Goidelic languages

The Goidelic /ɡɔɪˈdɛlɪk/ or Gaelic languages (Irish: teangacha Gaelacha; Scottish Gaelic: cànanan Goidhealach; Manx: çhengaghyn Gaelgagh) form one of the two groups of Insular Celtic languages, the other being the Brittonic languages.[2]

Goidelic
Gaelic
Geographic
distribution
Linguistic classificationIndo-European
Early forms
Subdivisions
Glottologgoid1240[1]

Goidelic languages historically formed a dialect continuum stretching from Ireland through the Isle of Man to Scotland. There are three modern Goidelic languages: Irish (Gaeilge), Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig), and Manx (Gaelg). Manx died out in the 20th century but has since been revived to some degree.[3]

Nomenclature

Although Irish and Manx are often referred to as Irish Gaelic and Manx Gaelic (as they are Goidelic or Gaelic languages), the use of the word "Gaelic" is unnecessary because the terms Irish and Manx, when used to denote languages, always refer to those languages. This is in contrast to Scottish Gaelic, for which "Gaelic" distinguishes the language from the Germanic language known as Scots. Gaelic, by itself, is sometimes used to refer to Scottish Gaelic, especially in Scotland, and so it is ambiguous.

The endonyms (Gaeilge, Gaelic and Gaolainn in Irish, Gaelg in Manx and Gàidhlig in Scottish Gaelic) are derived from Old Irish Goídelc, which in turn is derived from Old Welsh Guoidel meaning "pirate, raider".[4][5] The medieval mythology of the Lebor Gabála Érenn places its origin in an eponymous ancestor of the Gaels and the inventor of the language, Goídel Glas.

Classification

The family tree of the Goidelic languages is as follows:

History and range

Britain and Ireland in the first few centuries of the 1st millennium, before the founding of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
  Mainly Goidelic areas.
  Mainly Pictish areas.
  Mainly Brittonic areas.
Goidelic language and culture would eventually become dominant in the Pictish area and far northern Brittonic area.

Goidelic was once restricted to Ireland and, possibly, the west coast of Scotland. Medieval Gaelic literature tells us that the kingdom of Dál Riata emerged in western Scotland during the 6th century. The mainstream view is that Dál Riata was founded by Irish migrants, but this is not universally accepted. Archaeologist Ewan Campbell says there is no archaeological evidence for a migration or invasion, and suggests strong sea links helped maintain a pre-existing Gaelic culture on both sides of the North Channel.[6]

Dál Riata grew in size and influence, and Gaelic language and culture was eventually adopted by the neighbouring Picts (a group of peoples who may have spoken a Brittonic language) who lived throughout Scotland.[7] Manx, the language of the Isle of Man, is closely akin to the Gaelic spoken in the Hebrides and the Irish spoken in northeast and eastern Ireland and the now-extinct Galwegian Gaelic of Galloway (in southwest Scotland), with some influence from Old Norse through the Viking invasions and from the previous British inhabitants.

The oldest written Goidelic language is Primitive Irish, which is attested in Ogham inscriptions from about the 4th century. The forms of this speech are very close, and often identical, to the forms of Gaulish recorded before and during the Roman Empire. The next stage, Old Irish, is found in glosses (i.e. annotations) to Latin manuscripts—mainly religious and grammatical—from the 6th to the 10th century, as well as in archaic texts copied or recorded in Middle Irish texts. Middle Irish, the immediate predecessor of the modern Goidelic languages, is the term for the language as recorded from the 10th to the 12th century: a great deal of literature survives in it, including the early Irish law texts.

Classical Gaelic, otherwise known as Early Modern Irish,[8] covers the period from the 13th to the 18th century, during which time it was used as a literary standard[9] in Ireland and Scotland.[10] This is often called Classical Irish, while Ethnologue gives the name "Hiberno-Scottish Gaelic" to this standardised written language. As long as this written language was the norm, Ireland was considered the Gaelic homeland to the Scottish literati.

