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  2. Early Scandinavian Dublin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Scandinavian_Dublin

    Early Scandinavian Dublin. Ireland c. 900. The First Viking Age in Ireland began in 795, when Vikings began carrying out hit-and-run raids on Gaelic Irish coastal settlements. Over the following decades the raiding parties became bigger and better organized; inland settlements were targeted as well as coastal ones; and the raiders built naval ...

  3. Dublin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dublin

    Beginning in the 9th and 10th centuries, there were two settlements where the modern city stands. The Viking settlement of about 841, Dyflin, and a Gaelic settlement, Áth Cliath ("ford of hurdles") [23] further up the river, at the present-day Father Mathew Bridge (also known as Dublin Bridge), at the bottom of Church Street.

  4. History of Dublin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Dublin

    County Dublin was the first county in Ireland to be shired in the 1190s, and the city became the capital of the English Lordship of Ireland. Dublin was peopled extensively with settlers from England and Wales, and the rural area around the city, as far north as Drogheda, also saw extensive English settlement.

  5. Eblana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eblana

    Eblana. Eblana ( Greek: Έβλανα) is an ancient Irish settlement that appears in the Geographia of Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy), [ 1] the Greek astronomer and cartographer, around the year 140 AD. It was traditionally believed by scholars to refer to the same site as the modern city of Dublin. [ 2][ 3] The 19th-century writer Louis Agassiz ...

  6. Norse–Gaels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse–Gaels

    The Norse–Gaels ( Old Irish: Gall-Goídil; Irish: Gall-Ghaeil; Scottish Gaelic: Gall-Ghàidheil, 'foreigner-Gaels') were a people of mixed Gaelic and Norse ancestry and culture. They emerged in the Viking Age, when Vikings who settled in Ireland and in Scotland became Gaelicised and intermarried with Gaels. The Norse–Gaels dominated much of ...

  7. Gaelic Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_Ireland

    A page from the Book of Kells, made by Gaelic monastic scribes in the 9th century. Gaelic Ireland ( Irish: Éire Ghaelach) was the Gaelic political and social order, and associated culture, that existed in Ireland from the late prehistoric era until the 17th century. It comprised the whole island before Anglo-Normans conquered parts of Ireland ...

  8. History of Dublin to 795 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Dublin_to_795

    Cornmarket, Dublin: the heart of the earliest settlement. Dublin is Ireland's oldest known settlement. It is also the largest and most populous urban centre in the country, a position it has held continuously since first rising to prominence in the 10th century (with the exception of a brief period in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when it was temporarily eclipsed by Belfast).

  9. History of Ireland (1536–1691) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Ireland_(1536...

    The pre-Elizabethan Irish population is usually divided into the "Old (or Gaelic) Irish", and the Old English, or descendants of medieval Hiberno-Norman settlers. These groups were historically antagonistic, with English settled areas such as the Pale around Dublin, south Wexford, and other walled towns being fortified against the rural Gaelic ...