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Great Irish warpipes

Irish warpipes (Irish: píob mhór; literally "great pipes") are an Irish analogue of the Scottish great Highland bagpipe. "Warpipes" is originally an English term. The first use of the Gaelic term in Ireland was recorded in a poem by Seán Ó Neachtain (c. 1650–1728), in which the bagpipes are referred to as píb mhór.[1]

An Irish piper playing very large bagpipes, from a copy of a 1578 woodcut.

History edit

One of the earliest references to the Irish bagpipes comes from an account of the funeral of Donnchadh mac Ceallach, king of Osraige in AD 927.[2] A likely first reference to bagpipes being played in war is found in a manuscript written between 1484 and 1487 containing an Irish Gaelic version of "Fierabras": the quote "sinnter adharca & píba agaibh do tionól bur sluaigh" translates as "let horns and pipes be played by you to gather your host".[3] The first clear references to the Irish píob mhór relate to Henry VIII's siege of Boulogne. A muster roll of the "Kerne to be transported into Englaunde to serve the kinge" contains entries of various pipers attached to these forces, such as "The Baron of Delvene’s Kerne: Brene McGuntyre pyper".[4] and according to an entry in Holinshed's Chronicles (1577) for May 1544, "In the same moneth also passed through the citie of London in warlike manner, to the number of seven hundred Irishmen, having for their weapons darts and handguns with bagpipes before them: and in St. James Park besides Westminster they mustered before the king."[4]

In a 1581 volume, musician Vincenzo Galilei, the father of the astronomer Galileo, wrote that the bagpipe "is much used by the Irish: to its sound this unconquered fierce and warlike people march their armies and encourage each other to deeds of valor. With it they also accompany the dead to the grave making such sorrowful sounds as to invite, nay to compel the bystander to weep". In the same year, John Derricke published the poem "The Image of Ireland", in which the pipes are already used to convey signals in battle:

Now goe the foes to wracke
The Kerne apace doe sweate
And baggepype then instead of Trompe
Doe lull the back retreate

One famous description of the pipes from Richard Stanihurst's De Rebus Hibernicis (1586), reads as follows in English translation:[4]

The Irish also use instead of a trumpet a wooden pipe constructed with the most ingenious skill to which a leather bag is attached with very closely plaited (or bound) leather bands. From the side of the skin issues a pipe through which as if through a tube the piper blows with swollen neck and distended cheeks, as it is filled with air the skin swells: when it swells he presses it down again with his arm. At this pressure two other wooden pipes, a shorter and a longer, emit a loud and piercing sound. There is also a fourth pipe, pierced with several holes which by opening and closing the holes with nimble fingers the piper manages to elicit from the upper pipes a loud or low sound as he thinks fit. The stem and stern of the whole affair is that the wind should have no outlet through any part of the bag except the mouths of the pipes. For if anyone (as is the practice of merrymakers when they want to give annoyance to these pipers) make even a pinhole in the skin the instrument is done for because the bag collapses. This sort of instrument is held among the Irish to be a whetstone for martial courage: for just as other soldiers are stirred by the sound of trumpets, so they are hotly stimulated to battle by the noise of this affair.

The pipes seem to have figured prominently in the war with William of Orange. When the exiled King James II arrived in Cork City in March 1689, he was greeted with “bagpipes and dancing, throwing their mantles under his horse’s feet”. On his way to the castle in Dublin, “the pipers of the several companies played the Tune of The King enjoys his own again”.[5]

There are late-17th-century reports of peace-time use of the pipes, for example to play for hurling teams.[5] For 18th century references, however, it is often difficult to tell whether the pipes referred to in a particular case are píob mhór or another instrument. There are a number of reports of pipers in Irish regiments of the British Army in the 18th century; for example, a Barney Thompson (reportedly of Hillsborough, County Down) is attested in Lord Rawdon's Volunteers of Ireland in New York in 1778.[6][page needed] Information from a muster roll indicates that there was at least a Piper Barney Thompson in the regiment.[7] However, Thompson seems to have played a bellows-blown (pastoral/Union) bagpipe, which could be sung to, and not a warpipe.[8][unreliable source?]

One way or another, by the 19th century, the Irish warpipes died out, or at least fell into obscurity. Perhaps the píob mhór, while played by a few individuals, came to be seen as mainly Scottish,[9] the bellows-blown union or uilleann pipes being the new "Irish pipes".[original research?] Business directories of Dublin in 1840 show a Maurice Coyne as a maker of Union and "Scotch" bagpipes at 41 James Street.

