T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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823.1 | Thunderin Jaysus Do ye think I'm dead ! | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Sat Oct 27 1990 19:37 | 27 |
| Leaprechauns have broken hearts from chasing colleens.
Welcome to the file Jos�.
Irish girls usually marry around their early to mid twenties. They are
also known to have tempers to match the colour of their hair.
Weddings in Ireland are usually conducted in church. (95% Roman
Catholic population). There is no divorce so a bad decision has
terminal implications, you live with your mistakes in Ireland.
Wedding receptions are dressed up boozing sessions for those attending
and pure hell for both mothers. But they are good-natured events and
with the right chemistry between the families the party lasts into the
next day.
There is an Irish tradition of "WAKES" for the dead. Its not as big
now as it was once. However at the wake (before the remains is removed
to the church) there is a big gathering of family and friends and a lot
of drink and food is laid on and consumed. Burials usually take place
within two to three days of the death in Ireland.
In the past Wakes were better than weddings for macabre entertainment
nowadays they are very alike, I'm still just as sick the next morning.
Snake hopes to attend a few more of these occassions yet.
|
823.2 | LANGUAGE | CORREO::RAMOS_J | | Wed Oct 31 1990 21:49 | 7 |
| When I was there I went to several small towns and everybody speak
English. Is the language Irish a dead language. I hope you understand
what I mean. I am not said that the Irish is losing thier culture.
I have a lot of respect for your culture.
SALUDOS
JOS�
|
823.3 | | TALLIS::DARCY | | Wed Oct 31 1990 23:48 | 31 |
| Jose,
A good question.
The Irish language isn't dead -> it has been hibernating now for
some 150 years. Out of a total population of about 4 million people
in Ireland, some 100,000 people consider Irish as their "first
language", and more likely, around 20,000 - 30,000 people speak
Irish as part of their everyday life.
Many more people "know" the language well enough to carry on a simple
conversation. I don't know what that figure would be - maybe 400,000?
Irish is spoken heavily in geographical pockets in Ireland, known as
Gaeltachts. If the map of Ireland represents a bear, then these
Gaeltachts are located at the paws and the head of the bear (Kerry,
Galway, Mayo, and Donegal mainly).
The Irish language is also very strong in Northern Ireland in
Nationalist areas (Derry and West Belfast), probably because the
British government does not recognize Irish at all. Today, you can
enter Belfast, get a taxi, rent a hotel room, and go out to a fine
restaurant without mentioning a word of Be/arla (English). You couldn't
due that in Galway (or could you?)
Maybe some day, the sleeping bear will awaken from his hibernation
and realize what he is missing.
"Bain triail as"
Se/oirse/
|
823.4 | Learning Irish is not all fun | MACNAS::JDOOLEY | mature wreck election | Thu Nov 01 1990 10:49 | 15 |
| Irish language is a compulsory cor subject in all schools in the
Republic and usually every student will have 12 years of Irish done
by the time he has finished school.
In spite of this the spoken language is rarely used except on
ceremonial occasions and is not held in high regard by a lot of people.
Some people feel the time would be better spent on more practical
subjects at school.This is a sign of the fierce level of competition
for jobs and university positions in Ireland.
The teaching method in schools is also to blame, putting emphasis on
the written word and not enough on the spoken,using out-of-date text
that is not relevant to todays world.In many ways the teaching of Irish
is like the teaching of Latin,where a student is expected to remember
hundreds of poems and literary passages,as well as hundreds of
grammar rules.There is not much joy in learning it.
|
823.5 | More numbers | TALLIS::DARCY | | Thu Nov 01 1990 14:22 | 4 |
| Anybody (maybe Craig) know how many active Scottish Gaelic speakers
there are? And how about the other Celtic languages?
-george
|
823.6 | Que pasa | BUZON::RAMOS_J | | Thu Nov 01 1990 16:26 | 4 |
| Is Scottish Gaelic a languages in Ireland ?
