CELTIC LANGUAGES

subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. At one time, during the Hellenistic period, Celtic speech extended all the way from Britain and the Iberian Peninsula in the west across Europe to Asia Minor in the east, where a district still known as Galatia recalls the former presence there of Celtic-speaking Gauls. Later, however, in the course of the Roman conquest, Celtic speech tended to yield to Latin, and by the 5th cent. a.d. Celtic had virtually disappeared from continental Europe. Today the Celtic languages that have survived into the modern era are limited almost entirely to the British Isles and French Brittany, where these tongues are spoken by a total of about 2 million people. The Celtic subfamily is made up of three groups of languages: the Continental, the Brythonic (also called British), and the Goidelic (also called Gaelic).

Continental Celtic

Continental Celtic, which includes all Celtic idioms on the Continent with the exception of Breton, died out following the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the late 5th cent. a.d. The principal example of this group is the now extinct language Gaulish, for little remains of any other Continental Celtic tongues. Gaulish was once the language of Gaul proper (now modern France). Evidence of Gaulish is found both in words and in personal and proper names referred to by ancient Greek and Latin writers as well as in more than a hundred Gaulish inscriptions from France and N Italy (ranging in date from the 3d cent. b.c. to the 3d cent. a.d.). Coins and Greek and Latin inscriptions in Europe also preserve Celtic place-names and personal names. Yet the material as a whole is quite limited, furnishing only a number of proper names, a small vocabulary, and certain indications regarding the sounds and grammar of Gaulish and of Continental Celtic in general.

Brythonic

The Brythonic group includes Breton, Cornish (now extinct), and Welsh. They are all descendants of British, the Celtic language of the ancient Britons of Caesar's day. The emergence of Welsh, Cornish, and Breton from British as separate languages probably took place during the 5th and 6th cent. a.d. and was a result of the Germanic invasions of Britain. Welsh and Breton have discarded the originally numerous Indo-European cases for the noun and use only one case. Both employ the Roman alphabet for writing. The accent in Welsh and Breton generally falls on the next-to-last syllable, with the exception of a single Breton dialect that has the accent on the last syllable.

Breton today is spoken by more than 500,000 people in Brittany, most of whom are bilingual, speaking also French. It is not surprising that Breton, unlike Welsh, has many loan words from French. Breton is by no means descended from ancient Gaulish, but rather from the Celtic dialects taken by Welsh and Cornish immigrants from the British Isles who were fleeing Germanic invasions and found refuge in Armorica (now French Brittany) in the 5th and 6th cent. a.d. Surviving literary documents in Breton go back only as far as the 15th cent., but the earlier stages of the language are known through glosses and proper names (see Breton literature).

Cornish, once the Celtic language of Cornwall, became extinct in the late 18th cent. Cornish proper names in manuscripts of the 10th cent. a.d. are the oldest recorded traces of the language. A number of Cornish place-names have survived, and some Cornish words appear in the English spoken in Cornwall today. The Cornish language was written in the Roman alphabet. It is not noted for an outstanding literature (see Cornish literature). Modern efforts to revive Cornish have had little success.

Welsh (called Cymraeg or Cymric by its speakers) is the language today of over 600,000 people, chiefly in Wales (a western peninsula of Great Britain) but also in the United States and Canada, to which a number of Welsh people have migrated. Most speakers of Welsh in Great Britain also use English. The oldest extant Welsh texts are from the 8th cent. a.d. (see Welsh literature).

Goidelic

The third group of the Celtic subfamily is Goidelic, to which Irish (also called Irish Gaelic), Scots Gaelic, and Manx belong. The term Erse is used as a synonym for Irish and sometimes even for Scots Gaelic. All the modern Goidelic tongues are descendants of the ancient Celtic speech of Ireland. It is thought that the Celtic idiom first came to Ireland shortly before the Christian era. An official language of Ireland, Irish is spoken natively by approximately 75,000 people; roughly a third of Ireland's population can speak and understand it to some degree. Most speakers of Irish also use English (see Irish language).

Scots Gaelic is the tongue of about 60,000 persons in the Highlands of Scotland and an additional 3,000 in Canada. Most of these people also speak English. Gaelic speech began to reach Scotland in the late 5th cent. a.d., when it was brought by the Irish invaders of that country. However, a truly distinctive Scots Gaelic did not appear before the 13th cent. The chief difference between Scots Gaelic and Irish results from the substantial Norse influence on the former. There are four cases for the noun (nominative, genitive, dative, and vocative) in Scots Gaelic, which uses the Roman alphabet (see Gaelic literature).

Manx is a dialect of Scots Gaelic that was once spoken on the Isle of Man, but it has almost entirely died out there. First recorded in writing in the early 17th cent., Manx does not have an important literature. It is written in the Roman alphabet and shows a strong Norse influence.

Pronunciation and Grammar

The rules of pronunciation for all the Celtic languages are extremely complicated. For example, the final sound of a word frequently brings about a phonetically changed initial consonant of the next word, as in Irish fuil, "blood," but ar bhfuil, "our blood." Another example is Welsh pen, "head," but fy mhen, "my head." In order to look up a word in the dictionary, one has to be familiar with these rules of phonetic change, or mutation. There are only two genders in the Celtic languages, masculine and feminine. Words of Celtic origin that have been absorbed by English include bard,blarney,colleen,crock,dolmen,druid,glen,slogan, and whiskey. An interesting feature of Celtic languages is that in several characteristics they resemble some non-Indo-European languages. These characteristics include the absence of a present participle and the use instead of a verbal noun (found also in Egyptian and Berber), the frequent expression of agency by means of an impersonal passive construction instead of by a verbal subject in the nominative case (as in Egyptian, Berber, Basque, and some Caucasian and Eskimo languages), and the positioning of the verb at the beginning of a sentence (typical of Egyptian and Berber).

