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T. F. O'Rahilly

Thomas Francis O'Rahilly (Irish: Tomás Ó Rathile; 11 November 1882 – 16 November 1953)[1] was an influential Irish scholar of the Celtic languages, particularly in the fields of historical linguistics and Irish dialects. He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy and died in Dublin in 1953. He is the creator of O'Rahilly's historical model, which has since been discredited.

Thomas Francis O'Rahilly
Tomás Ó Rathile
Born(1882-11-11)11 November 1882
Died16 November 1953(1953-11-16) (aged 71)
Known forWork in Goidelic phonology, historical linguistics
SpouseMary Buckley
Academic background
EducationUniversity College Dublin
Academic work
DisciplineLinguistics, Celtic studies
Notable worksIrish Dialects Past and Present: With Chapters on Scottish and Manx

Early years and education edit

He was born in Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland to Thomas Francis Rahilly of Ballylongford, County Kerry and Julia Mary Rahilly (née Curry) of Glin, County Limerick.[1] He was the seventh of his parents fifteen children. His younger sister was the scholar Cecile O'Rahilly.

He received his secondary education at St. Michael's College, Listowel, and later at Blackrock College in Dublin at the same time as future Irish politician Éamon de Valera.[2][3] He took an interest in Irish and Celtic languages early in his life, buying Irish language newspaper An Claidheamh Soluis with his pocket money while still a school boy.[4] De Valera commented on this unusual sight:

 
An Claideamn Soluis

If O'Rahilly had been reading Greek I would not have been too surprised; I could attempt that myself. But to be reading Gaelic from a newspaper - that was something extraordinary indeed in those days.[3]

He was educated at the Royal University of Ireland, and received his B.A. in Irish and Classics in 1905. He spent a year teaching Irish at University College Dublin, before taking up a permanent position as a clerk in the Four Courts in 1906, where he stayed until 1919.[4]

On 17 October 1918 he married Mary Buckley in Carrigtwohill, County Cork. They had no children.[5]

Academic career edit

O'Rahilly worked full-time in the Irish civil service as a clerk in the Four Courts. He founded and edited journal Gadelica: a Journal of Modern Irish Studies which "sought to pursue and promote investigation into the area of Celtic studies, including philology".[6] The journal was short-lived due to a shortage of subscriptions and four issues were published between 1912 and 1913.[1] He completed his MA thesis The Accentuation of Gaelic in 1916.[1]

Fellow Celtic languages scholar and lecturer of Trinity College, Dublin Eleanor Knott described his work during this period:

His unsurpassed knowledge of modern Irish dialects and manuscript literature was acquired in his early manhood when as a civil servant his chosen studies had perforce to be relegated to evenings, weekends and vacations. Unceasing application during this period together with recurrent attacks of influenza brought about a definite decline in his health and this should be taken into account in considering a characteristic asperity in criticising the work of other scholars.[7]

In 1919 he entered academic life in a full-time capacity upon taking up his first professorship in Irish at Trinity College, Dublin (1919-1929). He was appointed research professor in Celtic languages in 1929 at University College Cork and stayed in this position until 1935.[8] He returned to academic life in Dublin as professor of Celtic languages at University College Dublin (1935-1941). He was director of the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies from 1942 to 1947. He received an honorary degree in D.Litt.Celt. from the National University of Ireland in 1928 and D.Litt. from Trinity College, Dublin in 1948.[1]

O'Rahilly edited Celtica, a journal of the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, between 1946 and 1950.[4] Other publications by O'Rahilly include a series of anthologies of Irish language poetry publish in the 1920s.[9]

Later years edit

O'Rahilly retired from academia in 1948. He suffered from poor health for many years and died suddenly on 16 November 1953 at his home.[4][7] He was buried in Glasnevin Cemetery. His wife believed that his death was due to overwork and burned many of his remaining papers at their home.[1]

Some of his surviving papers are held by School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. His collection of books, correspondence, and Irish manuscripts, including an annotated draft of the 1937 Constitution of Ireland, were bequeathed to the Queen's University of Belfast.[8]

Controversial theories edit

O'Rahilly was known for his sometimes controversial theories of Irish history. In his book Early Irish History and Mythology (1946), O'Rahilly developed a model of Irish prehistory based on his analysis of early Irish literature and language, especially the Lebor Gabála Érenn. He suggested that there were four waves of Celtic migrations or invasions: the Cruthin (c. 700–500 BC), the Érainn or Builg (c. 500 BC), the Laigin, Domnainn and Gálioin (c. 300 BC), and the Gaels (c. 100 BC). He argued that the first three groups spoke Brittonic languages, and that many of Ireland's 'pre-Gaelic' peoples flourished for centuries after 100 BC.[10] Although highly influential, O'Rahilly's theory has been challenged by historians, archaeologists and linguists—such as Kenneth H. Jackson[11] and John T. Koch[12]—and it is no longer accepted.[13][14]