Jos�
|
823.7 | Ren� El Gringo | RUTILE::AUNGIER | Ren� Aungier, Site Telecom Mgr, DTN 885-6901, @FYO | Thu Nov 01 1990 16:52 | 30 |
| Jos�,
The Scottish Gaelic is similar in many ways to the the Irish Gaelic. I
have had conversations with Scottish Gaelic speakers and understood
almost all, there are differences but they are not too many.
The Irish language as Seoirse Darcy says is hibernating. Many young
people now a days go to all Irish schools, that is to say they follow
their education through the Iirsh language. For the most part they come
from families who do not speak a word of Irish.
While the Irish language in some peoples mind is of no practical use, I
personally would totally disagree. I had a wonderful occasion to put
this to the test in Athens, Greece almost 10 years ago. I was having a
drink in a small taverna and in walked a guy who I got talking to, from
Dublin, like myself, once I heard he spoke Irish, we immediately
changed from speaking English to Irish. A few minutes later in walked
another guy, it was obvious he was Irish, he wore a hat which indicated
he came from the Aran Islands, he spoke Iirsh, we spent a marvelous 4
days, never speaking a word of English.
Nobody understood what we said and he made me very proud when people
asked me what language I was speaking to be able to reply Irish.
There is a interest by many young people to keep our identity despite
the concept of a United Europe, and part of that is our language.
Sl�n agus beannacht
Ren� El Gringo
|
823.8 | | NOEDGE::FARRELL | Goofball | Mon Nov 05 1990 10:56 | 32 |
|
It's funny, caith me cupla la abhaile i Mbaile Atha Cliath
last week and I was thinking not too much has changed.
Then I got back to Boston yesterday afternoon and watched
a great program on PBS last night called the Story of English.
It dealt with how the british used language as a political
tool and a means of ruling Ireland and discussed the effect
that Irish-English has had on the original language. Several
people who were interviewed seemed to be saying that they
believe that the Irish will use their particular version
of English as a means of self-expression in the future.
BTW, it was interesting to hear some people interviewed
in some Tropical location (Montserrat ?) whose forebears
came from Cork originally. They were coloured, yet looked
and SPOKE like Corkonians. Apparently the Cork accent and
speech mannerisms are based on Elizabethan (Liz the First)
english.
Very interesting program with, of course, plenty of praise
for Synge and Joyce.
Anois back to your regular schedule. By the way, I believe
we don't speak much Irish because of a kind of shyness
that seems to be part of the charm (and maybe the problems)
of the Irish race. We won't do things we don't feel we
can excel at.
Bernard
|
823.9 | IRISH WEDDING V IRISH WAKE | MEALA::OHARA | | Mon Nov 05 1990 12:10 | 20 |
| I presume that you the know the difference between an Irish Wedding and
a Irish Wake....
There is one less DRUNK !!!
I saw a documentary on the Irish speaking tropical Island. Its history
is as you said, the original inhabitants were from Cork in Ireland.
What happened was that, the English claimed the Island and had
plantations there. Their overseers were Irish people who were deported
for some crime (probably stealing something trivial) and were sentenced
to work on this Island for the English Landlord. Their culture was
passed on to the black natives and when they learned the English AND
Irish tongue, they did so with a Irish accent. It was a fasinating
programme as it demonstrated how a culture can be transported thousands
of miles and if the location is remote eneough it can thrive.
Rgds
Dom
|
823.10 | what?? | PULPO::RAMOS_J | | Tue Nov 06 1990 16:43 | 6 |
|
Dom
What you mean by "There is one less DRUNK !!!!"
Jos�
|
823.11 | Wake up and drink your porter. | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Wed Nov 07 1990 06:11 | 6 |
| Leaprechauns are immortal.
Jos�, THe one guy at the wake who is NOT drunk is the corpse.
Snake's alive.
|
823.12 | | MACNAS::DKEATING | Eamon Dunphy for President! | Wed Nov 07 1990 07:37 | 11 |
| .9� I presume that you the know the difference between an Irish Wedding and
.9� a Irish Wake....
Well...in an Irish wedding the main man has some some chance of an
after life...whereas in the case of a wedding he has NO chance!
