Online Encyclopedia

ERIN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 744 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ERIN  , an

ancient name for Ireland . The
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oldest form of the word is Eriu, of which Erinn is the dative case . Eriu was itself almost certainly a contraction from a still more
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primitive form Iberiu or Iveriu; for when the name of the island was written in ancient Greek it appeared as'Iovepvia (Ivernia), and in Latin as Iberio, Hiberio or
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Hibernia, the first syllable of the word Eriu being thus represented in the classical
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languages by two distinct vowel sounds separated by b or v . Of the Latin variants, Iberio is the form found in the most ancient Irish
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MSS., such as the Confession of St Patrick, and the same saint's
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Epistle to Coroticus . Further evidence to the same effect is found in the fact that the ancient Breton and Welsh names for Ireland were Ywerddon or Iverdon . In later Gaelic literature the primitive form Eriu became the dissyllable Eire; hence the Norsemen called the island the
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land of Eire, i.e . Ireland, the latter word being origin-ally pronounced in three syllables . (See IRELAND: Notices of Ireland in Greek and
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Roman writers.) Nothing is known as to the meaning of the word in any of its forms, and Whitley Stokes's
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suggestion that it may have been connected with the
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Sanskrit avara, meaning "western," is admittedly no more than conjecture . There was, indeed, a native Irish legend, worthless from the standpoint of etymology, to account for the origin of the name . According to this myth there were three kings of the Dedannans reigning in Ireland at the coming of the Milesians, named MacColl, MacKecht and MacGrena . The wife of the first was Eire, and from her the name of the country was derived . Curiously, Ireland in ancient Erse
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poetry was often called " Fodla " or " Bauba," and these were the wives of the other two kings in the legend .

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