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Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent |  | Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent: Encyclopedia II - Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent |  | Gaelicization in Galloway and Carrick occurred at the expense of Old English and British. Old Irish can be traced in the Rhinns of Galloway from at least the fifth century. How it developed and spread is largely unknown. The Gaelicization of the land was complete probably by the eleventh century, although some have suggested a date as early as the beginning of the ninth century. The main problem is that this folk-movement is unrecorded in the historical sources, so it has to be reconstructed from things such as place-names. According to the ...
See also:Galwegian Gaelic, Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent, Galwegian Gaelic - Culture, Galwegian Gaelic - Relationships to other languages, Galwegian Gaelic - 1500 and after, Galwegian Gaelic - Modern influence, Galwegian Gaelic - Bibliography, Galwegian Gaelic - External link |  | | Galwegian Gaelic, Galwegian Gaelic - 1500 and after, Galwegian Gaelic - Bibliography, Galwegian Gaelic - Culture, Galwegian Gaelic - External link, Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent, Galwegian Gaelic - Modern influence, Galwegian Gaelic - Relationships to other languages |  | |
|  |  | Galwegian Gaelic: Encyclopedia II - Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent
Galwegian Gaelic - History and extent
Gaelicization in Galloway and Carrick occurred at the expense of Old English and British. Old Irish can be traced in the Rhinns of Galloway from at least the fifth century. How it developed and spread is largely unknown. The Gaelicization of the land was complete probably by the eleventh century, although some have suggested a date as early as the beginning of the ninth century. The main problem is that this folk-movement is unrecorded in the historical sources, so it has to be reconstructed from things such as place-names. According to the placename studies of WFH Nicolaisen, formerly of the University of Edinburgh, the earliest layer is represented by placenames with the prefix Sliabh- (often anglicized Slew- or Sla(e-) and Carraig (= a fishing station; anglicized as Carrick). This would make the settlement roughly contemporary with what was then Dalriada. The Gall-Gaidhel (the Gaelic Norse), who gave their name to the area appear to have settled in the ninth and tenth centuries. Many of the leading settlers would have been Norse speaking, but this would not appear to have been to the same extent as in other Norse-Gaelic regions, such as parts of the Hebrides and Sutherland-Caithness.
It is quite possible that even as late as the twelfth century, Cumbric (a Brythonic language related to Welsh) was still spoken in Annandale and lower Strathnith (where a man called Gille Cuithbrecht has the Gaelic nickname Bretnach [=Welshman]), but these areas seem to have been thoroughly Gaelicized by the end of that century. A couple of legal terms also survive in medieval documents. The demise of Cumbric in the region is even harder to date than Gaelic.
The likely eastern limit reached by the language was the Annan. The reason for that is that Gaelic placenames disappear quite rapidly after this boundary, although a handful of Gaelic names also appear in Cumbria. In the north it was possibly cut off from other Scottish dialects in the fourteenth, if not the thirteenth century.
Other related archives1234, 1296, 1504, 1508, 1563, 1566, 1575, 1600, 1800, Alexander Montgomerie, Anglo-Saxon, Annan, Annandale, Arran, Balmaghie, British, Brythonic language, Caithness, Carrick, Celtic, Cumbria, Cumbric, Dalriada, Daugh, Dumfries and Galloway, England, Extinct languages, Fergus, Gall-Gaidhel, Galloway, Germanic, Gilla Brigte mac Fergusa, Gille Aldan, Goidelic, Goidelic languages, Hebrides, Highlands, Insular Celtic, Irish, Isle of Arran, Kirkcudbright, Languages of the United Kingdom, Lothian, Lowland Scots, Manx, Margaret McMurray, Medieval Scotland, Medieval languages, Middle Ages, Middle Irish, Old English, Old Irish, Picts, Rhinns of Galloway, Richard of Hexham, Sawney Bean, Scotland, Scottish, Scottish Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic language, Scottish culture, Scottish society, St Andrew, Strathnith, Sutherland, Uchtred mac Fergusa, Ulster Irish, University of Edinburgh, Walter Kennedy, Welsh, William Dunbar, William Neill, William Wallace, clans, dialect, dissolution of the Lordship, eighteenth century, eleventh century, fifth century, fourteenth, independent kings of Galloway, ninth century, peighinn, place-names, quarterland, seventeenth century, thirteenth century, twelfth century
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History and extent", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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