Olig...
:-):-):-):-) :-) :-):-) :-) :-):-) :-) :-):-) :-) :-):-) :-) :-):-) :-) :-)
|
823.13 | Re .5 More Numbers | IOSG::HUGHES | | Wed Nov 07 1990 11:17 | 28 |
|
R.e .5 More numbers.
>>>Anybody (maybe Craig) know how many active Scottish speakers there are? And
how about the other Celtic languages?
Some figures: (bearing in mind that census figures don't include people not
resident in the u.k.)
Scots Gaelic: 79,000 (approx 1.6% of the population of Scotland) claimed to
speak Scots Gaelic in the 1981 census.
Gaeilige (N.Ireland) approx. 60,000 (estimate)
Kernewek (Cornish) - approx 50-100 people can converse freely in Cornish. This
is due to a linguistic revival in the language. The last native speaker died in
the nineteenth century.
Welsh - In 1981 census 503,550 people claimed to speak Welsh - 19% of the
population of Wales.
Breton - 600,000 speakers.
Manx Gaelic - not sure. No native speakers left.
HTH,
Catrin
|
823.14 | news | BUZON::RAMOS_J | | Wed Nov 07 1990 17:01 | 5 |
| Today newspaper came out an article about Ireland. The article spoke
about having election and about the referendum they had about divorce.
We heard a lot of Northern Ireland but little of Ireland. News travel
slow about Ireland but violence in Northern Ireland we receive it
within 24 hours.
|
823.15 | flag | BUZON::RAMOS_J | | Wed Nov 07 1990 17:10 | 2 |
| Does the Irish flag has a story behind it ? How did the flag came to it's
existence ?
|
823.16 | A hi-story. | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Wed Nov 07 1990 17:50 | 58 |
| Leaprechauns say yes.
Originally Ireland was a group of Celtic Kingdoms up to 1170. Then the
Normans invaded and set up their own kingdom as a sub-kingdom of the
English kingdom. This situation obtained until 1800 even though the
kingdoms of England and Scotland had been united in 1603 approx. The
principality of Wales was also sub-sumed into this greater kingdom but
Ireland maintained a "separateness" with its own parliament even though
it was subservient to the English crown and maintained as such by force
of English arms.
The Irish Flag is actually A gold coloured Harp on a green background.
This is the original flag of the country (indeed the president's ensign
is a gold harp on a blue background.)
In 1800 the Second Act of Union was passed by the British Parliament in
London. When they did this the abolished the the Irish Parliament and
decided that Ireland was part of a new entity called Great Britain.
In so doing the modified the "Union Flag" into the "Union Jack" as it
is now known. This modification was the addition of two diagonal red
bars. You see the British version of the Irish flag was considered to
be St. Patrick's cross which is similar to the Scottish flag of St.
Andrew's cross. They cosidered the flag to be two diagonal red bars
on a white background. (This subject is called heraldry by the way).
However shortly before this decision was made for us by the British in
1800 a new form of government had just emerged on the planet called
republicanism where the divine right of monarchs was tossed aside and
replaced by the will of the people. The Irish had completely turned
over to the gospel of Republicanism (led for the most part by the
protestant community of Dublin and the North East). They had staged
a rebellious uprising in 1798 and had earlier tried to land a massive
French army in Co. Cork.
This was a time of remarkable upheaval. The flag at this time was as
I earlier described it, gold Harp on a green background. There was no
way the new flag of Great Britain was going to accept a symbol of
rebellion and republicanism.
However the french had also invented a new flag a tricolour. THere was
a new fashion for this type of banner in the world in the early part of
the 19th century. In Ireland it was flaunted first in the late 1830's
I believe. Green and Orange to represent the two traditions of the
island. White was chosen only because it was a good colour to put in
between the other two as in the French model. Later this was to be
interpreted as a symbol of peace between the two traditions. This only
became the case when the protestant tradition was divided from the
republican ethos it had espoused by judicious doses of religious
attachment to the protestantness of the U.K. throne and through liberal
encouragement of industry in protestant communities.
