwidge - poet and political activist, killed in action 1917
- Phil Lynott - singer-songwriter and rock star, died 1986
- Mary McAleese - President of Ireland since 1997
- Dubhaltach MacFhirbhisigh - historian and genealogist, murdered 1671
- Dermot MacMurrough - King of Leinster, invited Normans to Ireland; died 1171.
- Paddy Moloney - composer and founder of The Chieftains
- Christy Moore - leading Irish singer-songwriter
- Samantha Mumba, actress and pop star, born 1983
- Dáibhí Ó Bruadair, one of the last of the Bardic poets, died 1698
- Hugh Roe O'Donnell, last de facto Prince of Tir Connall, assasinated 1602
- William O'Dwyer - Irish-born mayor of New York City
- Turlough O'Carolan - Irish harpist and composer, 1670-1738
- Grace O'Malley - Irish chieftan and pirate, c.1530-c.1603
- Felim O'Neill of Kinard - lawyer and solider, executed 1652
- Hugh O'Neill, 3rd Earl of Tyrone - last King of Tir Eoghan, died 1616
- Hugh Dubh O'Neill - solider, fl. 1650
- Owen Roe O'Neill - Irish general, died 1649
- Maureen O'Sullivan - Irish actress, Tarzan's Jane
- Sonia O'Sullivan - Olympic athlethe, born 1969
- Patrick Sarsfield, 1st Earl of Lucan, solider, died 1693
- Ernest Shackleton - Antarctic explorer, died 1922
- Bram Stoker - theatre manager and author of Dracula, died 1912
- Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnel, solier, died 1691
- Ruaidri mac Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair - last High King of Ireland, died 1198
- Lorcan Ua Tuathail - Archbishop of Dublin, died 1180
- Charles Stewart Parnell - leader of Irish Home Rule Party, died 1891
- Eamon de Valera - Irish Taoiseach and President, died 1975
- Ninette de Valois - ballerina and founder of the Royal Ballet, died 2001
- U2 - rock band
Notable people of Irish descent
- Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom
- Gruffydd ap Cynan, Prince of Gwynedd
- Howell the Good, first and last King of all Wales
- Kenneth I of Scotland, first king of Scotland
- Muhammad Ali [1] - champion heaveyweight boxer, political activist
- Rick Barry - basketball player
- George Berkeley - Idealist Pholosopher
- Anne Bonny - pirate
- Jeff Buckley - singer-songerwriter
- James J. Braddock - heavyweight boxing champion
- Billy Caffrey - Founder, Wicklow Shillelaghs, Ltd.
- James Cagney - American movie actor
- Mariah Carey - pop star
- George Carlin - American comedian
- William Harvey Carney - American Civil War hero, Medal of Honor awardee
- William Tierney Clark - English engineer
- Patrick Clancy - Dipsotic Media Commentator
- George Clooney - American actor
- Rosemary Clooney - Popular singer
- Ivonne Coll - actress and singer
- Tom Collins - Noted mixologist
- Charles Comiskey MLB player, team manager, and owner
- Cyril Connolly - English man of letters
- James J. Corbett - heavyweight boxing champion
- Bing Crosby - World-renown crooner (Der Bingle)
- Frankie Darrow - Juvenile actor
- Charles de Gaulle - French solider and politicion
- Robert De Niro - actor
- Martin R. Delany - American abolitionist
- Jack Dempsey - heavyweight boxing champion
- James Duane - Mayor of New York, son of a Galwayman
- Aloysius Duffy - Noted New York Tavern Owner
- Miguel Ferrer - actor
- Barry Fitzgerald - Noted award-winning thirsty actor
- F. Scott Fitzgerald - American novelist
- George FitzGerald - Noted physicist
- Errol Flynn - Australian actor
- Joan Fontaine - Academy Award-Winning Actress
- Harrison Ford - actor
- Henry Ford - founder of the Ford Motor Company
- Michael J. Fox - actor
- Vicente Fox - President of Mexico
- Jackie Gleason - American comedian
- Oliver Goldsmith - Author and playwright
- William Patrick Hitler - nephew of Adolf Hitler
- Sir John Johnson - American Loyalist leader
- William Joyce - aka Lord Haw-Haw; American-born Nazi propaganda broadcaster
- John F. Kennedy - former President of the United States
- Jimi Hendrix [2] - guitarist and singer-songwriter
- Douglas Hogg, 3rd Viscount Hailsham - son of a member of the Tribes of Galway
- Ferlin Husky - Country music singer
- Bill Keane - Syndicated cartoonist
- Edward Kelley - Worchester-born medium and Knight of Bohemia
- Jim Kelly - football player
- Nancy Kerrigan - figure skater
- Stephen King - American writer, descendant of the King/Mac Con Raoi clan of Galway
- Thomas Arthur Lally, French general, executed 1766
- Denis Leary - American comedian and actor
- Timothy Leary - Addictive Harvard Professor
- John Lennon - of The Beatles
- Lindsay Lohan - American actress
- Felix Magath - director of FC Bayern Munich
- Bryan Magee - British media commentator and author
- Willy McCovey - San Francisco Giants first baseman
- Gil McDougal - N.Y. Yankee shortstop
- Patrice MacMahon, duc de Magenta - French General and President of France
- Owney Madden - Irish American gangster
- George McGovern - Anti-war Presidential candidate
- Tug McGraw - Baseball relief pitcher
- John McEnroe - tennis player
- Dalton McGuinty - Premier of Ontario
- Mark McGwire - baseball player
- Kevin McHale - basketball player
- Ed McMahon - TV personality
- Mickey Mantle - N.Y. Yankee outfielder
- Michael Moore - American filmmaker
- Terry Moran - Proprietor of Cois Tine Gaidhlig pub in Kincaid, Alaska
- Paul Morphy - First U.S. Chess Champion
- Tommy Morrison - heavyweight boxing champion
- Sean Mott - Champion Bumble Puppy Player
- Brian Mulroney - former Prime Minister of Canada
- Bill Murray - American actor
- Jack Nicholson - American actor
- Dion O'Banion - Successful businessman
- Álvaro Obregón - President of Mexico
- Conan O'Brien - American comedian
- Pat O'Brien - American movie actor
- Richard O'Connor - WWII British General
- Juan O'Gorman - Mexican artist
- Bernardo O'Higgins - South American revolutionary, first Chilean head of state
- Georgia O'Keeffe - American artist
- Ana María O'Neill - women's right's activist
- Eugene O'Neill - Playwright "Long Day's Journey Into Night"
- Joseph Cornelius O'Rourke - Russian General
- Gregory Peck - American actor
- Regis Philbin - American television personality
- Anthony Quinn - Mexican-born American actor
- Ronald Reagan - President of the United States
- Andy Rooney - Liberal media commentator
- Annie Rooney - Self-made media celebrity
- Mickey Rourke - Star of movie "Barfly"
- Nolan Ryan - baseball player
- Keeley Smith - Popular singer
- John L. Sullivan - heavyweight boxing champion
- Gene Tunney - heavyweight boxing champion
- Spencer Tracy - American actor
- Terry Walsh - Police Chief, New York City, 1897 - 1911
See also
- List of Ireland-related topics
- History of Ireland
- Republic of Ireland
- Northern Ireland
- Kingdom of Ireland
- The Ireland Funds
- Irish Mexicans
- Black Irish