In 1942 his lecture where he proposed that there were two Saint Patricks,[15] was published. Irish author James Plunkett described the controversy caused by O'Rahilly's theory:

I can still recall the great scandal of 1942, when a book called The Two Patricks was published by a learned Irish Professor who advanced the theory that there was one Patrick (Palladius Patrick) whose mission lasted from 432-461, and another who arrived in 462 and died about 490. The suggestion caused a national unheaval. If the careers of the two Patricks, through scholarly bungling, had become inextricably entangled, who did what? And worse still - which of them was the patron saint? If you addressed a prayer to one, might it not be delivered by mistake to the other? There was a feeling abroad that any concession to the two Patricks theory would lead unfailingly to a theory of no Patrick at all.[16]

His views on language contact and bilingualism were equally controversial. In Irish Dialects Past and Present (1932) he wrote the following about the Manx language:

From the beginning of its career as a written language English influence played havoc with its syntax, and it could be said without much exaggeration that some of the Manx that has been printed is merely English disguised in a Manx vocabulary. Manx hardly deserved to live. When a language surrenders itself to foreign idiom, and when all its speakers become bilingual, the penalty is death.[17]

This view has more recently been challenged by Nicholas Williams, who suggests that Manx is Gaelic pidginized by early contact with Norse, long before there was any English spoken on the Isle of Man.

Family edit

His sister Cecile O'Rahilly was also a Celtic scholar, and published editions of both recensions of the Táin Bó Cúailnge and worked with her brother in the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.[18] Their brother Alfred O'Rahilly, himself a noted academic, was President of University College Cork and Teachta Dála (TD) for Cork City.[19]

His first cousin Michael O'Rahilly (better known as The O'Rahilly) was a founding member of the Irish Volunteers and died in the Easter Rising.

Published works edit

  • Dánta Grádha: An Anthology of Irish Love Poetry (1350-1750) (1916)
  • Dánfhocail - Irish Epigrams in Verse (1921)
  • A Miscellany of Irish Proverbs (1922)
  • Papers on Irish Idiom by Peadar Ua Laoghaire, together with a translation into Irish of part of the First Book of Euclid (1922)
  • Laoithe Cumainn (1925)
  • Búrdúin Bheaga: Pithy Irish Quatrains (1925)
  • Measgra Dánta I: Miscellaneous Irish Poems (1927)
  • Duanta Eoghain Ruaidh Mhic an Bhaird (1930)
  • Irish Dialects Past & Present, with Chapters on Scottish and Manx (1932)
  • The Goidels and their Predecessors (1936)
  • Desiderius, otherwise called Sgáthán an chrábhaidh, by Flaithrí Ó Maolchonaire (Florence Conry) (1941)
  • The Two Patricks: A Lecture on the History of Christianity in Fifth-century Ireland (1942)
  • Early Irish History and Mythology (1946)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Ó Sé, Diarmuid. "O'Rahilly, Thomas Francis (‘T. F.’)". Dictionary of Irish Biography. (ed.) James McGuire, James Quinn. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
  2. ^ UK Census 1901 held in the National Archives in the Republic of Ireland O'Rahilly is listed as Rahilly and de Valera as Edward.
  3. ^ a b Farragher, Sean P. (1984). Dev and His Alma Mater: Eamon de Valera's Lifelong Association with Blackrock College, 1898-1975. Dublin: Paraclete Press. p. 21. ISBN 9780946639014.
  4. ^ a b c d Breathnach, Diarmuid; Ní Mhurchú, Máire. "Ó RATHILE, Tomás (1882–1953)". Ainm.ie. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  5. ^ Humphrys, Mark. "T.F. O'Rahilly". Humphrys Genealogy. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  6. ^ "Description of Gadelica: A Journal of Modern Irish Studie". JSTOR. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  7. ^ a b Knott, Elenor (1955). "Thomas Francis O'Rahilly 1883–1953". Ériu. 17: 147.
  8. ^ a b Thomas Francis O'Rahilly Papers 1883-1953. Queen's University Belfast Special Collections & Archives. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  9. ^ "Thomas F. (Thomas Francis) O'Rahilly b. 1883–d. 1953". CODECS: Collaborative Online Database and e-Resources for Celtic Studies. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  10. ^ O'Rahilly 1946, p.264; pp. 154 ff.
  11. ^ Jackson, Kenneth H. (1953). Language and History in Early Britain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  12. ^ Koch, John T. (1991). "Ériu, Alba, Letha: When Was a Language Ancestral to Gaelic First Spoken in Ireland?". Emania. 9 – via Academia.
  13. ^ Brady, Ciaran; O'Dowd, Mary; Mercer Walker, Brian, eds. (1989). Ulster: An Illustrated History. Batsford Books. pp. 22–23. T. F. O'Rahilly, whose historical conclusions have been questioned by archaeologists and historians. In particular, O'Rahilly's thesis on the chronology of the invasion has been subject to serious revision and, consequently, as explained in more detail below, his views on the ethnic makeup of early Ireland are no longer accepted.
  14. ^ Dillon, Myles and Chadwick, Nora. The Celtic Realms: History and Civilization. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. 1967. p. 5. He distinguished four successive immigrations: the Cruthin some time before 500 BC; the Érainn (Fir Bolg) perhaps in the fifth century; the Laigin (with Domnainn and Gálioin) in the third century; the Goidil who came c. 100 BC. ... O'Rahilly's most novel suggestion is that his first three groups spoke Brythonic dialects ... His demonstration is not convincing, and the notion that this more archaic language was brought latest, by a migration of the Quariates from south-east Gaul, is inherently improbable.
  15. ^ O'Rahilly, Thomas Francis (1942). The Two Patricks: A Lecture on the History of Christianity in Fifth-century Ireland. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.
  16. ^ Hopkins, Allanah (1989). Living Legend of St. Patrick. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 151.
  17. ^ O'Rahilly, Thomas Francis (1972). Irish Dialects Past and Present: With Chapters on Scottish and Manx. Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. p. 121.
  18. ^ Ní Mhunghaile, Lesa. "O'Rahilly (Ní Rathaille, Ó Rathaille), Cecile (Sisile)". Dictionary of Irish Biography. (ed.) James McGuire, James Quinn. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
  19. ^ Gaughan, Anthony J. (2016). "Alfred O'Rahilly: Creative Revolutionary". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 105 (417): 58–66. JSTOR 24871385 – via JSTOR.