Thus the great experiment of the 1790's in Ireland was destroyed, it
will take many more years to re-build that which was torn apart and
later cemented into a partition.
Snake illustrates.
|
823.17 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Thu Nov 08 1990 04:38 | 34 |
| Re .16:
> The Irish Flag is actually A gold coloured Harp on a green background.
> This is the original flag of the country (indeed the president's ensign
Mike, I thought that this was the coat of arms of Leinster (which is
why the coat of arms of Ireland has a blue background so that Leinster
would not be confused with the whole country...). When was the
distinction brought between the two?
Incidentally, about the French flag, the reason why it is blue,
white and red goes back to the first years of the French revolution
when there was still a constitutional monarchy instead of the republic
which followed. The French royal flag of the time of absolute monarchy
was white with three gold lilly flowers. During the revolution the city
of Paris played a proeminent part and as the coat of arms of Paris has
a blue and red background, the new flag was devised as a symbol of the
union of the new constitutional monarchy and the capital after the king
had been brought back from Versailles to Paris (Versailles had become a
symbol of absolutism and originally the reason why Louis XIV moved
there was to be out of reach of the Parisian mob, he had never
forgotten that he had to flee out of Paris when he was 8 or 10 during
the rebellion called la Fronde). Not long after, the king was
overthrown, and eventually beheaded...
Re .13:
> Breton - 600,000 speakers.
Catrin, where does that figure come from? The French census forms sure
don't have a question about native language, everybody is supposed to
speak French... I have seen some other figures (circulated in the 70s
by some militant Breton speaking organizations, so they might be
biased) which mentionned 2 millions fluent speakers and 4 more millions
able to understand the language. What I'm interested in is the sources
of these figures. Do you have some info about it?
Denis.
|
823.18 | voting | BUZON::RAMOS_J | | Wed Nov 28 1990 17:21 | 5 |
| I like know when the people in Ireland go voting ? Do they chose a leader
ever 5 years and they vote directly for the leader, also is the system
different from U.S. and Great Britain.
Jos�
|
823.19 | Fait Accompli - embellished | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Thu Nov 29 1990 05:55 | 38 |
| Leaprechauns know who the real leaders are.
The Irish Constitution provides for three types of election.
1. The "real" election or as its known here as the General Election.
This election decides the shape of the government. The maximun term of
office of a gvmt. is 5 years. Elections for gvmt. can happen much more
frequently if the gvmt. is unstable (e.g. loses an important vote in
the parliament). The Prime Minister (Taoiseach) is the boss of all
bosses.
In this general election you vote to elect local members of parliament
in your own constituency only. There will be a minimum of three and a
maximum of five per constituency. (We are over-represented by 80%).
Depending on the result the parties then decide in parliament who is to
be the leader. The majority vote elects the Taoiseach. The canditates
for taoiseach are selected by the parliamentary party (elected members
of parlaiment of that party) , but this will always have been
done long before the election.
2. The Presidential election. This can be quiet a rare event. The
office of the president is only a figurehead role with little power.
A president:s term is 7 years and they may have two terms only.
If the parliament agrees on a single canditate (nominations require the
support of twenty parliamentarians) then there is no election.
3. Local elections for the appointment of local gvmt. representatives.
These reps. have no power. The local gvmt. civil service wield the
power and they hold most of that from the central gvmt. department of
the environment. These representatives provide a talking shop where
mgmt. decisions are lambasted or praised and in this way the people
think that mgmt. hears what the people have to say. (You see most
people think that their local representatives direct and manage the
affairs of local gvmt. when if fact they are virtually powerless to
do anything about it).
Snake has a weather eye on the politicians.
|
823.20 | LOCAL GOVT - THE BUFFER BETWEEN OFFICALS & PEOPLE | MEALA::OHARA | | Wed Dec 05 1990 08:39 | 23 |
| RE MIKES LAST NOTE AND LOCAL GOVT.
I am one of the much maligned local representative. They act (in
business terms) like a Board of Directors but we can't fire the CEO !
