DONNYBROOK
A scene of uproar and disorder; a heated argument.
We are in Ireland, in what was once a village on the high road out of Dublin but which is now one of that city’s suburbs. King John gave a licence in 1204 to hold an annual fair in Donnybrook.
By the eighteenth century it had become a vast assembly, held on August 26 and the following 15 days each year, a gathering-place for horse dealers, fortune-tellers, beggars, wrestlers, dancers, fiddlers, and the sellers of every kind of food and drink. It was renowned in Ireland and beyond for its rowdiness and noise, and particularly for the whiskey-fuelled fighting that went on after dark. A passing reference in, of all sober works, Walter Bagehot’s The English Constitution of 1867, gives a flavour: “The only principle recognised ... was akin to that recommended to the traditionary Irishman on his visit to Donnybrook Fair, ‘Wherever you see a head, hit it’.” The usual weapon was a stick of oak or blackthorn that Irishmen often called a shillelagh (a word which derives from the town of that name in County Wicklow). The legend was that visitors to Donnybrook fair would rather fight than eat.
As Donnybrook progressively became a residential suburb of Dublin, the fair became more and more a nuisance until a campaign was got up to have it closed; in 1855 the rights to the fair were bought up by Dublin Corporation and it was suppressed. It was around that time that its name started to be used to describe a brawl, at first in the form like Donnybrook fair but then elliptically.
2006-06-16 11:20:54
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answer #1
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answered by budbub 2
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It isn't a tragic expression, but rather a way to describe a fight. A donnybrook is one of those fights (like you get in a bar, or a soccer game) where everyone joins in and just whales away on everyone else, rather than a fight where people take sides.
2006-06-16 11:22:50
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answer #2
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answered by old lady 7
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It's a decent f******* brawl between people in Ireland...can happen anytime anyplace, oh I too can look up the history...but when you have witnessed one ...ok..many..you dont need google to search the meaning....strangely enough they often begin in pubs, then they make up all a fright, looking that is, torn clothes, bloody noses and they have by then even forgotten the point. Then they can go back in if so chosen and drink to each other and sing whilst getting more drunk! Slainte !!!!!!.....it's culture honey....jayuys it's just a bloody fight! No need to analyze that!!!!!!
2006-06-16 16:16:55
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It's not tragic. It's a great old melee, usually between families, friends and guests present at whatever occasion..or just at the pub. If it's a good one, everyone will speak of it laughingly for years to come.
Get's even better with a bit of embroidery..
2006-06-16 13:31:52
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't know why it would be tragic, but a donnybrook is a big free-for-all or brawl (named after a suburb of Dublin, Ireland).
2006-06-16 11:19:21
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answer #5
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answered by -j. 7
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It's a fight. Like a brawl. I think it may be Irish in origin
2006-06-16 11:19:20
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answer #6
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answered by amaridy 3
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