External links edit

  • Bibliography of T. F. O'Rahilly from the A. G. van Hamel Foundation for Celtic Studies
  • Thomas Francis O'Rahilly - a family history page
  • "O'Rahilly, Thomas F." . Thom's Irish Who's Who . Dublin: Alexander Thom and Son Ltd. 1923. p. 194  – via Wikisource.

rahilly, tomás, rathile, redirects, here, confused, with, tomás, raghallaigh, thomas, francis, rahilly, irish, tomás, rathile, november, 1882, november, 1953, influential, irish, scholar, celtic, languages, particularly, fields, historical, linguistics, irish,. Tomas o Rathile redirects here Not to be confused with Tomas o Raghallaigh Thomas Francis O Rahilly Irish Tomas o Rathile 11 November 1882 16 November 1953 1 was an influential Irish scholar of the Celtic languages particularly in the fields of historical linguistics and Irish dialects He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy and died in Dublin in 1953 He is the creator of O Rahilly s historical model which has since been discredited Thomas Francis O RahillyTomas o RathileBorn 1882 11 11 11 November 1882Listowel County Kerry IrelandDied16 November 1953 1953 11 16 aged 71 Rathgar DublinKnown forWork in Goidelic phonology historical linguisticsSpouseMary BuckleyAcademic backgroundEducationUniversity College DublinAcademic workDisciplineLinguistics Celtic studiesNotable worksIrish Dialects Past and Present With Chapters on Scottish and Manx Contents 1 Early years and education 2 Academic career 3 Later years 4 Controversial theories 5 Family 6 Published works 7 References 8 External linksEarly years and education editHe was born in Listowel County Kerry Ireland to Thomas Francis Rahilly of Ballylongford County Kerry and Julia Mary Rahilly nee Curry of Glin County Limerick 1 He was the seventh of his parents fifteen children His younger sister was the scholar Cecile O Rahilly He received his secondary education at St Michael s College Listowel and later at Blackrock College in Dublin at the same time as future Irish politician Eamon de Valera 2 3 He took an interest in Irish and Celtic languages early in his life buying Irish language newspaper An Claidheamh Soluis with his pocket money while still a school boy 4 De Valera commented on this unusual sight nbsp An Claideamn SoluisIf O Rahilly had been reading Greek I would not have been too surprised I could attempt that myself But to be reading Gaelic from a newspaper that was something extraordinary indeed in those days 3 He was educated at the Royal University of Ireland and received his B A in Irish and Classics in 1905 He spent a year teaching Irish at University College Dublin before taking up a permanent position as a clerk in the Four Courts in 1906 where he stayed until 1919 4 On 17 October 1918 he married Mary Buckley in Carrigtwohill County Cork They had no children 5 Academic career editO Rahilly worked full time in the Irish civil service as a clerk in the Four Courts He founded and edited journal Gadelica a Journal of Modern Irish Studies which sought to pursue and promote investigation into the area of Celtic studies including philology 6 The journal was short lived due to a shortage of subscriptions and four issues were published between 1912 and 1913 1 He completed his MA thesis The Accentuation of Gaelic in 1916 1 Fellow Celtic languages scholar and lecturer of Trinity College Dublin Eleanor Knott described his work during this period His unsurpassed knowledge of modern Irish dialects and manuscript literature was acquired in his early manhood when as a civil servant his chosen studies had perforce to be relegated to evenings weekends and vacations Unceasing application during this period together with recurrent attacks of influenza brought about a definite decline in his health and this should be taken into account in considering a characteristic asperity in criticising the work of other scholars 7 In 1919 he entered academic life in a full time capacity upon taking up his first professorship in Irish at Trinity College Dublin 1919 1929 He was appointed research professor in Celtic languages in 1929 at University College Cork and stayed in this position until 1935 8 He returned to academic life in Dublin as professor of Celtic languages at University College Dublin 1935 1941 He was director of the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies from 1942 to 1947 He received an honorary degree in D Litt Celt from the National University of Ireland in 1928 and D Litt from Trinity College Dublin in 1948 1 O Rahilly edited Celtica a journal of the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies between 1946 and 1950 4 Other publications by O Rahilly include a series of anthologies of Irish language poetry publish in the 1920s 9 Later years editO Rahilly retired from academia in 1948 He suffered from poor health for many years and died suddenly on 16 November 1953 at his home 4 7 He was buried in Glasnevin Cemetery His wife believed that his death was due to overwork and burned many of his remaining papers at their home 1 Some of his surviving papers are held by School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies His collection of books correspondence and Irish manuscripts including an annotated draft of the 1937 Constitution of Ireland were bequeathed to the Queen s University of Belfast 8 Controversial theories editO Rahilly was known for his sometimes controversial theories of Irish history In his book Early Irish History and Mythology 1946 O Rahilly developed a model of Irish prehistory based on his analysis of early Irish literature and language especially the Lebor Gabala Erenn He suggested that there were four waves of Celtic migrations or invasions the Cruthin c 700 500 BC the Erainn or Builg c 500 BC the Laigin Domnainn and Galioin c 300 BC and the Gaels c 100 BC He argued that the first three groups spoke Brittonic languages and that many of Ireland s pre Gaelic peoples flourished for centuries after 100 BC 10 Although highly influential O Rahilly s theory has been challenged by historians archaeologists and linguists such as Kenneth H Jackson 11 and John T Koch 12 and it is no longer accepted 13 14 In 1942 his lecture where he proposed that there were two Saint Patricks 15 was published Irish author James Plunkett described the controversy caused by O Rahilly s theory I can still recall the great scandal of 1942 when a book called The Two Patricks was published by a learned Irish Professor who advanced the theory that there was one Patrick Palladius Patrick whose mission lasted from 432 461 and another who arrived in 462 and died about 490 The suggestion caused a national unheaval If the careers of the two Patricks through scholarly bungling had become inextricably entangled who did what And worse still which of them was the patron saint If you addressed a prayer to one might it not be delivered by mistake to the other There was a feeling abroad that any concession to the two Patricks theory would lead unfailingly to a theory of no Patrick at all 16 His views on language contact and bilingualism were equally controversial In Irish Dialects Past and Present 1932 he wrote the following about the Manx language From the beginning of its career as a written language English influence played havoc with its syntax and it could be said without much exaggeration that some of the Manx that has been printed is merely English disguised in a Manx vocabulary Manx hardly deserved to live When a language surrenders itself to foreign idiom and when all its speakers become bilingual the penalty is death 17 This view has more recently been challenged by Nicholas Williams who suggests that Manx is Gaelic pidginized by early contact with Norse long before there was any English spoken on the Isle of Man Family editHis sister Cecile O Rahilly was also a Celtic scholar and published editions of both recensions of the Tain Bo Cuailnge and worked with her brother in the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 18 Their brother Alfred O Rahilly himself a noted academic was President of University College Cork and Teachta Dala TD for Cork City 19 His first cousin Michael O Rahilly better known as The O Rahilly was a founding member of the Irish Volunteers and died in the Easter Rising Published works editDanta Gradha An Anthology of Irish Love Poetry 1350 1750 1916 Danfhocail Irish Epigrams in Verse 1921 A Miscellany of Irish Proverbs 1922 Papers on Irish Idiom by Peadar Ua