The
early history of the triangular frame harp in Europe is contested. The first instrument associated with the harping tradition in the Gaelic world was known as a . This word may originally have described a different stringed instrument, being etymologically related to the Welsh
crwth. It has been suggested that the word / (from / , a board) was coined for the triangular frame harp which replaced the , and that this coining was of Scottish origin. A notched piece of wood which some have interpreted to be part of the bridge of an
Iron Age lyre dating to around 300 BC was discovered on the
Isle of Skye, which, if actually a bridge, would make it the oldest surviving fragment of a western European stringed instrument (although images of Greek lyres are much older). The earliest descriptions of a European triangular framed harp, i.e. harps with a fore pillar, are found on carved 8th century
Pictish stones. Pictish harps were strung from horsehair. The instruments apparently spread south to the Anglo-Saxons, who commonly used gut strings and then west to the Gaels of the Highlands and to Ireland. Exactly thirteen depictions of any triangular chordophone instrument from pre-11th-century Europe exist and twelve of them come from Scotland. The earliest Irish references to stringed instruments are from the 6th century, and players of such instruments were held in high regard by the nobility of the time.
Early Irish law from 700 AD stipulates that
bards and 'cruit' players should sit with the nobility at banquets and not with the common entertainers. Another stringed instrument from this era was the
tiompán, most likely a kind of lyre. Despite providing the earliest evidence of stringed instruments in Ireland, no records described what these instruments looked like, or how the cruit and tiompán differed from one another. Only two quadrangular instruments occur within the Irish context on the west coast of Scotland and both carvings date two hundred years after the Pictish carvings. One study suggests Pictish stone carvings may be copied from the
Utrecht Psalter, the only other source outside Pictish Scotland to display a Triangular Chordophone instrument. The Utrecht Psalter was penned between 816 and 835 AD. However, Pictish Triangular Chordophone carvings found on the
Nigg Stone date from 790 to 799 AD. and pre-date the document by up to forty years. Other Pictish sculptures also predate the Utrecht Psalter, namely the harper on the
Dupplin Cross from c. 800 AD. The Norman-Welsh cleric and scholar
Gerald of Wales (c.1146 – c.1223), whose
Topographica Hibernica and
Expugnatio Hibernica is a description of Ireland from the Anglo-Norman point of view, praised Irish harp music (if little else), stating: However, Gerald, who had a strong dislike of the
Gaelic Irish, somewhat contradicts himself. While admitting that the style of music originated in Ireland, he immediately added that, in "the opinion of many", the Scots and the Welsh had now surpassed them in that skill. Gerald refers to the
cythara and the
tympanum, but their identification with the harp is uncertain, and it is not known that he ever visited Scotland. Early images of the clàrsach are not common in Scottish iconography, but a gravestone at
Kiells, in
Argyllshire, dating from about 1500, shows one with a typically large soundbox, decorated with Gaelic designs. The Irish Saint
Máedóc of Ferns reliquary shrine dates from c.1100, and clearly shows King
David with a triangular framed harp including a "T-Section" in the pillar. The
Irish word
lamhchrann or
Scottish Gaelic làmh-chrann came into use at an unknown date to indicate this pillar which would have supplied the bracing to withstand the tension of a wire-strung harp. Three of the four pre-16th-century authentic harps that survive today are of Gaelic provenance: the
Brian Boru Harp in
Trinity College, Dublin, and the
Queen Mary and
Lamont Harps, both in the National Museum of Scotland,
Edinburgh. The last two are examples of the small low-headed harp, and were long believed to have been made from
hornbeam, a wood not native to Scotland or Ireland. This theory has been refuted by Karen Loomis in her 2015 PhD thesis. All three are dated approximately to the 15th century and may have been made in
Argyll in western Scotland. One of the largest and most complete collections of 17th–18th century harp music is the work of
Turlough O'Carolan, a blind, itinerant Irish harper and composer. At least 220 of his compositions survive to this day.
Telyn harps See: History of the harp in Wales . In Wales, harp was
telyn in Welsh; words were added to indicate variations:
telyn benglin (lap harp),
telyn farddol (bardic harp),
telyn rawn (harp using horsehair strings),
telyn ledr (harp strung with gut strings). The tradition in harps are found "frequently" in literature, starting about the 12th century A.D. Like the Irish, the Welsh did have metal-strung harps. Horsehair strings remained in common use through the 17th century, and gut strings gradually grew into use in Wales as well. The
telyn had an early single-strung form that was "distinct from its Irish counterpart," with a "straighter pillar" than the Irish harps. Welsh harps had a frame made from wood, with an animal-hide soundboard, wood or bone pegs, and about 30 horsehair strings. Strings might have L-shaped wooden pegs (
gwarchïod) which touched the strings at the bottom and caused them to buzz.
Telyns were played on the musician's left shoulder. Over time, the Welsh had harps in a number of shapes and sizes, which were superseded in about 1700 by the Italian chromatic
triple harp, and later the
pedal harp. However, harpists today claim that they have an "unbroken history" from the harps' early use to the present day. After being displaced by the pedal harp, the triple harp has been the focus of a revival in Wales. ==Characteristics and function==