Sidor som bilder
PDF
ePub

would for want of recording, be ever children in the knowledge of times and ages, is not likely. Whatever might be the reason, this we find, that of British affairs, from the firft peopling of the island, to the coming of Julius Cæfar, nothing certain, either by tradition, history, or antient fame, hath hitherto been left us. That which we have of oldeft feeming, hath by the greater part of judicious antiquaries, been long rejected as a modern fable *."

Scripture, is certainly the only standard of all antient history, and the touchstone by which the truth of it may be tried. Heathen writers, who, unaffisted by this, attempt to fearch into antiquity, have no stay whereon to reft. Herodotus on all occafions talks familiarly of a myriad of years before his time. The Greeks, fpeaking of their own country and its inhabitants, thought it enough to say that they ever were Auroxloves, or Aborogines, and the antient Irish denominated themselves Atach-tuath †• In Egypt, the priests were the poffeffors of learning, and intrufted with the public records. Heredotus, Plato and Diodorus went thither for information; when they talked of the duration of their monarchy, the round number, the priests generally affected to fpeak in, was ten thousand years ago. But they who pretended to be more exact, told Diodorus, that from their first king Ofiris to Alexander the great, were precifely 23,000 years.

The Greeks ftill knew lefs: they were totally ig norant of the hiftory of the elder ages and remote

Milton's Hiftory of England.

O Conor's State of Heathen Irish, No. XII.

countries;

countries; therefore they made their invention supply the want of the knowledge of facts,

quicquid Græcia mendax

Audet in hiftoriis

Yet this is the foundation of history impreffed on our minds at school; and with great difficulty can we unfhackle ourselves from our school education, when we come to more mature age. It is not furprizing that the Irish bards and hiftorians fhould follow the examples of the Greeks, whose fables are extolled to the skies by our tutors: and fo wanton have been our own countrymen to mislead the world in our own history, that Jofeph of Exeter, afterwards archbishop of Bourdeaux, famous in poetry and good learning, under Henry II. and Richard I. compofed a poem under the name of Cornelius Nepos, where he makes the Britons aid Hercules at the rape of Hefione, and Apollo to aid them in the Trojan war." And indeed this critick age, (fays Selden, speaking of the Welsh Brutus) can scarce any longer endure any nation, their firft fuppofed authors name, not Italus to the Italian, not Hifpalus to the Spaniard, Scota to the Scot, nor Romulus to his Rome, especially this of Brutus *."

And the very learned Gebelin expreffes himself thus, "on eft tojours etonnè quand on voit des favans auteurs s'egarer à ce point: il est vrai que les Grecs eux-mêmes font de mauvais guides fur l'origin t."

* Selden's Notes on Drayton's Polyalbion.
+ Hiftoria Civile du Calendrier.

B 2

How

How then are we to trace the origin of Weftern nations? Are we to follow the fabulous Greeks, Græci profectò, levis, inconftans, mendax, fuperftitiofa gens femper habiti; qui argonando, veritatem novis fubinde figmentis ita immutarunt & penè obliterarunt, ut &c. &c. Or fhall we depend on dubious etymology, and adopt the fyftems of Bochart, Heydegger, Berofus Annius Viterbenfis, &c. Can it be proved that countries have always been named from chiefs, princes and dukes, in preference to the fituation, features, or produce of the foil? No-the contrary appears in ten thousand inftances. What then is to be our guide? The fureft, is the language, laws, religion and cuftoms of the people, compared with thofe of other nations; "le langue d'une nation," fays Fourmont, "eft tojours le plus reconnoiffable de fes monumens; par elle on apprend fes antiquitez, on découvre fon origine."

It is by this never failing touchftone, that our great and impartial antiquary Lhwyd, takes upon him to declare, that the antient Scots of Ireland, were diftinct from the Britons of the fame kingdom; and that one may obferve in Cornwall, from the names of places, that another people once poffeffed that country; as one may from the names of places in fome parts of Wales, gather, that the Irish nation once inhabited there, particularly in Brecknockshire and Caermarthenshire +.

By the fame guide, I judge that the antient history of Ireland, is grounded on fact, that they are the

*Delphi Phæniciffantes.

Letter to Mr. Rowland, Mona Antiq. p. 342, 337.

immediate

immediate defcendants of the Pelafgi, and of the Tyrrheni, the defcendants of Atys or Atac, fon of Cotys, fon of Meon, the firft king of Lydia and Phrygia; but whence the name of Atac? from whom do the Irish call themfelves Atach-tuath? it bears the fame meaning as Peni, and both Atac and Peni in the Chaldæan language imply exiles, wanderers, Phoenicians.-Aiteac in Irish alfo means a giant, a ruftick perfon, agriculture, (whence Attica) and likewife a firft born fon. Diodorus tells us from Sanchon. that Ofiris left the care of tillage in Attica to Triptolemus, which in the Irish means no more than a tiller of the ground, i. e. Treabh-talamh; and Tarcon who headed the Pelasgi when driven by the Helenifts from Mæonia, I apprehend was fo called from Tarcon, a Hebrew word, fignifying an exile. See Plantavit's Lexicon Synon. Heb. and Chald.-In like manner Diodorus, after he has given a long detail of the genealogy of Ceres, fays it is only an allegory or figurative narration, for that it only alludes to the times, when bread corn and those fruits of the earth that are called by the fame name with the goddefs, were imported into Athens. Now this is the deity the Phoenicians worshipped at BethCar, and is the Irish Ceara or Kara, of which hereafter.

SECTION II.

The Oriental writers that have mentioned the Britannic islands, are many. Rab. Ab. Chaija, in his Sphæra mundi. Abarbanel, not only calls Ireland

B 3

land Little Britain *, but fays, that the children of Mefk and Tubal inhabited both iflands: Mefk was a name they gave to the Etrufcans, and Tubal inhabited Spain, from both which places the Irish claim colonies. Abarbanel is known to be well verfed in antient Oriental hiftories; he says, that the children of Mefk and Tubal went to dwell on the the banks of the Euphrates, but foon removed from thence, and came at length to the Great Western Ilands. From hence may be derived the name Iber or Hiber, in like manner as the children of Abraham, from paffing over the Euphrates, were called Hebrews; and it is remarkable, that if the Irish Seannachies have impofed upon us, in the date when their ancestors took the name of Hiber, they have done it with great art and cunning, making it correfpond with that of the Hebrews.

Aben Ezzra fays, (in Obadiah,) that when Joshua took poffeffion of Canaan, most of the inhabitants retired to Greece, Italy, Gaul, and to fome western iflands.

Sedor Olem mentions an old custom prevailing amongst the Jews of the fecond temple, of celebrating a great feast on the 15th and 16th days of Nifan, for the expulfion of the Magogian Scythians from Beth-fan, by Maccabeus; for, fays he, they were fo very powerful, that neither Joshua, David or Solomon, could ever extirpate them, upon which, the Scythopolians retired to Greece, and fome very far diftant western countries, with whom they always kept up a

*Hence Ptolemy calls it Little Britain: Strabo, lib. i. p. 110. British Ierna and his antient Abridger, explains it by the Britons inhabiting Ierna.

cor

« FöregåendeFortsätt »