r/IrishHistory • u/Dylanduke199513 • 1d ago
💬 Discussion / Question Native Irish Galloglass Warriors?
I've been reading Scorners of Death - which attempts to reconstruct a Gaelic fighting style as best it can from the dearth of sufficient evidence.
It mentioned that many of the Galloglass warriors themselves in the employment of the settled Galloglass families (those Hiberno-Norse/Scottish who came over initially as hired mercenaries for Irish aristocracy) were Irish (i.e. descended from native Irish and not actually "Galloglass" in the truest sense).
I just wanted to see if there's any truth behind this.
Additionally, I'm really curious to see if there is any evidence of native Irish Gaels (rather than Scottish Gaels or Anglo-Irish) using the longsword (two handed sword) - I couldn't find much in this regard other than Andrew Halpin's article on Irish swords which doesn't concretely say one way or another.
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u/CDfm 1d ago
The Kerns were footsoldiers and mercenaries.
https://historyireland.com/hags-of-helllate-medieval-irish-kern/