Laoghaire together with a translation into Irish of part of the First Book of Euclid 1922 Laoithe Cumainn 1925 Burduin Bheaga Pithy Irish Quatrains 1925 Measgra Danta I Miscellaneous Irish Poems 1927 Duanta Eoghain Ruaidh Mhic an Bhaird 1930 Irish Dialects Past amp Present with Chapters on Scottish and Manx 1932 The Goidels and their Predecessors 1936 Desiderius otherwise called Sgathan an chrabhaidh by Flaithri o Maolchonaire Florence Conry 1941 The Two Patricks A Lecture on the History of Christianity in Fifth century Ireland 1942 Early Irish History and Mythology 1946 References edit a b c d e f o Se Diarmuid O Rahilly Thomas Francis T F Dictionary of Irish Biography ed James McGuire James Quinn Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2009 UK Census 1901 held in the National Archives in the Republic of Ireland O Rahilly is listed as Rahilly and de Valera as Edward a b Farragher Sean P 1984 Dev and His Alma Mater Eamon de Valera s Lifelong Association with Blackrock College 1898 1975 Dublin Paraclete Press p 21 ISBN 9780946639014 a b c d Breathnach Diarmuid Ni Mhurchu Maire o RATHILE Tomas 1882 1953 Ainm ie Retrieved 25 August 2020 Humphrys Mark T F O Rahilly Humphrys Genealogy Retrieved 23 August 2020 Description of Gadelica A Journal of Modern Irish Studie JSTOR Retrieved 28 August 2020 a b Knott Elenor 1955 Thomas Francis O Rahilly 1883 1953 Eriu 17 147 a b Thomas Francis O Rahilly Papers 1883 1953 Queen s University Belfast Special Collections amp Archives Retrieved 28 August 2020 Thomas F Thomas Francis O Rahilly b 1883 d 1953 CODECS Collaborative Online Database and e Resources for Celtic Studies Retrieved 28 August 2020 O Rahilly 1946 p 264 pp 154 ff sfn error no target CITEREFO Rahilly1946 help Jackson Kenneth H 1953 Language and History in Early Britain Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Koch John T 1991 Eriu Alba Letha When Was a Language Ancestral to Gaelic First Spoken in Ireland Emania 9 via Academia Brady Ciaran O Dowd Mary Mercer Walker Brian eds 1989 Ulster An Illustrated History Batsford Books pp 22 23 T F O Rahilly whose historical conclusions have been questioned by archaeologists and historians In particular O Rahilly s thesis on the chronology of the invasion has been subject to serious revision and consequently as explained in more detail below his views on the ethnic makeup of early Ireland are no longer accepted Dillon Myles and Chadwick Nora The Celtic Realms History and Civilization Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1967 p 5 He distinguished four successive immigrations the Cruthin some time before 500 BC the Erainn Fir Bolg perhaps in the fifth century the Laigin with Domnainn and Galioin in the third century the Goidil who came c 100 BC O Rahilly s most novel suggestion is that his first three groups spoke Brythonic dialects His demonstration is not convincing and the notion that this more archaic language was brought latest by a migration of the Quariates from south east Gaul is inherently improbable O Rahilly Thomas Francis 1942 The Two Patricks A Lecture on the History of Christianity in Fifth century Ireland Dublin Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies Hopkins Allanah 1989 Living Legend of St Patrick New York St Martin s Press p 151 O Rahilly Thomas Francis 1972 Irish Dialects Past and Present With Chapters on Scottish and Manx Dublin Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies p 121 Ni Mhunghaile Lesa O Rahilly Ni Rathaille o Rathaille Cecile Sisile Dictionary of Irish Biography ed James McGuire James Quinn Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2009 Gaughan Anthony J 2016 Alfred O Rahilly Creative Revolutionary Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 105 417 58 66 JSTOR 24871385 via JSTOR External links editBibliography of T F O Rahilly from the A G van Hamel Foundation for Celtic Studies Thomas Francis O Rahilly a family history page O Rahilly Thomas F Thom s Irish Who s Who Dublin Alexander Thom and Son Ltd 1923 p 194 via Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title T F O 27Rahilly amp oldid 1180904567, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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