- Gàidhealtachd
The Gàidhealtachd IPA|/kɛːəɫtaxk/ (Eng: "Gaeldom"), sometimes known as A' Ghàidhealtachd (Eng: "the Gàidhealtachd"), usually refers to the Scottish
highlands and islands , and especially the Scottish Gaelic culture of the area. The corresponding Irish word "Gaeltacht " however refers strictly to an Irish speaking area. The term is also used to apply to the Gaelic-speaking areas ofNova Scotia ,Canada .The term "the Gàidhealtachd" is not truly interchangeable with the term highlands, as it refers to the
language and not to thegeography . Also, many parts of the highlands no longer have substantial Gaelic-speaking populations, and some parts of what is now thought of as the highlands have traditionally been Scots-speaking areas:Caithness ,Cromarty ,Grantown-on-Spey ,Campbeltown etc. Conversely, several Gaelic-speaking communities lie outwith the Highland,Argyll and Bute andWestern Isles council areas, for example Arran and parts ofPerth and Kinross . For this reason, "the Gàidhealtachd" also increasingly refers to the regions inScotland andNova Scotia whereScottish Gaelic is spoken as thenative language by most or some part of the population."Galldachd" ("Gall-dom", "Gall" referring to a non-
Gael ;cognate withGaul ) is often used for the Lowlands, although it is also notable that theHebrides are known as "Innse Gall" due to the historical presence ofNorsemen .History
In the past, the Gàidhealtachd would have included much of modern day Scotland outside the extreme south east and the
Northern Isles , as evidenced by the prevalence of Gaelic derived place names throughout Scotland, and contemporary accounts. These includeDundee from the Gaelic "Dùn Deagh",Inverness from "Inbhir Nis",Stirling from "Sruighlea",Argyll from "Earra-Ghàidheal" andGalloway from "Gall-Ghaidhealaibh". Gaelic speakers from what would be considered traditionally English speaking/non-Gaelic regions today included George Buchanan from Stirlingshire, andRobert the Bruce andMargaret McMurray from Galloway andAyrshire .For historical reasons, including the influence of a Scots-speaking
royal court inEdinburgh , and the plantation ofmerchant burgh s in much of the south and east, the Gàidhealtachd has been reduced massively to the present region of theWestern Isles , and theNorth-West Highlands , Skye andLochalsh andArgyll and Bute , with small Gaelic populations existing inGlasgow andEdinburgh Fact|date=July 2008.Canadian Gàidhealtachd
Scottish Gaelic has also survived among communities descended from immigrants in parts of
Nova Scotia (especiallyCape Breton Island ),Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland in easternCanada and those areas where Gaelic is spoken can also be said to be "Gàidhealtachdan".ee also
*
Scotia
*Gaelic road signs in Scotland
*Gaeltacht
*Y Fro Gymraeg
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