:''For the asteroid, see
3753 Cruithne.''
The '''Cruithne''' or '''Cruthin''' were a semi-mythical people, with occasional historic reference in
Irish sources, that lived within the
British Isles during the
Iron Age.
According to
T. F. O'Rahilly's
historical model, the Cruithne were descended from the 'Priteni', who O'Rahilly argues were the first
Celtic group to inhabit the
British Isles, and identifies with the
Picts of
Scotland. They settled in
Britain and
Ireland between 700 and 500
BC. They used
iron and spoke a
P-Celtic language, calling themselves ''Priteni'' or ''Pritani'',
[1] which is the origin of the
Latin word ''Britannia'' and the
Old English words "Briton" and "British".
More recent theories, supported by
archaeological evidence, suggest that the Cruithne were a pre-Celtic people, and may have spoken a non-Indo-European language before the spread and dominance of Celtic culture in the British Isles. It is also suggested that these people were the descendants of the
aboriginal neolithic people of the
isles. Around 50 BC
Diodorus wrote of "those of the Pretani who inhabit the country called Iris (Ireland)". The first reference to the name Pict is found in a Latin document dated 297
AD.
It should be noted that
Pytheas in about 325 BC is credited with first recording the local name of the islands, in Greek as ''Prettanike'' - apparently in connection with the Cornish region - which
Diodorus later rendered ''Pretannia''.
In Britain these Priteni were absorbed by later invaders and lost their cultural identity, except in the far north where they were known to the
Romans as
Picti, or “painted people,†on account of their practice of decorating their bodies with paint or
tattoos (a practice which by then had died out among other Celtic tribes). In Ireland, too, the Priteni were largely absorbed by later settlers; but a few pockets of them managed to retain a measure of cultural, if not political, independence well into the Christian era. By then they were identified as ''Cruithne'',
P-Celtic linguistic descendants of the ''Priteni''.
Among the Cruthnian tribes that survived were the ''LoÃges'' and ''Fothairt'' in
Leinster. The name of the first of these tribes - modernized as
Laois - has been revived and given to one of the counties of Leinster (formerly known as Queen's County).
The existence of the Cruithne in Ireland as a pre-Gaelic people has led some (particularly
unionists) to advocate the theory that they were not, as some
nationalists consider, a "non-native" people.
The language of the inhabitants of the British Isles is called Cruithne in
Jacqueline Carey's
Kushiel's Legacy series.
Notes
1. Early Irish History and Mythology, , T. F., O'Rahilly, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1946,
External links
★
The Cruithne at Electric Scotland