See Indo-European.

Bibliography

See H. Lewis and H. Pedersen, A Concise Comparative Celtic Grammar (1937); K. H. Jackson, Language and History in Early Britain (1953); V. E. Durkacz, The Decline of the Celtic Languages (1983); C. W. J. Withers, Gaelic in Scotland, 1698–1981 (1984).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...with its emphasis on early and medieval Celtic languages and literatures (Programme of the Eleventh...Indo-European model on the status of the Celtic languages was immense: The Celtic languages (and cultures) were now allowed to assume...
...from some one of the Celtic languages alone, and the great...literatures composed in the Celtic languages. constantly in Celtic...which to judge what the Celtic literatures are really...dangerous, since six languages are involved, covering...
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...intellectual basis for Celtic revival and the...and Arabic, two languages in which Jones...language family.54 The Celtic tongues shared...the classical languages of the Mediterranean...India and the Celtic periphery in a celebration...between European languages and the Sanskrit...
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Celtic Presence: Studies in Celtic Languages and Literatures, Irish, Scottish...Celtic Presence: Studies in Celtic Languages and Literatures. Irish, Scottish...borrowings, from Continental Celtic via other languages, include budget, change, mutton...
...current research in the area of Celtic Arthurian material. Much of this...on the oral tradition of other languages. She considers the effect this...on Arthurian literature in the Celtic languages. The insights are new, and informed...
...1975, 165). In terms of the Celtic languages, Tolkiens knowledge and appreciation...1968. Among his interests are Celtic languages and antiquities (Tolkien...not-too-obvious link is the "interest in Celtic languages and antiquities," which, however...
...term) may be very real to practitioners of contemporary Celtic spirituality and other people who may not speak any Celtic languages or originate from Celtic culture areas. However, given that this kind of Celtic self-identification is not "authentic...
...McTurk, Chaucer and the Norse and Celtic Worlds. by Sian Gronlie Rory McTurk, Chaucer and the Norse and Celtic Worlds (Aldershot and Burlington...his work (p. 188)--to the Norse and Celtic fringes of the medieval world. From...
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magazine articles on: Celtic Languages  - 78 results

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...moved residents of the site down to the new valley town. The Celtic tribe living there at the time of the Roman invasion were the...the museum opens. Already there are neat plaques in several languages installed around the site and it looks as if this pet project...
...methods to forcibly repress the Celtic languages of Ireland and Wales. Although...back from the edge of extinction. Languages, too, can be turned around. In...even after they have died. The Celtic language of Cornish, once spoken...
...all historically English speaking. Although centuries of intolerance have led to the attrition of the indigenous Celtic languages, there are still communities in which they are spoken, and in which some older people have only a limited command...
...warmth and continuity in smaller communities when their own languages die out, humanity as a whole is a loser too. An interfering...should know nothing of these skills, if outlying centres of Celtic eloquence had not survived in Ireland and Wales. Some of the...
...Language Loss The idea of saving languages is very modern. When linguistics...dialects--such as Breton, the Celtic language spoken in Brittany...education and of the Official Languages Act is likely to give some...for political autonomy. The Celtic language of Welsh, or cymraeg...
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...BIG NAME TO TURN DOWN THE CELTIC PARK HOTSEAT. by Ewing Grahame The languages may change but the message...decide he didnt want to coach Celtic. On May 11 Wim Jansen...Olsen who have also rejected Celtic. Jansen quit because he...
...Celtic Encyclopedia is published as an element of the Celtic Languages and Cultural Identity project. An international...tradition in the visual arts. Project five: The Celtic Languages and Cultural Identity focusing on the concept of...
...world. "Thats been the theory that everybody has grown up with for at least 100 years. "There is evidence that the Celtic languages were spoken there because of place names and peoples names. "But the assumption was that was where they came from...
...Celtic and is pleased to co-operate with other Celtic institutions whenever possible in order to further the cause of Celtic languages. The library has been working towards publishing the Cornish manuscript for a number of years and in co-operation...
...huge surprise if Celtic knock them out. But the moral of these recollections is that Celtic have come to expect being written off in advance. In various languages. So what an opportunity to put their name up in lights across England, Europe and...
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CELTIC LANGUAGES subfamily of the Indo-European...from continental Europe. Today the Celtic languages that have survived into the modern...rules of pronunciation for all the Celtic languages are extremely complicated. For example...
...table) The Indo-European Family of Languages Anatolian Hieroglypic Hittite...Lithuanian , Old Prussian * Celtic Brythonic Breton, Cornish, Welsh...Subfamily Group Subgroup Languages and Principal Dialects...
BRYTHONIC brithon ik, group of languages belonging to the Celtic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. See Celtic languages . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
GAELIC ga lik, or Goidelic, group of languages belonging to the Celtic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. See Celtic languages ; Irish language . ____________________ Copyright...
GOIDELIC goidel ik, or Gaelic, group of languages belonging to the Celtic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. See Celtic languages ; Irish language . ____________________ Copyright...
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