Modern instrument edit

In the second half of the 19th century, however, the general revival of Irish nationalism and Gaelic culture seems to have coincided with a return of the popularity of the warpipes. The art picked up again until the pipes achieved considerable popularity in both military and civilian use. Today, pipe bands of essentially the same kind as the Highland form are a standard feature of British regiments with Irish honours and the Irish Defence Forces, and there are many local bands throughout both the Republic and Northern Ireland. The Irish warpipes as played today are one and the same as the Scottish great Highland bagpipe.

Attempts in the past to make a distinct instrument for Irish pipers have not proved popular in the long run. In the first half of the 20th century, it was very common to play pipes with only one tenor drone; the reason for this is discussed below. Several attempts were made to improve the pipes; the most successful was the London pipe maker Starck's "Brian Boru" bagpipe, with a keyed chanter that could play a full range of traditional music and a baritone drone, often held with the tenor and bass in a common stock. Such pipes are produced by few makers today and are played by only a minority of pipers.

Surviving evidence for the original Irish Warpipe tradition edit

 
The missal painting
 
The pig piper from the Dinnseanchus
 
Lucas DeHeere's boy piper, whose instrument, like that in "Image of Ireland", is reminiscent of German and Dutch bagpipes and again would not have been drawn from life

The notion that Irish warpipes were a clearly distinct instrument from the Scottish Highland bagpipe before the revival is based on evidence which may be suspect.[9] The main problem when comparing the instrument in Scotland and Ireland lies in determining such technical points as the number of drones and the tuning of the old Irish pipes. Unfortunately, no early instruments that would provide material evidence are known to survive. Nevertheless, there are several reasons to believe that the old Irish and Scottish pipes were more or less the same instrument. For one thing, Scottish and Irish culture were not isolated, and artistic and musical trends could be copied and shared. At the 1785 Highland Society of London piping competition, piper John MacPherson played "Piobrachd Ereanach an Irish pibrach",[10] and it is quite possible that at least some of this "typically Scottish" piping music (piobaireachd, the "classical music of the Highland bagpipe") comes from Ireland.[10]

Some illustrations of Irish mouth-blown pipes do exist, but these are largely rough or inaccurate. Among the native Irish depictions of the instrument is a c. 16th-century painting in the margin of a missal of the Abbey of Rosgall, County Kildare, and now in the Bodleian Library, showing a piper playing an instrument with two drones and a chanter in the usual positions. The drones are of unequal length and all pipes have flaring Medieval-style bell ends. Otherwise, however, the picture is quite rough and unrealistically proportioned.

Another illustration coming directly from Ireland is found in a possibly 16th-century, although that date has never been put under scrutiny and the actual date maybe closer to the 14th century[11], manuscript of a dinnseanchus, an Irish topographical history, which contains an initial letter in the form of a pig playing the pipes. The instrument has two drones, one clearly a bass and one shorter. The chanter and drones seem to slightly bell out at the end. The illustration looks relatively "normal" in configuration, but is still sketchy enough that no further details can be deduced from it.

Most period images of the Irish piob mhor from outside Ireland are similar enough to have to stem from a common source. They include an illustration from around 1575 by Lucas DeHeere. Now in the library of the University of Ghent, it bears the caption "Irish Folk as they were attired in the reign of the late King Henry", and shows a group of people which includes a boy playing a bagpipe. There are again two drones, apparently in a common stock, and a large chanter, all of which end with flaring bell ends. The bag is very bulbous, and its position is odd; it appears to be held under the piper's right arm, but the drones go over the piper's left shoulder. Although this is our best-done illustration, the instrument does not seem to depict an Irish warpipe, but rather a German/Low Countries "dudelsack", such as would have been more familiar to the painter, who may have copied it from a source common with one of the engravings illustrating Derricke's "Image of Ireland" and had probably never seen an actual Irish piper.

Despite the fact that these and other 16th-century sources show two-droned pipes, the modification in the 20th century of Highland pipes by Irish pipers who omitted one tenor seems to be a mistake in terms of making the pipes "more Irish". At the time those descriptions were made, the Scottish counterpart would also have had no more than two drones; at any rate, there seems to be no evidence that there was a third drone until well into the 17th century. Indeed, a pig piper similar to the one in the dinnseanchus with two drones exists in a 16th-century Scottish psalter.[12][page needed] Like the missal picture, this too is roughly executed; what should be a tenor drone projects from what seems to be a bass, and the chanter again seems disproportionately long. There is nothing in any of these images that could be identified as a specifically "Irish" or "Scottish" feature of the pipes depicted.

