An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 eBook

Mary Frances Cusack
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 946 pages of information about An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800.

An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 eBook

Mary Frances Cusack
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 946 pages of information about An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800.
with fuel, and is remembered to have been forty feet above its present level by a generation now living, the antiquity of the vessel is unquestionable.  As a specimen of superior workmanship, the cauldron has been greatly admired.  It is made of sheets of gold-coloured bronze, evidently formed by hammering:  the rim is of much thicker metal than the rest, and is rendered stiffer by corrugation—­a process which has been patented in England within the last dozen years, as a new and valuable discovery.[250]

Cauldrons are constantly mentioned in the Book of Rights, in a manner which shows that these vessels were in constant use.  It was one of the tributes to be presented in due form by the King of Cashel to the King of Tara; and in the will of Cahir Mor, Monarch of Ireland in the second century, fifty copper cauldrons are amongst the items bequeathed to his family.  Probably the poorer classes, who could not afford such costly vessels, may have contented themselves with roasting their food exclusively, unless, indeed, they employed the primitive method of casting red hot stones into water when they wished it boiled.

The exact precision which characterizes every legal enactment in ancient Erinn, and which could not have existed in a state of barbarism, is manifested even in the regulations about food.  Each member of the chieftain’s family had his appointed portion, and there is certainly a quaintness in the parts selected for each.  The saoi of literature and the king were to share alike, as we observed when briefly alluding to this subject in the chapter on ancient Tara; their portion was a prime steak.  Cooks and trumpeters were specially to be supplied with “cheering mead,” it is to be supposed because their occupations required more than ordinary libations; the historian was to have a crooked bone; the hunter, a pig’s shoulder:  in fact, each person and each office had its special portion assigned[251] to it, and the distinction of ranks and trades affords matter of the greatest interest and of the highest importance to the antiquarian.  There can be but little doubt that the custom of Tara was the custom of all the other kings and chieftains, and that it was observed throughout the country in every family rich enough to have dependents.  This division of food was continued in the Highlands of Scotland until a late period.  Dr. Johnson mentions it, in his Tour in the Hebrides, as then existing.  He observes that he had not ascertained the details, except that the smith[252] had the head.

The allowance for each day is also specified.  Two cows, and two tinnes,[253] and two pigs was the quantity for dinner.  This allowance was for a hundred men.  The places which the household were to occupy were also specified; so that while all sat at a common table,[254] there was, nevertheless, a certain distinction of rank.  At Tara there were different apartments, called imdas, a word now used in the north of Ireland to denote a couch or

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An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.