was
nonetheless united in culture and language. The bearers of religion, law, literature,
history, medicine, music and poetry, as hereditary tradesmen in their fields, enjoyed a
special status, and freely practiced their arts among and between such tribal groups.
Indeed, far from being merely tolerated by the tribes, these professional classes actually
performed the essential functions of the society, maintaining its tribal character of
independence and partition. For these professionals, the spoken word held a special and
ancient power. Gaelic bards and historians prided themselves in the cultivation of memory
for the oral transmission of information and records, a task which they accomplished with
the aid of poetic conventions, thematic paraphrase and aphoristic formulas of stock
idiomatic cultural meaning (the phrase "be literal" had no meaning prior to the
coming of the literate Christians). The spoken ire of a poet would maim a king through
sympathetic magic, while his blessing could bring prosperity.
Gaelic tribalism tended to foster a natural
aristocracy based on talent. A tribesmans individual talent, and the talent of his
immediate ancestors played the major role in determining where one stood within the
internal tribal hierarchy. In another sense, the same hierarchy tended to run horizontally
rather than vertically, which meant that all members of the tribe, being equally descended
from the founding chief or king, shared equally in his royal blood, and therefore counted
themselves equal in blood to the king of the tribe. In this way, differences between
tribesmen tended to emphasize talent rather than blood, though the tribal king or clan
chief himself was "a breed apart."
A chiefs personal and family talent
played its role in securing him that dignity in the first place, but once inaugurated, a
new chief took on a new aspect. As chief, he symbolized the manifestation of the spirit of
the tribe, ritualistically reincarnated in each succeeding chief, presumably since the
beginning of time. Any man whose father, grandfather or great-grandfather had been chief
was generally eligible to be a chief himself as long as he acknowledged the male line and
reckoned himself a member of the tribe. However, this system often led to strife between
rival nominees and their supporters, especially when the succession was not prearranged by
the chief himself (contrast this with the Norman-English custom of primogeniture, wherein
the eldest son is automatically the heir).
A chief could appoint his successor by a
process known as tanistry, but otherwise the office was filled through election by the
tribal council, made up of the heads and elders of the kindred branches of the tribe,
though their decision could be influenced greatly by personal combats among the
candidates. Indeed, the succession itself was originally carried out by means of a ritual
combat between the chief and his successor (or at least challenger) within the kingroup,
or "dynastic family." Such ancient practices continued well into the Middle
Ages, and among some families (such as the MacCarthys and OFlahertys) even later. It
arose in part from the prudent need to settle such questions |