References edit

  1. ^ Donnelly, Seán (April 1984). "The Warpipes in Ireland IV". Ceol.
  2. ^ Keating, Geoffrey (1908) [1906]. Dinneen, Patrick S. (ed.). "The History of Ireland". London: David Nutt / Irish Texts Society. p. 219 – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ Donnelly, Seán (2001). The Early History of Piping in Ireland. Dublin: Na Píobairí Uilleann. p. 9. ISBN 9780950974392.
  4. ^ a b c Donnelly, Seán (July 1981). "The Warpipes in Ireland I". Ceol.
  5. ^ a b Donnelly, Seán (April 1983). "The Warpipes in Ireland III". Ceol.
  6. ^ Grattan Flood, W. H. (1911). The Story of the Bagpipe. London / New York: Walter Scott Publishing / Charles Scribern's Sons. p. 149 – via Internet Archive.
  7. ^ . BattleOfCamden.org. Archived from the original on 3 February 2018.
  8. ^ erract; Sanderson, Adam; Halliday, Ray. . Archived from the original on 3 February 2018. The second page of this discussion was not saved by Internet Archive.
  9. ^ a b Lecic, Ned (2021). "The Irish Warpipes". IrishMusicAssociation.com.
  10. ^ a b Timoney, Frank (November–December 1997). "Who Was the Earl of Antrim? A Discussion: On the Possible Influence of Scottish and Irish Ceol Mor on Each Other". The Piping Times.
  11. ^ https://www.bagpipesociety.org.uk/articles/2018/chanter/winter/irish-piping-pig-stamp/
  12. ^ Reproduced in: Stewart, Pete (2006). The Day It Daws: The Lowland Scots Bagpipe and its Music 1400 to 1715. Ashby Parva, Leicestershire: White House Tune Books / Hornpipe Music.

External links edit

  • "Irish Warpipes". IrishMusicAssociation.com. 2024.
  • Ó Bríain, Garaidh (2009). . Mac Maoláin. Archived from the original on 28 March 2023.

