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Thomas Johnston Westropp
   
Life
1860-1922 [var. Westhropp]; archaeologist and folklore field-worker, collecting
in Clare, and publishing in Folk-lore in the period 1910- ; his water-colours
of the Burren can be seen in a local publication of 1991, along with those
by Petrie and others; works reprinted by Clasp.
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Works
Folklore from Clare ([London:] Clasp 2001), 144pp. [arts. from
Folklore Soc. Transactions 1910-13]; also Archaeology of the Burren (Clasp
[q.d.]).
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Criticism
Mairéad Ashe FitzGerald, Thomas Johnson Westropp: (1860-1922): An Irish
Antiquary [UCD Dept. of Archaeol.; Seandálaíocht Monograph Ser., No.
1] (Dublin: UCD [2000]), 133pp., ill., maps.
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Notes
George A. Little, Dublin Before the Vikings (1957), notes
that Westropp points out the sensitiveness of the early Irish to
landscape coloration. as examples he instances some names of forts [lios]
(I give his spelling), Lisderg, Redford; Lisbuy, Yellowfort; Caherbreac,
Speckledfort, Lisglass, Greenfort; Rathduff, Blackfort. (The Ancient
Forts of Ireland, TRIA, vol. XXXI, pt. 14 (1902), p.591. (Little,
p.26). Further, Westropp notes that in our literature the word (dún)
is frequently equated with city (Ancient Forts in Ireland,
TRIA, Vol. XXI, 1902, p.590). ALSO, Westropp, Early Italian Maps, PRIA
Vol. XXX, Sec. C. no.16, p.401, remarks on the Norse settlement in Wicklow
(Wiking-luc; Viking Beach, or properly flame, from lue) being imposed
on an earlier promontory fort. [37]. ALSO, Westropp, Early Maps of Ireland,
PRIA, vol. xxx, sect. c, no.16, refers to wine refreshments given guests
by Diarmait Mac Carbhaill, the king for whom wine was served in
splendour, after the Battle of Magh Rath. (p.66) [80]. Further,
Little quotes an extensive passage from Westropp, dealing with the location
of St. Patricks well outside the cloister walls, So
far from endeavouring to secure unfailing supply of water within their
walls, the fort builders were careful rather to exclude any well or spring
that rose near the site selected for their enclosure. Strange to say,
this curious fact was not confined to Ireland; it has left its mark on
the greatest literature of the world. We recall the pathetic incident
of the Well at the gate of Bethlehem whence intruders, though with risk
of bloodshed, could draw water; or those springs before the gates of Ilium,
where the ladies had washed their robs in peace before the Achaeans came,
and to which the fated Hector ran, pursued by his deadly foe. Schliemann
found two springs 400 ft. east of Mycenae, which fortress had to trust
to a water-supply outside its walls. Hirtius also records how Uxellodunum
was reduced by the Romans, because its only spring lay outside the walls.
The same fact appears in Irish literature. Columba, Adamnan tells us,
prophesied that the well near Dún Ceithern would be defiled with
human blood. The Colloquy of the Ancients mentions a hidden ell
to the south side of the fortress and apparently its fosse. [PARA]
This peculiarity sprang from a wish to avoid the pollution of the water-supply;
there was, too, comparatively little risk of blockade. (The Ancient
Forts of Ireland, [n.p.]). ALSO, Westropp, Irish Motes, JRSAI,
(pp.39-30), The great mounds in Denmark are not similar to Irish
motes; the negative evidence is strongly against the Danish
origin of high motes. Little regards the Thingmote as of Irish origin,
if also employed by Scandinavians for meetings. [128-29] Bibl, Westropp,
T.J., The Ancient Forts of Ireland.
Liam de Paor, The Folks
on the Hill, in The Irish Times (30 Jan 1993), writing of
the complex of hillforts at Baltinglass, Co Wicklow, remarks: hillforts
in Ireland seem to be comparatively few, and often aberrant in type, but
they were sufficiently interesting to attract attention since the early
days of archaeology. Round the turn of the century that great field-worker
T. J. Westropp strove to record as many as possible, in association with
his work on raths and other earthworks and monuments ...].
Hyland Books (Cat. 214) lists Hodder M Westropp, Pre-historic
Phases, or Introductory Essays on Prehistoric Archaeology (1872).
Col. George OCallaghan Westropp, portrayed in David
Fitzpatrick, Politics of Irish Life as an Anglo-Irish type
still too little noticed by historians ... in whom love of place transcends
divisions based on origins, religion, politics, and is briefly mentioned
also in R. F. Foster, Paddy and Mr Punch (1993), p.30.
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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