Later orthographic divergence has resulted in standardised pluricentristic orthographies. Manx orthography, which was introduced in the 16th and 17th centuries, was based loosely on English and Welsh orthography, and so never formed part of this literary standard.

Irish

Irish is one of the Republic of Ireland's two official languages along with English. Historically the predominant language of the island, it is now mostly spoken in parts of the south, west, and northwest. The legally defined Irish-speaking areas are called the Gaeltacht; all government institutions of the Republic, in particular the parliament (Oireachtas), its upper house (Seanad) and lower house (Dáil), and the prime minister (Taoiseach) are officially named in this language, even in the context of English. At present, the Gaeltachtaí are primarily found in Counties Cork, Donegal, Mayo, Galway, Kerry, and, to a lesser extent, in Waterford and Meath. In the Republic of Ireland 1,774,437 (41.4% of the population aged three years and over) regard themselves as able to speak Irish.[11] Of these, 77,185 (1.8%) speak Irish on a daily basis outside school.[11] Irish is also undergoing a revival in Northern Ireland and has been accorded some legal status there under the 1998 Good Friday Agreement but its official usage remains divisive among a predominantly British population. The 2001 census in Northern Ireland showed that 167,487 (10.4%) people "had some knowledge of Irish". Combined, this means that around one in three people (c.1.8 million) on the island of Ireland can understand Irish.

Despite the ascent in Ireland of the English and Anglicised ruling classes following the 1607 Flight of the Earls (and the disappearance of much of the Gaelic nobility), Irish was spoken by the majority of the population until the Great Famine of the 1840s. Disproportionately affecting the classes among whom Irish was the primary spoken language, famine and emigration precipitated a steep decline in native speakers which only recently has begun to reverse.[12]

The Irish language has been recognised as an official and working language of the European Union.[13] Ireland's national language was the twenty-third to be given such recognition by the EU and previously had the status of a treaty language.[14]

Scottish Gaelic

Linguistic division in early twelfth century Scotland:
  Gaelic speaking
  Norse-Gaelic zone, characterized by the use of both languages
  English-speaking zone
  Cumbric may have survived in this zone; more realistically a mixture of Cumbric, Gaelic (west) and English (east)

Some people in the north and west of mainland Scotland and most people in the Hebrides still speak Scottish Gaelic, but the language has been in decline. There are now believed to be approximately 60,000 native speakers of Scottish Gaelic in Scotland, plus around 1,000 speakers of the Canadian Gaelic dialect in Nova Scotia.

Its historical range was much larger. For example, it was the everyday language of most of the rest of the Scottish Highlands until little more than a century ago. Galloway was once also a Gaelic-speaking region, but the Galwegian dialect has been extinct there for approximately three centuries. It is believed to have been home to dialects that were transitional between Scottish Gaelic and the two other Goidelic languages. While Gaelic was spoken across the Scottish Borders and Lothian during the early High Middle Ages it does not seem to have been spoken by the majority and was likely the language of the ruling elite, land-owners and religious clerics. Some other parts of the Scottish Lowlands spoke Cumbric, and others Scots Inglis, the only exceptions being the Northern Isles of Orkney and Shetland where Norse was spoken.

Scotland takes its name from the Latin word for 'Gael', Scotus, plural Scoti (of uncertain etymology).[15] Scotland originally meant Land of the Gaels in a cultural and social sense. Until late in the 15th century, Scottis in Scottish English (or Scots Inglis) was used to refer only to Gaelic, and the speakers of this language who were identified as Scots. As the ruling elite became Scots Inglis/English-speaking, Scottis was gradually associated with the land rather than the people, and the word Erse ('Irish') was gradually used more and more as an act of culturo-political disassociation, with an overt implication that the language was not really Scottish, and therefore foreign. This was something of a propaganda label, as Gaelic has been in Scotland for at least as long as English, if not longer.