great, irish, warpipes, list, ireland, pipe, champions, pipe, champions, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, re. For list of All Ireland War pipe champions see War pipe champions This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message This article or section possibly contains synthesis of material which does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Irish warpipes Irish piob mhor literally great pipes are an Irish analogue of the Scottish great Highland bagpipe Warpipes is originally an English term The first use of the Gaelic term in Ireland was recorded in a poem by Sean o Neachtain c 1650 1728 in which the bagpipes are referred to as pib mhor 1 Irish warpipesWoodwindOther namesPiob mhorClassificationAerophone Wind Woodwind BagpipeHornbostel Sachs classificationMixed 422 122 2 amp 422 221 1 set of reed aerophones Developed7th centuryRelated instrumentsBorder pipes Great Highland bagpipe Northumbrian pipes Pastoral pipes Scottish smallpipes Uilleann pipes An Irish piper playing very large bagpipes from a copy of a 1578 woodcut Contents 1 History 2 Modern instrument 3 Surviving evidence for the original Irish Warpipe tradition 4 References 5 External linksHistory editOne of the earliest references to the Irish bagpipes comes from an account of the funeral of Donnchadh mac Ceallach king of Osraige in AD 927 2 A likely first reference to bagpipes being played in war is found in a manuscript written between 1484 and 1487 containing an Irish Gaelic version of Fierabras the quote sinnter adharca amp piba agaibh do tionol bur sluaigh translates as let horns and pipes be played by you to gather your host 3 The first clear references to the Irish piob mhor relate to Henry VIII s siege of Boulogne A muster roll of the Kerne to be transported into Englaunde to serve the kinge contains entries of various pipers attached to these forces such as The Baron of Delvene s Kerne Brene McGuntyre pyper 4 and according to an entry in Holinshed s Chronicles 1577 for May 1544 In the same moneth also passed through the citie of London in warlike manner to the number of seven hundred Irishmen having for their weapons darts and handguns with bagpipes before them and in St James Park besides Westminster they mustered before the king 4 In a 1581 volume musician Vincenzo Galilei the father of the astronomer Galileo wrote that the bagpipe is much used by the Irish to its sound this unconquered fierce and warlike people march their armies and encourage each other to deeds of valor With it they also accompany the dead to the grave making such sorrowful sounds as to invite nay to compel the bystander to weep In the same year John Derricke published the poem The Image of Ireland in which the pipes are already used to convey signals in battle Now goe the foes to wracke The Kerne apace doe sweate And baggepype then instead of Trompe Doe lull the back retreate One famous description of the pipes from Richard Stanihurst s De Rebus Hibernicis 1586 reads as follows in English translation 4 The Irish also use instead of a trumpet a wooden pipe constructed with the most ingenious skill to which a leather bag is attached with very closely plaited or bound leather bands From the side of the skin issues a pipe through which as if through a tube the piper blows with swollen neck and distended cheeks as it is filled with air the skin swells when it swells he presses it down again with his arm At this pressure two other wooden pipes a shorter and a longer emit a loud and piercing sound There is also a fourth pipe pierced with several holes which by opening and closing the holes with nimble fingers the piper manages to elicit from the upper pipes a loud or low sound as he thinks fit The stem and stern of the whole affair is that the wind should have no outlet through any part of the bag except the mouths of the pipes For if anyone as is the practice of merrymakers when they want to give annoyance to these pipers make even a pinhole in the skin the instrument is done for because the bag collapses This sort of instrument is held among the Irish to be a whetstone for martial courage for just as other soldiers are stirred by the sound of trumpets so they are hotly stimulated to battle by the noise of this affair The pipes seem to have figured prominently in the war with William of Orange When the exiled King James II arrived in Cork City in March 1689 he was greeted with bagpipes and dancing throwing their mantles under his horse s feet On his way to the castle in Dublin the pipers of the several companies played the Tune of The King enjoys his own again 5 There are late 17th century reports of peace time use of the pipes for example to play for hurling teams 5 For 18th century references however it is often difficult to tell whether the pipes referred to in a particular case are piob mhor or another instrument There are a number of reports of pipers in Irish regiments of the British Army in the 18th century for example a Barney Thompson reportedly of Hillsborough County Down is attested in Lord Rawdon s Volunteers of Ireland in New York in 1778 6 page needed Information from a muster roll indicates that there was at least a Piper Barney Thompson in the regiment 7 However Thompson seems to have played a bellows blown pastoral Union bagpipe which could be sung to and not a warpipe 8 unreliable source One way or another by the 19th century the Irish warpipes died out or at least fell into obscurity Perhaps the piob mhor while played by a few individuals came to be seen as mainly Scottish 9 the bellows blown union or uilleann pipes being the new Irish pipes original research Business directories of Dublin in 1840 show a Maurice Coyne as a maker of Union and Scotch bagpipes at 41 James Street Modern instrument editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message In the second half of the 19th century however the general revival of Irish nationalism and Gaelic culture seems to have coincided with a return of the popularity of the warpipes The art picked up again until the pipes achieved considerable popularity in both military and civilian use Today pipe bands of essentially the same kind as the Highland form are a standard feature of British regiments with Irish honours and the Irish Defence Forces and there are many local bands throughout both the Republic and Northern Ireland The Irish warpipes as played today are one and the same as the Scottish great Highland bagpipe Attempts in the past to make a distinct instrument for Irish pipers