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Who were the Black Irish?



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The term 'Black Irish' has commonly been in circulation among Irish emigrants and their descendants for centuries. As a subject of historical discussion the subject is almost never referred to in Ireland. There are a number of different claims as to the origin of the term, none of which are possible to prove or disprove.

'Black Irish' is often a description of people of Irish origin who had dark features, black hair, dark complexion and eyes.

A quick review of Irish history reveals that the island was subject to a number of influxes of foreign people. The Celts arrived on the island about the year 500 B.C.

Whether or not this was an actual invasion or rather a more gradual migration and assimilation of their culture by the natives is open to conjecture, but there is sufficient evidence to suggest that this later explanation is more likely.

The next great influx came from Northern Europe with Viking raids occurring as early as 795 A.D. The defeat of the Vikings at the Battle of Clontarf in the year 1014 by Brian Boru marked the end of the struggle with the invaders and saw the subsequent integration of the Vikings into Irish society. The migrants became 'Gaelicized' and formed septs (a kind of clan) along Gaelic lines.

The Norman invasions of 1170 and 1172 led by Strongbow saw yet another wave of immigrants settle in the country, many of whom fiercely resisted English dominance of the island in the centuries that followed. The Plantation of Ulster in the seventeenth century saw the arrival of English and Scottish colonists in Ulster after the 'Flight of the Earls'.

Each of these immigrant groups had their own physical characteristics and all, with the exception of the Ulster Planters, assimilated to some degree into Irish society, many claiming to be 'more Irish than the Irish themselves!'

The Vikings were often referred to as the 'dark invaders' or 'black foreigners'. The Gaelic word for foreigner is 'gall' and for black (or dark) is 'dubh'.

Many of the invaders families took Gaelic names that utilized these two descriptive words. The name Doyle is in Irish 'O'Dubhghaill' which literally means 'dark foreigner' which reveals their heritage as an invading force with dark intentions.

The name Gallagher is 'O Gallchobhair' which translates as 'foreign help'. The traditional image of Vikings is of pale-skinned blond-haired invaders but their description as 'dark foreigners' may lead us to conclude that their memory in folklore does not just depend on their physical description.

The Normans were invited into Ireland by Dermot McMurrough and were led by the famous Strongbow. Normans are ultimately of French origin where black haired people are not uncommon. As with the Vikings these were viewed as a people of 'dark intentions' who ultimately colonized much of the Eastern part of the country and several larger towns.


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66 Comments

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My Irish people always referred to me as Black Irish due to my black hair and skin tones. Both my parents of Galway were dark.In the US Army, I had some Hispanic soldiers address me in Spanish. I find this a very interesting topic.
Very interesting...but my brother was just told after a DNA study that his health problem was due to his Spanish heritage. Both sides of our family have been in North America for hundreds of years primarily migrating from Ireland pre-famine era and marriages over here have been mostly with others of Irish descent.
To Ms.Gail, who asked about genetic evidence: I read an interesting book a couple years ago called "Saxons, Vikings and Celts: the Genetic Roots of Britain and Ireland." The author, in contrast to this article, found significant evidence that the "legend" of the sons of Mil emigrating from Spain to Ireland was in fact supported by the DNA found in modern Irish. My Dad is "black Irish" - black, wavy hair with green eyes.
The Roman invasion included soldiers from all over europe and the mediterranean, including black africans. Unwilling subjects alway band together against their oppressors. By the time of the roman invasion europe was already well mixed. Keep in mind also that the nordics traded with the middle east using an overland and river route through europe.
Loved it! Much more information than I'd taken away from a movie, the name of which escapes me now. Anyway, I'm intrigued by all information/history/lore Irish!
You forgot the Bicycle Irish. Bicycle Irish are people like Teddy Kennedy, and his clan. They hurt your rear end.
You forgot the Bicycle Irish. Bicycle Irish are people like Teddy Kennedy, and his clan.
Reading the other posted comments only adds to this very interesting article.
Very, very interesting. Who would have thought. The title is misleading. I was thinking more in terms of black people with Irish surnames such as Donavan McNabb.
Interesting article...many different cultures settled in Ireland. My grandfather was Thomas Stanislaus Schultz. claimed the family settled in Cork during the British/ Hessian hired invasion of Cromwell era.
Interesting article although I agree with with some of the comments that the writer got some facts wrong. Normans were'nt necessarily French and the Viking and saxon invasions from scandanavia started much earlier. I too have heard many definitions for Black Irish...one not mentioned here which I've heard a lot is that its the Irish with the wanderlust...the adventurers. Those that have moved around the world in our diaspora. I'm surprised to see nothing on that? Also it was my belief that the Irish red hair came from scandanivia invasions. And that Poland had the most red-haired people in the world...but I've nothing to support that.
never saw a black with blue eyes anywhere.
mcdolan, those Israelis are of European origin not those Israelis with origins in the Middle East. Also the original Irish were fair skinned and not the other way around, just look at the examples of hair samples found in bogs etc. your points have no facts to back them up, or at least not in anyhting I have read. I woudl be interested in what you said if you cna back it up.
I was thinking the same thing about the "emigrants" to the West Indies. Like the book, "To Hell or Barbados" by Sean O'Callaghan. Read that and weep.
I'm sorry but much of it is "vanilla."-- So much more could have been said about what was mentioned in passing... for examples, the Vikings were in two distinct waves, the latter being mainly Danes, who are often "dark"as compared to the earlier Norse, from whom we & the Scots got our red hair; the "emigrants" to the West Indies? does this refer to the 10s of thousands of Irish slaves shipped out in Cromwell's 1600s rampages???




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