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Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

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COURTNEY’S ‘UNION PIPES’ AND THE TERMINOLOGY OF IRISH BELLOWS-BLOWN BAGPIPES 20<br />

was then researching in Dublin the first book on <strong>Irish</strong> music, that the<br />

<strong>Irish</strong> had pipes of two kinds, ‘one filled by the mouth, the other<br />

modern by the bellows at the elbow or Uilean’, 54 the latter word a<br />

form of the <strong>Irish</strong> word for elbow. In referring to the old <strong>Irish</strong> word<br />

‘Cuislanagh, Pipers’, Vallancey says ‘I think Bagpipers; because<br />

they at this day call a piper by that name, and he names the bellows,<br />

bollog na Cuisli, the bellows of the Cuisli, or Veins of the Arm, at<br />

the first joint, and on the outside is Ullan or the Elbow – so that I<br />

take Ullan <strong>Pipes</strong> and Cuisli pipes to be the same...’. 55 Vallancey’s<br />

coinage of ‘Ullan <strong>Pipes</strong>’ was motivated by a wish to make a<br />

connection with the ‘woollen pipes’ of Shakespeare in The Merchant<br />

of Venice. When Walker came to print in 1786 he repeated<br />

Vallancey’s observations and passed on his supposition: ‘Vallency<br />

[sic] concludes that Ullan <strong>Pipes</strong> and Cuisle <strong>Pipes</strong> are one and the<br />

same’. 56 In time, as will be seen, this first term, which has no<br />

ancestry before Vallancey but was coined by him, would give rise to<br />

the term ‘uilleann pipes’.<br />

54<br />

Charles Vallancey to Joseph Cooper Walker in undated questionnaire, TCD<br />

MS 1461 (I) T51, fols 182–6.<br />

55<br />

Charles Vallancey, undated letter to Joseph Cooper Walker, in TCD MS<br />

1461–7 T.66 fol. 242. ‘Cuisli <strong>Pipes</strong>’ were not bagpipes but mouth-blown <strong>Irish</strong><br />

pipes of antiquity.<br />

56<br />

Walker 1786: 76. This is the first appearance of these terms in print. For<br />

further details see Carolan 1981: 4–9. Another unreliable contemporary <strong>Irish</strong><br />

antiquarian, William Beauford, incorrectly used the term adharcaidh ciuil for<br />

bagpipes (Beauford 1781: 244) but he meant mouth-blown bagpipes. Walker<br />

1786: 76 followed Beauford in this.

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