The Vikings and Normans are ethnically
linked because of their common descent from the Norwegian group of Viking raiders and
settlers of the ninth to eleventh centuries. The Vikings per se came directly to Ireland
and Scotland during this period, and in Ireland they established the first towns as
coastal trading centers, as merchant activity was a natural second stage to their original
ferocious naval raiding. They became completely Gaelicized. The twelfth century brought
Anglo-Norman settlers to Scotland, and Anglo-Norman invaders to Ireland. The Normans first
appear as mixed Danish and Norwegian settlers in tenth-century Normandy, a province of
France which these Vikings wrested from the French and made a dukedom, and from which
province they subsequently invaded England in 1066. Their original introduction into the
Frankish and Gallo-Roman world in Normandy changed military technology forever, for these
acculturated Vikings, afterwards known as Normans, swept forward from Normandy into
England and later Gaeldom with "Mote and Bailey" castles (where the Gaels had
raided, exacted tribute and then gone back to their own territory, the Normans confounded
the Irish by actually squatting on the invaded land with castles, thus physically denying
it to its erstwhile owners). The Normans also utilized disciplined and armored
Frankish-style cavalry, thus introducing the mounted knight. They invaded both England and
Ireland with similar success, though in the Gaelic area they were influenced as much as
they influenced. They eventually became to a very large degree, "more Irish than the
Irish," adopting Gaelic lifestyles, language and kinship patterns.
The Viking Clans
The Viking clans descended from the
Norse who settled in Gaeldom before the Normans include the Clann Fearghaille, the Claim
Guinne, the Siol Tormod and Siol Torquil, the MacCotters, the ODoyles and the
MacCorquodales. |