Quote:
Just to add: Her Irish was pretty shaky too. She gave the Irish name for Ireland as "Éireann" and claimed it was made up of "Éire" and the Viking word for "land" (I think she had it confused with "Ireland").
She may have taken bad notes when people told her things, and confused the story of the origin of
Éire/Éire ann with that of the names of the provinces (or three of them, anyway). When the Norsemen started speaking Norse Irish, they came up with names for the three provinces other than Connacht which combined the Irish province names, the Irish word
tír (“land” or “country”), and the Germanic “s” to show the genitive case, resulting in:
Ulaidh +
s +
tír = Ulster = "Ulaidh's land" [or “land of Ulaidh”]
Mumhain +
s +
tír = Munster = "Mumhain's land" [or “land of Mumhain”]
Laighin +
s +
tír = Leinster = "Laighin's land" [or “land of Laighin”]