Background

Background: There are no very big mountains on the island of Ireland. The highest Irish mountain, Carrauntoohill (Corrán Tuathail) is a little higher than 1,000m. There is no summit that cannot be reached by walking, yet there are many regions that are enjoyed by hillwalkers, hikers and climbers. Although the altitude of such regions is hardly more than Spain's Meseta, due to the combination of altitude and latitude such terrain is agriculturally unproductive , being used mainly as rough grazing for sheep. Many people enjoy mountain activities such as hiking and climbing in Ireland and over the centuries many people have travelled from Ireland to perform feats of mountaineering in the Greater Ranges of the world.

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Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Climbing mountains for pleasure

 As we've seen, travel in and through the mountains took place in many different cultures and in many different places for many different reasons.  Mountains were seen not just as physical entities but represented a wide spectrum of ideas, needs and fears at different times in history.  They were; the sacred places of pilgrimage; barriers to military advances; source of bad weather and the home of dragons and other demons.  They were visited only of necessity.

Croagh Patrick
Croagh Patrick

Christianity may have caused a change in attitude towards mountains and many of the pagan mountain sites were subsumed into Christian practice - Croagh Patrick in Ireland, Harz Mountains in Germany,

Gr St Bernard. Courtesy IAAH

,Great St Bernard Pass in Switzerland -  so that pilgrimages to mountains became part of Christian spirituality.

To climb for the pleasure of doing so!  The Italian, Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) is regarded as the first person to have climbed a mountain simply "for the view" in April 1336.  Mt Ventoux was close to where he lived and he felt  a "wish to see what so great an elevation had to offer". 

Through the succeeding centuries some mountains in Europe were being climbed by individuals for such 'non utilitarian' reasons:

Antoine de Ville - (d.1504) ordered by the King of France (Charles VIII) to climb Mont Aiguille, then regarded as 'unclimbable', he assailed the mountain with ropes and ladders and succeeded in 1492.  This is regarded as the first ascent of a peak of any technical difficulty and, using techniques far ahead of the time, is considered the first truly "Alpine" climb.

During these centuries there were others who were interested in the Alps and Alpine travel:

Josias Simmler (1530-'76), an academic in Zurich interested in classical accountsof Alpine travel and his work promotes a growing interest in the topography of the Alps. he produced the first book solely related to Th Alps. (Wikipedia).

Conrad Gesner (1516-65), 'his writings were the first to instil a positive delight in the mountains and a joy in the scenery for its own sake'.  His account of the ascent of Mt Pilatus in 1555 is one of the early classics of mountain literature. He declared in a letter to a friend the he " resolved for the future ... to climb mountains, or...to climb one mountain every year".  (Wikipedia)

Conrad Gessner



Josias Simmler

In Ireland there seems to be no evidence that any such activity was taking place although mountain journeys continued to be undertaken, as related earlier, in relation to pilgrimages to holy mountains and Lughnasa festivals.

The earliest mention of an Irishman climbing a significant mountain was Darby Field who made the first ascent of Mt Washington in USA in 1642. (More to follow)

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Mountains in Early Modern times.

  There are some references to the mountains in Irish literature. A notable one is from Brian Merriman in his Cúirt an Mheán Oíche from the 18th Century.


Ba ghnáth mé ar siúl le ciumhais na habhann

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Ar bháinseach úr is an drúcht go trom,

In aice na gcoillte i gcoim an tsléibhe

Gan mhairg gan mhoill ar shoilseadh an lae.  

  Do ghealadh mo chroí nuair chínn Loch Gréine, 

  An talamh, an tír, is íor na spéire 

 Ba thaitneamhach aoibhinn suíomh na sléibhte 

 Ag bagairt a gcinn thar dhroim a chéile.



Translation of underlined:

By the edge of the woods on the wild mountainside

At the dawn of the day I'd cheerfully stride.

This might indicate, if not for the requirements of metre and rhyme, that he was accustomed to walk in the hollows or cooms (cwms) of the mountains and simply for the pleasure of doing so.


The Rapparees:  

This was a cohort of 'outlaws' that used the hills and mountains as a place of refuge from the authorities.  The poem 'Eamon an Cnoic' is the story of Ned Ryan, an 18th Century rapparee, who was a folk hero in Co Tipperary.  He may have used the hills and mountains of Tipperary, as the poem's title indicates,  as a base from which to operate as others did in different parts of the country.

This may be meagre evidence but it does indicate that the uplands and mountains were being frequented by the people and for a variety of reasons up to modern times.


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