In the early 16th century the dialects of northern Middle English, also known as Early Scots, which had developed in Lothian and had come to be spoken elsewhere in the Kingdom of Scotland, themselves later appropriated the name Scots. By the 17th century Gaelic speakers were restricted largely to the Highlands and the Hebrides. Furthermore, the culturally repressive measures taken against the rebellious Highland communities by The Crown following the second Jacobite Rebellion of 1746 caused still further decline in the language's use — to a large extent by enforced emigration (e.g. the Highland Clearances). Even more decline followed in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

The Scottish Parliament has afforded the language a secure statutory status and "equal respect" (but not full equality in legal status under Scots law)[16] with English, sparking hopes that Scottish Gaelic can be saved from extinction and perhaps even revitalised.

Manx

Long the everyday language of most of the Isle of Man, Manx began to decline sharply in the 19th century. The last monolingual Manx speakers are believed to have died around the middle of the 19th century; in 1874 around 30% of the population were estimated to speak Manx, decreasing to 9.1% in 1901 and 1.1% in 1921.[17] The last native speaker of Manx, Ned Maddrell, died in 1974.

At the end of the 19th century a revival of Manx began, headed by the Manx Language Society (Yn Çheshaght Ghailckagh). Both linguists and language enthusiasts searched out the last native speakers during the 20th century, recording their speech and learning from them. In the United Kingdom Census 2011, there were 1,823 Manx speakers on the island, representing 2.27% of the population of 80,398, and a steady increase in the number of speakers.[18]

Today Manx is used as the sole medium for teaching at five of the island's pre-schools by a company named Mooinjer veggey ("little people"), which also operates the sole Manx-medium primary school, the Bunscoill Ghaelgagh. Manx is taught as a second language at all of the island's primary and secondary schools and also at the University College Isle of Man and Centre for Manx Studies.

Comparison

Numbers

Comparison of Goidelic numbers, including Old Irish. Welsh numbers have been included for a comparison between Goidelic and Brythonic branches.

Goidelic Brythonic
# Old Irish Irish Scottish Gaelic Manx Welsh
1óenaonaon*unun
2*daadau
3trítrítrìtreetri
4cethairceathairceithirkiarepedwar
5cóiccúigcòigqueigpump
6siasheychwech
7sechtseachtseachdshiaghtsaith
8ochtochtochdhoghtwyth
9noínaoinaoinuynaw
10deichdeichdeichjeihdeg
11óen deichaon déagaon deugnane-jeigunarddeg
12dá dheichdó dhéagdà dheugdaa-yeigdeuddeg
20ficheficheficheadfeedugain
100cétcéadceudkeeadcant

* un and daa are no longer used in counting. Instead the suppletive forms nane and jees are normally used for counting but for comparative purposes, the historic forms are listed in the table above

Common phrases

Irish Scottish Gaelic Manx English
FáilteFàilteFailtWelcome
Ulster: Goidé mar atá tú?
Connacht: Cén chaoi a bhfuil tú?
Munster: Conas tánn tú?
Over-regional[19]: Ciamar a tha thu?
Lewis[20]: Dè man a tha thu?
Argyll and Outer Hebrides[21]: Dè mar a tha thu?
Kys t'ou? How are you?
Ulster: Cad é an t-ainm atá ort?
Connacht: Cén t-ainm atá ort?
Munster: Cad is ainm duit?
Over-regional: Dè an t-ainm a tha ort?
West coast mainland[22]: C' ainm a tha ort?
Cre'n ennym t'ort? What is your name?
Is mise...'S mise...Mish...I am...
Lá maithLatha mathLaa mieGood day
Maidin mhaithMadainn mhathMoghrey mieGood morning
Tráthnóna maithFeasgar mathFastyr mieGood afternoon/evening
Oíche mhaithOidhche mhathOie vieGood night
Go raibh maith agat Outer Hebrides and Skye[23]: Tapadh leat
Over-regional[24]: Mòran taing
Southwestern[25]: Gun robh math agad
Gura mie ayd Thank you
Slán leatMar sin leatSlane lhiatGood-bye
SláinteSlàinteSlayntHealth (used as a toast
[cf. English "cheers"])

Influence on other languages

There are several languages that show Goidelic influence, although they are not Goidelic languages themselves:

