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Who were the Black Irish? What is the origin of the Irish with swarthy dark features?

A subject of historical discussion the subject is almost never referred to in Ireland


Irish Emigrants About to Set Sail for America from Liverpool, circa 1847
Irish Emigrants About to Set Sail for America from Liverpool, circa 1847
Photo by Google Images

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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.

Many families however integrated into Gaelic society and changed their Norman name to Gaelic and then Anglo equivalents: the Powers, the Fitzpatricks, Fitzgeralds, Devereuxs, Redmonds.


See more: Irish Ancestry , Irish Roots , Irish Genealogy , Irish History
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123 Comments

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Ron, genes in Spain are very similar to the irish, especially in the north of Spain. Blond hair and light eyes are of "recent" origin and Ireland was populated before: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080130170343.htm So, the so called "Black Irish" may be descendants of the very first irish people, and this is applicable to Wales and Scotland. In answer to: Ron "I always understood the term came about because of the Spaniards who were saved from death when the Armada was destroyed. They settled and inter-bred with the Irish thus passing on their darker, swarthy genes."
It is only during the past 20 years that the Irish nation,North and South, has suffered negatively because large numbers of Africans, legal aand illegal, who have moved within its shores.
The Battle of Clontarf is grossly overrated. The Vikings remained in control of Dublin and nearly 150 years later they were still in situ when the French Normans arrived invited by an Irishman and licenced by the Pope in Rome. People in Ireland never discuss the "Black Irish" because it's a non-subject.
theres a new lot of black irish now thanks to the EU no borders policy. no mistake where they originated from.yes,f.o its not racist when our kids are leaving home for good and being replaced by strangers.
My Dad and his brother Steve, were what we called "Black Irish" here in Boston, USA,..they had dark complexions, black hair, and my dad had a big Roman nose. Dad was a Tenor, who was voice-trained by a next door neighbor named Luigi Vena, the singer hired by Jackie Kennedy to sing at her wedding to JFK, and she called and asked him to sing at JFK's funeral. My Dads other two brothers were red-heads...I am not a geneticist, but cannot understand how one couple ( grandma Costello from Spiddal, Grandpa McDonough from Oughterard). Family legend is that Spaniards from the Armada had intervened with the gene pool.
I have often heard a reference to "A West Irish Spaniard", it means a person in Western Ireland (especially around Galway) who are descended from the Spanish. They usually have dark features.
I always understood the term came about because of the Spaniards who were saved from death when the Armada was destroyed. They settled and inter-bred with the Irish thus passing on their darker, swarthy genes.
look you people are not IRISH.you are of irish decent.unless you were born in ireland you are not one of us, having an irish name does not make u irish, the australians, kiwis or nigerians never claim to be irish, u know nothing of the troubles or the struggles that ireland faces.the only thing you have contributed to ireland is money( many thanks)other than that we REAL IRISH are embarressed by ur constant claims, grow up and fek off
hi my name is Jassica my mothers name is dorothy moore her brothers names are keith Moore,Thomas Moore her sisters are Maria Moore,sheila Moore, Sharon Moore, Their parents name are Douglas keith Moore and elizabeth moore maiden name of my grandmother is vermette. Ive been trying to find out about my grandfather Douglas keith Moore and have been unable to find any information. If anyone knows about him please leave me a msg thanks
Among the comments that I read, someone claimed that Phil Sheridan, a US Civil War general, was of Black Irish Heritage. First, I know this is not true. His family came from Cavan town in County Cavan, and they were Anglo-Irish. Second, Phil Sheridan was famous for his quotable remarks, one of them being "The Only Good Indian is a Dead Indian." The Irish Government a few years ago apologized for this remark being made by a man with Irish heritage. A better quote by Phil Sheridan is, "If I owned Texas and Hell, I would rent out Texas and live in Hell".
I am Black Irish. There is not as much mystery about us as the poorly written article and uninformed comments suggest. In the Spanish Fort in Galway, there is a Museum to the Black Irish, and it accurately portrays our origins. As far back as history goes, the Irish were likely having trade ships land on its coast, especially at Galway. The ancient Greeks called the Irish "Scoti". The Spanish came heavily and settled in various towns in and around Galway. In fact, on his first journey to the new world, Columbus stayed at the Spanish fort and prayed at the old St. Nicholas' church before his final leg across the Atlantic. The Black Irish are the one-time mixture of the Spanish and Irish around Galway, starting around the year 1,000 A.D. Spanish sailors still come to port in the west of Ireland. "Coen" is my grandmother's surname, and, although she was from Sligo, the Coens are largely found in Galway. In the Irish Jewish Musuem in Dublin, the history their tells of the first Jews in Ireland coming with the Spanish Merchants to Galway around the year 1000 AD. Coen in Hebrew means priests, and is variously spelled Cohen, etc. The British listed my Grandmother as dark swarthy on her shipping document description as she left Ireland for the US in about 1912.
Never fear Warrenpoint00 Clowngate is English and his mos famous post on this site was to accuse P.Pearse to be a racist fascist he's just a gombeen.
Smymian , thanking himself, for posting a supportive comment to himself,LOL, oh man and then the Townclowngate,aka AngloNorman, trying to convince us of their intelligence.Oh,My,God, what a bunch of sad losers.
@ Warrenpointless-double-zero: Are you so shocked that so many posters disagree with you that you have to imagine we are all 'one and the same' - pretending to be each other? I suggest you should have a 'Check-up from the Neck-up' my friend, and stop judging decent intelligent people by your own low standards.
Towngate ,another fool using many aliases, this clown has posted so many anti Irish slurs in his stupid post, that he now forgets that he is a brit, and that Ireland is an empire, what a laugh this woman,s hand bag is.Towngate, aka AngloNorman, aka Dan O longshanks, etc,etc but always a brit troll,trying to stir up tension between the Irish and American,s with their sectarian and divide and conquer agenda.Loser.




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