When beetles kept thudding : Geoffrey Keating's treatment of the foreign authors of his preface to Foras Feasa Ar Éirinn

Available
The embargo period has ended, and this item is now available.

Date

2014

Editor(s)

Advisor

Leighton, Cadoc D.

Supervisor

Co-Advisor

Co-Supervisor

Instructor

Source Title

Print ISSN

Electronic ISSN

Publisher

Bilkent University

Volume

Issue

Pages

Language

English

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Series

Abstract

Recent scholarship has convincingly revolutionised the interpretation of Geoffrey Keating’s Foras Feasa ar Éirinn by introducing hitherto unregarded concepts of Renaissance humanism and of Counter-Reformation thought to the study of the Tipperary scholar-priest and his outstanding historical compilation. However, hardly any serious work has been carried out with regard to Keating’s polemical preface, written under the influence of these intellectual movements. The purpose of the present dissertation is to examine Keating’s disputes with a group of Tudor authors, from Stanihurst to Davies, whom he cites and challenges in this polemical preface to Foras Feasa. Keating strove to merge Irishness with Catholicism and provided the Irish Catholic nobility, denominated as the Éireannaigh, with a renewed origin myth to enhance their illustrious character. The exclusion of the aforementioned Tudor authors and the political and religious groups which they represented from the imaginary community of the Éireannaigh has tempted Irish historians to attempt to place Keating’s polemical preface in early Stuart political history. Nevertheless, in comparison to his political ideology, Keating’s methodological concerns enjoy a more prominent place in the refutation of the authors to whom Gaelic Ireland was foreign. By virtue of these methodological concerns, Keating is also comparable to contemporary antiquarians/historians, who produced similar national histories in the vernacular in the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries. A further area of comparison, overlapping with this, is found in the historiography of the Catholic Reformation.

Course

Other identifiers

Book Title

Citation

item.page.isversionof