Isle of Man
This article is extracted from an article by Ben Johnson in the Historic UK History Magazine. Here are links for more information: History of Isle of Man, Anglotopia Ise of Man, and Isle of Man Wiki.
Man became an island as the glaciers of the last Ice Ae retreated and the level rose about 10,000 years ago. It then became settled bvy Gaelic people. The islands position made it pivotal for trade and communication with Scandanavia and Europe. It also was a contact point between Briton and Ireland.
The introduction of farming in the fourth millennium BC gave people an element of control over the way they lived, establishing settlements and enabling, in good seasons, the production of food surpluses to see them through leaner times and to exchange for specialist goods like pottery and, later, metal tools and weapons.The Manx PeopleThe Manx Iron Age lasted from around 500 BC to 500 AD and the Celtic traditions established in this period are fundamental to the culture today, perhaps the most significant legacy being the Manx language.
Manx Gaelic was the everyday language of the people until the 19th Century, and although the last native speaker died in the 1970s, the language is currently enjoying a revival. A new religion, Christianity, was introduced as early as the 6th Century, and has since played an important part in the lives of the Manx people.
The Vikings who arrived in the late 8th Century, first to raid but then to settle and rule, were pagans. The burial mounds of these pioneer warriors stand proudly in the landscape, declaring their status and protecting the goods and possessions buried with their owners.Within a few generations, however, the Norse settlers had adopted Christianity and in 1134, Olaf Godredson, King of Mann and the Isles, invited the Abbot of Furness to establish a monastery at Rushen Abbey, two miles upstream from his fortress at Castle Rushen in Castletown.
The Vikings established the Manx parliament, Tynwald (the oldest continuous Parliament in the world), and formalized the legal and political land divisions that still exist today.The Norse Kingdom of Mann and the Isles came to an end in 1265 and the Island became a pawn in a game of war between Scotland and England, with control passing back and forth between the two nations. Sovereignty finally passed to the English Crown at the beginning of the 15th Century and for nearly four centuries, the Island was governed under a hereditary Lordship.
Modern TimesIn the 18th Century, the Island’s offshore independence made it a major centre for the smuggling trade, causing a considerable loss of revenue to the English Treasury. As a result, in 1765, the British Government intervened directly in the course of Manx history and purchased the entire Island for just £70,000.A period of direct rule from Westminster followed the Revestment of 1765, and it was not until the mid-1800s that the Island regained a measure of control over its internal finances. Since that time, political power has gradually devolved from London to the Island and an old colonial-style administration has given way to a modern democratic government.
The people of the Isle of Man have a great respect for their rich cultural heritage, which is a testimony to their ability to adapt and exploit the changing circumstances of history, a nation ready to meet the challenges of tomorrow.
Tourist attractions include the trains, trams and horsedrawn trams. Another is the Laxey Wheel. In the Laxey valley valuable lead and zinc ore was found and mined. However, the mine kept flooding and a local engineer Robert Casement designed the Great Laxey Wheel to pump out the water in 1864. The water comes from rainwater from the hillsides which flows into a raised channel which empties into the wheel’s 168 Buckets which hold 24 gallons of water. The weight makes the wheel move forward, continually dumping the water producing close to 200 horsepower energy, emptying the water into a water tower which hocld a huge rod connect to a T-Rocker which changec the vertical movement to horizontal which pumps water from the mine into the Laxey River and out to sea. . The name of the wheel is the Lady Isabella. This youtube video explains how it works. Laxey Pump Video