This section contains 622 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
Review of How the Irish Saved Civilization
Summary: A historical and critical review of Thomas Cahill's How the Irish Saved Civilization, a book that sheds light upon the role of the Irish people in the conservation and rebirth of Western civilization after the fall of the Roman Empire.
In 476 AD, centuries of amassed knowledge in science and philosophy, literature and the arts lay in peril of destruction alongside the physical Roman Empire. Thomas Cahill's book How the Irish Saved Civilization sheds light upon the role of the Irish people in the conservation and rebirth of civilization and the Western tradition after the fall of the Roman Empire. It is here that Cahill opens his book and after a brief description of classical civilization, that we are given a look at another people, far different from the Romans and Greeks- the vibrant and intriguing Celts. How these people came in contact with the civilized world and how they assisted in pulling the West out of the Dark ages is, then, the paramount of Cahill's argument.
Cahill begins his discussion of the Irish people in an extensive reference to Medh, the Queen of Connacht. Through her story we...
This section contains 622 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |