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Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

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COURTNEY’S ‘UNION PIPES’ AND THE TERMINOLOGY<br />

OF IRISH BELLOWS-BLOWN BAGPIPES<br />

Nicholas Carolan, <strong>Irish</strong> <strong>Traditional</strong> <strong>Music</strong> <strong>Archive</strong>, Dublin<br />

Version 1.0 as at 14 May 2012 1<br />

<strong>Irish</strong> uilleann pipers and followers of the uilleann pipes generally<br />

know nowadays that their instrument was once often known as the<br />

‘union pipes’. 2 The term was one of those commonly used before<br />

1900 to refer to variant forms of the bellows-blown bagpipe found in<br />

Britain and Ireland, the United States of America, Australia, and<br />

elsewhere. After 1900 it continued in use but gradually gave way in<br />

Ireland to ‘uilleann pipes’, 3 which term eventually spread to be used<br />

universally, or almost so, for the <strong>Irish</strong> form of the instrument.<br />

There is nevertheless uncertainty about the term ‘union pipes’ – its<br />

origin, forerunners, meanings, spread and demise – and it is<br />

proposed here to examine these aspects, and to establish an outline<br />

1<br />

Much of the information on which this essay on <strong>Irish</strong> music terminology is<br />

based has been newly discovered through ongoing international print and image<br />

digitisation programmes. Since other relevant information will doubtless emerge<br />

from these sources in the future, the essay will be updated here to include such<br />

information as it is found. For expansion of bibliographic etc. citations see<br />

Information Sources below. Corrections and earlier instances of terms cited can<br />

be sent to union.pipes@itma.ie, but because of other commitments it will not be<br />

possible for the writer to enter into correspondence. The essay should be cited<br />

by author, title, version and date on www.itma.ie as above.<br />

2<br />

This form of the term is used throughout here for convenience, except in<br />

quotations, but the term also occurs in historical sources as ‘union pipe(s)’,<br />

‘union bag(-)pipe(s)’, ‘<strong>Irish</strong> union pipes’, etc., and its elements are often given<br />

initial capitals. Original spellings and initial capitalisation (only) have been<br />

retained here in quotations. Primary sources quoted have been checked unless<br />

otherwise stated.<br />

3<br />

This term also appears in variant spellings in older sources and often with<br />

initial capitals: ‘ullann’, ‘uileann’, ‘uillinn’, ‘ullian (bag-)pipe(s)’, etc.<br />

Introduced only in the twentieth century, it is the term now in standard use in<br />

Ireland to refer (ahistorically) to <strong>Irish</strong> bellows pipes of any period and in any<br />

place.

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