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Irish mythology 'Partholón' was the leader of the second group of people to settle in
Ireland, the first to arrive after the biblical
Flood. They arrived in 2680 BC according to the chronology of the
Annals of the Four Masters, 2061 BC according to
Seathrún Céitinn's chronology, and the time of
Abraham according to Irish synchronic historians.
The earliest surviving reference to Partholón's settlement is in the ''
Historia Brittonum'', a
9th century British
Latin compilation attributed to one
Nennius. Here, "Partolomus" is said to have come to Ireland with a thousand followers, who multiplied until there were four thousand, and then all died of plague in a single week.
The Irish ''
Lebor Gabála Érenn'' (Book of Invasions), compliled in the
11th century, tells us more. Partholón was the son of Sera, son of Sru, a descendant of
Magog, son of
Japheth, son of
Noah. He came to Ireland from
Sicily by way of
Greece,
Cappadocia,
Gothia and
Spain, and arrived three hundred, or three hundred and twelve, years after the flood, on
14 May, a Tuesday, landing at
Inber Scéne (
Kenmare in
South Kerry). His landing is synchronised with
Abraham's sixtieth year. With him were his wife, Dalgnat, and their three sons,
Sláine,
Rudraige (1) and Laiglinne, and their wives Nerba, Cichba and Cerbnad, and a thousand followers.
Seathrún Céitinn's
17th century compilation ''Foras Feasa ar Érinn'', gives Partholón a slightly different backstory. He was the son of
Sera, the king of
Greece, and fled his homeland after murdering his father and mother. He lost his left eye in the attack on his parents. He and his followers set off from Greece, sailed via
Sicily, round
Spain, and arrived in Ireland from the west, having travelled for seven years.
At the time of Partholón's arrival there were only three lakes, nine rivers and one plain in Ireland. He cleared four more plains, and seven more lakes
erupted from the ground. Three years after arriving, Partholón defeated the
Fomorians, led by
Cíocal, at
Magh Ithe, in the first battle fought in Ireland.
A poem in the ''Lebor Gabála'', expanded on by Céitinn, tells how Partholón and his wife lived on an island in the middle of
Lough Erne. Once, while Partholón was out touring his domain, his wife, Delgnat, seduced a servant, Topa. Afterwards they drank from Partholón's
ale, which could only be drunk through a golden tube. Partholón discovered the affair when he drank his ale and recognised the taste of Delgnat's and Topa's mouths on the tube. In anger he killed Topa, and his wife's dog. But Delgnat was unrepentant and insisted that Partholón himself was to blame, as leaving them alone together was like leaving honey before a woman, milk before a cat, edged tools before a craftsman or meat before a child and expecting them not to take advantage. This is recorded as the first adultery and the first jealousy in Ireland. The island they lived on was named Inis Saimera after Saimer, Dalgnat's dog.
According to the ''Lebor Gabála'', Partholón and his followers, five thousand men and four thousand women, died of plague in a single week, on Senmag, the "old plain", near modern
Tallaght. Later sources say Partholón died there after thirty years in Ireland, and the rest of his people died there of plague, 120 years later in the month of May. But one man survived:
Tuan, son of Partholón's brother Starn. Through a series of animal transformations he survived through the centuries to be reborn as the son of a chieftain named Cairell in the time of
Colm Cille (
6th century). He remembered all he had seen, and thus Partholón's story was preserved.
The story seems to reflect Irish
prehistory, in broad outline at least. Partholón's people brought
ploughs and
oxen, dairy farming, husbandry, houses and
ale, and are said to have buried their dead in "long graves" in "stone heaps". This corresponds with the
Neolithic farmers who arrived in Ireland around the
3rd millennium BC and buried their dead in long barrows derived from the rock-cut tombs of Sicily and southern
Italy. Although this is said to be the first settlement after the Flood, the Fomorians were already there, living on fish and fowl like the
hunter-gatherers of the
Mesolithic. However, the name 'Partholón' is not native and is probably a late addition, borrowed from a 'Bartholomaeus' who appears in the
Christian pseudohistories of St.
Jerome and
Isidore of Seville.
See also
★
Lebor Gabála Érenn
★
Early history of Ireland
References
★ John Morris (ed) (1980), ''Nennius: British History and the Welsh Annals''
★ R. A. S. McAllister (ed) (1941), ''Lebor Gabála Érenn: Book of the Taking of Ireland'' Part 1-5
[1]
★ John O'Donovan (ed) (1848-1851), ''Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters'' Vol 1
[2]
★ D. Comyn & P. S. Dineen (eds) (1902-1914), ''The History of Ireland by Geoffrey Keating''
[3]
★ John Morris (1973), ''The Age of Arthur''
★ James MacKillop (1998), ''Dictionary of Celtic Mythology''