| Ireland - A History Shaped by Geography
Dermot O'Gara, IrishAbroad.com

Ireland's location and proximity to Britain have in large measure
shaped her history. As an island to the west of continental Europe, Ireland,
which has been inhabited for approximately 7,000 years, experienced many
incursions and invasions, resulting in a rich mixture of ancestry and traditions.
The first settlers, mostly hunters from Britain, brought a Mesolithic culture.
They were followed around 3000 BC by farmers who raised animals and cultivated
the soil. After these Neolithic settlers, around 2000 BC, came prospectors
and metal workers. By the 6th century BC the waves of Celtic
invaders from Europe began to reach the country.
While Ireland was never
unified politically by the Celts, they did generate a cultural and linguistic
unity. The introduction of Christianity in the 5th century is
traditionally credited to Saint Patrick, though there is evidence that there
were Christians on the island before his arrival.
Ireland never experienced
the barbarian invasions of the early medieval period and, partly as a result,
the 6th and 7th centuries saw a flowering of Irish
art, learning and culture centring on the Irish monasteries. Irish monks
established centre of learning and Christianity in many parts of Europe
in the period before 800 AD.
During the 9th and 10th
centuries, the Vikings regularly raided Ireland. The Vikings were also traders
and they did much to develop town life at Dublin, Cork and Waterford. Following
the defeat of the Vikings by Brian Boru, the High King of Ireland, at Clontarf
in 1014, the Vikings influence faded.
In the 12th century, such
progress as had been made towards the creation of a centralised State under
a single High King was shattered by the arrival of the Normans, who had
earlier settled in England and Wales. The Normans quickly came to control
some three-quarters of the land of Ireland, which then came under the political
authority of the King of England.
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