  • Shelta language is sometimes thought to be a Goidelic language, but is in fact a cant based on Irish and English, with a primarily English-based syntax.
  • The Bungee language in Canada is an English dialect spoken by Métis that was influenced by Orkney English, Scots English, Cree, Ojibwe, and Scottish Gaelic.
  • Beurla Reagaird is a cant spoken by Scottish travelling folk, which is to a large extent based on Scottish Gaelic.
gollark: https://www.jtolio.com/2016/03/go-channels-are-bad-and-you-should-feel-bad/
gollark: Nope.
gollark: Yes, and overuse of channels bad as they are just not very good a lot of the time.
gollark: Ugh, Go code is just so awful to work on, especially this.
gollark: I think I can make this work sensibly if it just used *callbacks*, as it *obviously should have*, but that would require me to know how to do those in Go.

See also

Water feature commemorating the first supply of water by gravitation to Portmahomack in 1887. It carries an inscription in poor Gaelic, "Uisce Tobar Na Baistiad" (which, if it read Uisge Tobar a' Bhaistidh would translate as "Water of the Well of Baptism")

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Goidelic". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  2. Robert D. Borsley; Ian G. Roberts (1996). The Syntax of the Celtic Languages: A Comparative Perspective. Cambridge University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-521-48160-1.
  3. Robert D. Borsley; Ian G. Roberts (1996). The Syntax of the Celtic Languages: A Comparative Perspective. Cambridge University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-521-48160-1.
  4. Koch, John. The Gododdin of Aneirin, Celtic Studies Publications, 1997, p. xcvii, note 2
  5. Koch, John (ed). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, 2006, p. 739
  6. Campbell, Ewan. "Were the Scots Irish?" in Antiquity #75 (2001).
  7. Gillies, William (1993). "Scottish Gaelic". In Martin J. Ball; James Fife (eds.). The Celtic languages. London: Routledge. pp. 145–227. ISBN 0-415-01035-7.
  8. Adam Fox; Daniel Woolf (2003). The Spoken Word: Oral Culture in Britain, 1500–1850. Manchester University Press. p. 197. ISBN 978-0-7190-5747-2.
  9. Lynch, Michael (2001). The Oxford Companion to Scottish History. Oxford University Press. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-19-211696-3.
  10. Trudgill, Peter (1984). Language in the British Isles. Cambridge University Press. p. 289. ISBN 978-0-521-28409-7.
  11. Central Statistics Office Ireland
  12. Coleman, Karen (10 January 2001). "Gaelic enjoys a revival in Ireland". BBC News Online. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  13. "Official languages of the EU – Education and training – European Commission". Education and training. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
  14. "Irish becomes the 23rd official language of EU". The Independent. 3 January 2007. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
  15. Oxford English Dictionary: Scot, n.1. The source of the late Latin word is obscure. There is no evidence that it represents the native name of any Gaelic-speaking people (the Irish Scot, an Irishman, pl. Scuit, appears to be a learned word from Latin), nor does it exist in Welsh, though Welshmen in writing Latin have from the earliest times used Scoti as the rendering of Gwyddel (Gaels). [...] Retrieved 11 October 2010
  16. "MSPs rule against Gaelic equality". BBC News Online. 21 April 2005.
  17. Gunther, Wilf (1990). "Language conservancy or: Can the anciently established British minority languages survive?". In D. Gorter; J. F. Hoekstra; L. G. Jansma; J. Ytsma (eds.). Fourth International Conference on Minority Languages (Vol. II: Western and Eastern European Papers ed.). Bristol, England: Multilingual Matters. pp. 53–67. ISBN 1-85359-111-4.
  18. "Isle of Man Census Report 2011" (PDF). Isle of Man Government. April 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 November 2012.
  19. "ciamar". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  20. "dè man". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  21. "dè mar". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  22. "c' ainm a tha ort?". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  23. "tapadh leat". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  24. "mòran taing". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  25. "gun robh math agad". Am Faclair Beag. Michael Bauer and Will Robertson. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
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