have not proved popular in the long run In the first half of the 20th century it was very common to play pipes with only one tenor drone the reason for this is discussed below Several attempts were made to improve the pipes the most successful was the London pipe maker Starck s Brian Boru bagpipe with a keyed chanter that could play a full range of traditional music and a baritone drone often held with the tenor and bass in a common stock Such pipes are produced by few makers today and are played by only a minority of pipers Surviving evidence for the original Irish Warpipe tradition edit nbsp The missal painting nbsp The pig piper from the Dinnseanchus nbsp Lucas DeHeere s boy piper whose instrument like that in Image of Ireland is reminiscent of German and Dutch bagpipes and again would not have been drawn from life The notion that Irish warpipes were a clearly distinct instrument from the Scottish Highland bagpipe before the revival is based on evidence which may be suspect 9 The main problem when comparing the instrument in Scotland and Ireland lies in determining such technical points as the number of drones and the tuning of the old Irish pipes Unfortunately no early instruments that would provide material evidence are known to survive Nevertheless there are several reasons to believe that the old Irish and Scottish pipes were more or less the same instrument For one thing Scottish and Irish culture were not isolated and artistic and musical trends could be copied and shared At the 1785 Highland Society of London piping competition piper John MacPherson played Piobrachd Ereanach an Irish pibrach 10 and it is quite possible that at least some of this typically Scottish piping music piobaireachd the classical music of the Highland bagpipe comes from Ireland 10 Some illustrations of Irish mouth blown pipes do exist but these are largely rough or inaccurate Among the native Irish depictions of the instrument is a c 16th century painting in the margin of a missal of the Abbey of Rosgall County Kildare and now in the Bodleian Library showing a piper playing an instrument with two drones and a chanter in the usual positions The drones are of unequal length and all pipes have flaring Medieval style bell ends Otherwise however the picture is quite rough and unrealistically proportioned Another illustration coming directly from Ireland is found in a possibly 16th century although that date has never been put under scrutiny and the actual date maybe closer to the 14th century 11 manuscript of a dinnseanchus an Irish topographical history which contains an initial letter in the form of a pig playing the pipes The instrument has two drones one clearly a bass and one shorter The chanter and drones seem to slightly bell out at the end The illustration looks relatively normal in configuration but is still sketchy enough that no further details can be deduced from it Most period images of the Irish piob mhor from outside Ireland are similar enough to have to stem from a common source They include an illustration from around 1575 by Lucas DeHeere Now in the library of the University of Ghent it bears the caption Irish Folk as they were attired in the reign of the late King Henry and shows a group of people which includes a boy playing a bagpipe There are again two drones apparently in a common stock and a large chanter all of which end with flaring bell ends The bag is very bulbous and its position is odd it appears to be held under the piper s right arm but the drones go over the piper s left shoulder Although this is our best done illustration the instrument does not seem to depict an Irish warpipe but rather a German Low Countries dudelsack such as would have been more familiar to the painter who may have copied it from a source common with one of the engravings illustrating Derricke s Image of Ireland and had probably never seen an actual Irish piper Despite the fact that these and other 16th century sources show two droned pipes the modification in the 20th century of Highland pipes by Irish pipers who omitted one tenor seems to be a mistake in terms of making the pipes more Irish At the time those descriptions were made the Scottish counterpart would also have had no more than two drones at any rate there seems to be no evidence that there was a third drone until well into the 17th century Indeed a pig piper similar to the one in the dinnseanchus with two drones exists in a 16th century Scottish psalter 12 page needed Like the missal picture this too is roughly executed what should be a tenor drone projects from what seems to be a bass and the chanter again seems disproportionately long There is nothing in any of these images that could be identified as a specifically Irish or Scottish feature of the pipes depicted References edit Donnelly Sean April 1984 The Warpipes in Ireland IV Ceol Keating Geoffrey 1908 1906 Dinneen Patrick S ed The History of Ireland London David Nutt Irish Texts Society p 219 via Internet Archive Donnelly Sean 2001 The Early History of Piping in Ireland Dublin Na Piobairi Uilleann p 9 ISBN 9780950974392 a b c Donnelly Sean July 1981 The Warpipes in Ireland I Ceol a b Donnelly Sean April 1983 The Warpipes in Ireland III Ceol Grattan Flood W H 1911 The Story of the Bagpipe London New York Walter Scott Publishing Charles Scribern s Sons p 149 via Internet Archive Volunteers of Ireland presumed at or near Camden 1780 BattleOfCamden org Archived from the original on 3 February 2018 erract Sanderson Adam Halliday Ray Two 18th century Irish pipers Thady Lawler and Barney Thompson Archived from the original on 3 February 2018 The second page of this discussion was not saved by Internet Archive a b Lecic Ned 2021 The Irish Warpipes IrishMusicAssociation com a b Timoney Frank November December 1997 Who Was the Earl of Antrim A Discussion On the Possible Influence of Scottish and Irish Ceol Mor on Each Other The Piping Times https www bagpipesociety org uk articles 2018 chanter winter irish piping pig stamp Reproduced in Stewart Pete 2006 The Day It Daws The Lowland Scots Bagpipe and its Music 1400 to 1715 Ashby Parva Leicestershire White House Tune Books Hornpipe Music External links edit Irish Warpipes IrishMusicAssociation com 2024 o Briain Garaidh 2009 The Great Irish Warpipe Mac Maolain Archived from the original on 28 March 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Irish warpipes amp oldid 1223395734, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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