The officals cannot adopt policy without or approval but if we do not
approve we are disbanded.
My own view is that we are the whipping boys for the decision which are
made by officals. We rubber stamp their work simply because we have no
option. We can debate until the "cows come home" but at the end of the
day we effect little or no change is the officals original request. We
must take budgets as they are presented as we don't have any facilities
to propose alternative figures.
BUT, come election time and we are blamed for everything from a cracked
pavement to the the colour of a public building.
For all this we get paid $30 a month.
rgds
Dom
|
823.21 | EL Se�or | PULPO::RAMOS_J | | Thu Dec 06 1990 20:19 | 6 |
| > The officals cannot adopt policy without or approval but if we do not
approve we are disbanded.
Dom, can you explain this a little more ? Also you earn $30 a month
is this a part time job or full ?
|
823.22 | oldest church | PULPO::RAMOS_J | | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:34 | 4 |
| Can someone tell me the oldest church in Ireland ? What year it what
build and some imformation ?
Jos�
|
823.23 | The new stuff is old | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Fri Feb 01 1991 06:55 | 20 |
| Leaprechauns cannot be specific
THe oldest structure in Ireland is Newgrange tomb which because of its
orientation with the Sun had a religious purpose, is about 5000 to 6000
years old.
Since christian times the oldest structure would appear to Gallearus's
church in Co. Kerry. It dates from the sixth or sevent century and is
very tiny. Around the same time a bunch of monks also lived on the
most westerly point of Europe on a craggy inhospitable rock off the
coast od Co. Kerry called Skellig Michael. Their beehive shaped stone
cells still exist.
In most cases in Ireland later church structures were constructed on
top of the ancient religious sites. Some of these newer structures date
back as far as the year 800 to 900 and they are to be found all over
the country.
Snakes were victims of early Irish christian genocide.
|
823.24 | | FSOA::KSULLIVAN | | Fri Feb 01 1991 10:45 | 5 |
| The strong of heart (and pure of mind??) always survive though.......
M. (Suffering U.S. media war hype).
|
823.25 | ST.Brendan | BUZON::RAMOS_J | | Tue Mar 05 1991 17:52 | 6 |
| Can someone verify a story of St. Brendan who sailed from Ireland
to Central America, they say that he the first to land in the New
World.
Jose
|
823.26 | An Irish Air | VAXUUM::WALTERS | | Thu Mar 07 1991 17:01 | 23 |
| One day, the monks of Clonmacnoise were holding a meeting on the floor
of their church, and as they were at their deliberations there, they
saw a ship sailing over them in the air, going as if it were on the
sea. When the crew of the ship saw the meeting, and the inhabited land
below them, they dropped anchor and the anchor came right down on the
floor of the church, and the priests seized it.
A man came down out of the ship after the anchor, and he was swimming
as if he were in the water, until he reached the anchor; and they were
dragging him down then. "For God's sake let me go!" said he, "for you
are drowning me." Then he left them, swimming in the air as before,
taking his anchor with him.
Irish, 14th/15th Century
Author unknown, translated by
K. H. Jackson.
So you see Jose, the Brendan myth must be untrue - why would the Irish
*sail* to America, when they had already invented airships? ;-)
Regards,
Colin
|
823.27 | What else is there to do ? | BONNET::HARVEY | Floccinaucinihilipilification is Art | Fri Mar 08 1991 02:45 | 2 |
| re .26
Now that's what I call Poteen !!
|
823.28 | A boat sailed out of Brandon in the year of 501' | ACTGSF::BURNS | I listen to CLARE FM 96.4 | Fri Mar 08 1991 07:44 | 9 |
|
It MUST be true .... Why else would Christy Moore sing about it ?? :-)
keVin
|
823.29 | catalog | CORREO::RAMOS_J | | Thu May 02 1991 19:27 | 3 |
| Where can i get a catalog of Irish history and culture ? Where i live
is hard to find good books on Ireland and can someone give an address
so i can write. thank you Jos�
|