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Historical revisit: Goddard Henry Orpen, Ireland under the Normans, 1169–1333 (1911–20)*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Seán Duffy*
Affiliation:
Department of Medieval History, Trinity College Dublin

Extract

Almost a century after the publication, in 1911, of the first two volumes of his magnum opus (the third and fourth appeared together in 1920) Goddard Henry Orpen’s Ireland under the Normans remains controversial. The way to test this is not to read the polite comments of this generation of his successors but to go to a university library, take all four volumes off the shelf, and expose one’s eyes to the palimpsest of student marginalia added down through the decades. Pencilled emotions ranging from anger and outrage to ridicule and blasphemy litter the pages and tarnish its author’s memory, every bit as much in the reprint (dating, interestingly, from 1968) as in the original edition.

When the first two volumes, covering the period 1169-1216, were published, they were warmly greeted in certain quarters, British journals in particular carrying laudatory reviews. But in nationalist Ireland grave offence was taken not merely at some of the author’s apparently callous and hurtful statements, but at his basic thesis, a thesis which Orpen set out clearly in the preface to his first volume:

In the course of my study of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries (which has been spread over many years) … I have been led to regard the domination of the English Crown and of its ministers in Ireland, during the thirteenth century, and indeed up to the invasion of Edward Bruce in 1315, as having been much more complete than has been generally recognised, and to think that due credit has not been given to the new rulers for creating the comparative peace and order and the manifest progress and prosperity that Ireland enjoyed, during that period, wherever their rule was effective …

. . . it is, I think, manifest that the most prominent effect of the Anglo-Norman occupation was not, as has been represented, an increase of turmoil, but rather the introduction over large parts of Ireland of a measure of peace and prosperity quite unknown before.

Type
Historiography
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2000

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Footnotes

*

Ireland under the Normans, 1169–1333. By Goddard Henry Orpen. 4 vols. Pp 400, 363, 314, 343. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1911-20 (vols i-ii, 1911; vols iii-i v, 1920); reprint 1968.

References

1 Orpen, Normans, i, 7-8, 10-11.

2 Ibid., pp 201-2.

3 Ibid., p. 358.

4 Ibid., i, 309; ii, 324.

5 Ibid., i, 200.

6 Ibid., p. l97.

7 Ibid., p. 309.

8 See Martin, F.X. and Byrne, F.J. (eds), The scholar revolutionary: Eoin MacNeill, 1867-1945, and the making of the new Ireland (Shannon, 1973)Google Scholar.

9 R.S.A.I. Jn., xli (1911), pp 277-82.

10 Orpen, Normans, i, 330.

11 MacNeill, Eoin, Phases of Irish history (Dublin, 1919), p. 292Google Scholar.

12 Ibid., p.290.

13 Ibid., pp 293-4.

14 Orpen, Normans, ii, 182.

15 MacNeill, Phases, p. 240.

16 Ibid.

17 Orpen, Normans, ii, 335.

18 MacNeill, Phases, p. 240.

19 Martin & Byrne (eds), The scholar revolutionary, pp 387-90.

20 Orpen, Normans, iii, 9.

21 Studies, x (1921), pp 471-6.

22 Ibid., p. 472.

23 R.S.A.I. Jn., li (1921), pp 81-2.

24 See Lydon, James, ‘Historical revisit: Edmund Curtis, A history of medieval Ireland (1923, 1938)’ in I.H.S., xxxi, no. 124 (Nov. 1999), pp 535-48Google Scholar.

25 Bradshaw, Brendan, ‘Nationalism and historical scholarship in modern Ireland’ in I.H.S., xxvi, no. 104 (Nov. 1989), p. 350Google Scholar.

26 Curtis, Edmund, A history of medieval Ireland from 1110 to 1513 (Dublin, 1923), ForewordGoogle Scholar.

27 F.J. Byrne, ‘MacNeill the historian’ in Martin & Byrne (eds), The scholar revolutionary, p. 25.

28 Ibid., p. 27.

29 Orpen, Normans, i, 20-21.

30 Nicholls, Kenneth, Gaelic and gaelicised Ireland in the middle ages (Dublin, 1972), p. 3Google Scholar.

31 Binchy, D.A., ‘Secular institutions’ in Dillon, Myles (ed.), Early Irish society (Dublin, 1954), p. 62Google Scholar. On this matter see Corráin, Donnchadh Ó, ‘Nationality and kingship in pre-Norman Ireland’ in Moody, T.W. (ed.), Nationality and the pursuit of national independence: Historical Studies XI (Belfast, 1978), pp 135Google Scholar.

32 The song of Dermot and the earl, ed. and trans. Orpen, G.H. (Oxford, 1892)Google Scholar.

33 Orpen, Normans, i, 60-61; cf. pp 46, 51.

34 Ibid., p. 32.

35 Ibid., p. 27.

36 Ibid., p. 82.

37 Ibid., ii, 328.

38 Ibid., i, 284.

39 Ibid., ii, 33.

40 Ibid., p. 328.

41 Ibid., i, 253-4.

42 Ibid., ii, 97.

43 Warren, W.L., ‘King John and Ireland’ in Lydon, J.F. (ed.), England and Ireland in the later middle ages: essays in honour of Jocelyn Otway-Ruthven (Dublin, 1981), p. 39Google Scholar.

44 Martin, F.X., ‘John, lord of Ireland, 1185-1216’ in Cosgrove, Art (ed.), A new history of Ireland, ii: Medieval Ireland, 1169-1534 (Oxford, 1987), p. 132Google Scholar. I have attempted a reassessment in John and Ireland: the origins of England’s Irish problem’ in Church, Stephen (ed.), King John: new interpretations (Woodbridge, 1999), pp 221-45Google Scholar.

45 Orpen, Normans, ii, 319-20.

46 Ibid., iii, 163-4.

47 Ibid., p. 271.

48 Ibid., ii, 334.

49 Ibid., iii, 296.

50 Ibid., i, 219 (my italics).

51 Ibid., p. 143.