GAIDHLIG, Gàidheal. Ir. Gaoidhilig, Gaedhilig, the Erse and the Irish language.
Gàidheal, a highland Scot; Gaoidheal, an Irishman, EIr. Góedel, (1100 AD). Also seen as
Gaideli. The Cy. Gwyddel, Irishman. The root may be ghâdh, the Eng. good, god, thus
"god-like," Germ. gud, etc. The word has been compared with the Gaul. Geidumni,
which confers with the Lat. hoedus, a goat or "goat man." Notice that the Scots
were, in historic times, referred to as "goat-men" by Continentals. The Gaelic
root-word appears to be ghadh from which their word gabhar and gabhlan, a wandering man,
one devoid of care. Gaelic is currently considered to be the name of the language and
people of the Scottish Highlands although the former is sometimes termed Erse. The oldest
foreign reference to Ireland, in the sixth century before Christ, gives it the name Ierna.
Aristotle in his Book of the World also favoured this name.
In the first half of the first century Pomponius Mela called it Iuvernia, but the
Romans preferred Hibernbia or Scotia. The Scottish matter is probably the most confusing
element in Irish history, since the related word Scotland was eventually applied to
Ireland's northwestern neighbour, the land at first called Alba. Scotia is a name from
literate times but was claimed to be derived from Scota, the first queen-mother of the
Milesians (and thus a counterpart of Danu). The term Scoti was definitely preferred by
continental writers as the name for the people of Eiru. Thus it is explained that
"Hibernia is the nation of the Scots," Scotia being a name "which links
itself to no land on earth." As late as the seventh century, we find native
"Irishmen" referring to themselves as "Scots" when they were in exile.
Further, as time passed, they even began to designate their homeland as "the land of
Scots."
In the third century the Scots began a colonization of the southwestern peninsula of
Dal Riada in Alba. The first colonies in this new place received military help from Tara
in order to put down the neighbouring Picts. In the following century, a Munsterman,
Lugaid mac Conn, fleeing from enemies, made himself the chief power in this new land. From
his son came the ancestors of the lords of Argyle; the MacAllens, Campbells and the
MacCallums. A hundred years further on Cabri Riata established kingdoms in both Ireland
and Scotland. The Picts were not enamoured of any of this and would have driven the Scots
from their land, except for the efforts of the high-king Niall of the Nine Hostages. The
effect of all this was the establishment of a huge military presence in Alba by the sixth
century, when it became an independent kingdom under Aedh ard-righ. For a time it was
powerful enough to hold Antrim, in Ireland proper, as an appanage. That was the state of
things until the end of the eight century when the southern Irish began to pressure them
in Argyllshire and Dalriada. Looking for a more secure place they marched into Pictland
and conducted campaigns against these people until 850 A.D., when Cinead (Kenneth) mac
Alpein completely overthrew the Picts by very devious means, and became high-king of all
Scotia, Some claim that he even subdued the Britons on his southern borders and the
Anglo-Danish population of the southeast. At this time, with the Scotic people in a
position of power, Ireland was called "Scotia Major " and Scotland, "Scotia
Minor," but the title fell away from Ireland as their power there waned. In the
eleventh century, when all Scotland was dominated by Gaelic-speakers (excepting headlands,
and the western and northern islands which were under the Norse), the kingship passed to
Mylcollum (Malcolm) who married Margaret, a daughter of King Edmund, an Anglo-Saxon
monarch. Unfortunately for the Scots, he was easily swayed by her, and their son Edgar was
entirely English in name and outlook. When he was crowned king, a division developed
between the highland tribes and the lowland English kinsman of the king. In the thirteenth
century, Gaeldom flickered and went out as a force in the north, the old Irish line
becoming extinct with Alisdair (Alexander III) in 1297. Afterwards, there began the long
wars for succession which ended with the old-English families of Bruce and Balliol firmly
on the throne of Old Scotland. There is some correspondence between the old
warrior-magicians of pre-Milesian times and the Scots: When the Scots invaded Alba they
found present-day Scotland divided into seven territories, and they continued with these
divisions. "Each district was termed a Tuath or tribe; several Tuaths formed a
Mortuath (sea-tribe) or great tribe, two or more Mortuaths a Coicidh or province, at the
head of which was the righ, or King. Each province contributed a portion of its territory
at their junctions to form a central district, which was the capital of the whole country,
and the King who was elected to be its sovereign had his seat of government here. The
central district, where the four southern met was Perthshire and counted Scone as its
capital. The northern Tuaths adjoined at Moraigh (near the sea).
In the twelfth century the system was modified and the righ was no longer held by the
heads of the Tuath and Mortuath. but at the head of the former was the toiseeach (the
beginning or front one) and of the Mortuath, the mormaer (the great mayor or major, the
sea-ruler, or great steward)." It is possible that these designations were picked up
from the Picts, but it is more likely they were names visited upon the Scots by their
Irish enemies. If this is so, it is likely that sea-faring Scots numbered survivors from
the old Fomorian sea-kingdoms in the west. It is almost a homely to say that pre Roman
Britain was inhabited by a people "who were mainly Celtic and that the Celts reached
this country in three principal waves of immigration. One wave came to the east coast by
way of the North Sea, another by way of the Gaul to the South of England, and the third
from the Continent by way of Irealand." This is the view of most historians, although
there is no written magic to back up the idea that all the peoples of the islands arrived
from the east. In the black well of times long past historians are as much adrift as
mythologists, and many of these have a contrary opinion. These is the problem of Irish
Gaelic, which is still considered the most antique of all the Celtic tongues. Aryan
scholars say that the Indo European tongues started in northern India and spread slowly
from there westward. Professor Schleider (1874) that this Celtic tongue has the appearance
of a separation from the supposed root (Sanskrit) at a later date than the Cymric and
Brythonic tongues, but they are supposedly of more recent evolution. Worse still, Gaelic
has the look of being more closely allied with Latin than any of the supposed
Indo-European affiliates. These idiosyncracies suggest that Gaelic might have spread from
Ireland to the east, where it collided with, and became associates of the west-bound
language which is now preserved in English, German and the Scandinavian tongues. We are
then left with the question of where the Gaelic vocabulary originated and are led back to
the fact that the Celto Iberian tongues have "more analogies with American types than
with any other." In his book, On the Phenomena of Hybridity in the Genus Homo,, Paul
Broca (1869) said that "Of all Europeans, we must provisionally hold the Basques to
be the oldest inhabitants of our quarter of the world." He said that their language,
the Euscara, "has some common traits with the Magyr (Hungary), Osmanli, and other
dialects of the Altai family, as for instance, with the Finnic, on the old continent, as
well as the Algonquin-Lenape languages and others in America." Gaelic has been given
similar attachments both from a shared vocabulary with the Algonquin languages and with
parallels in the myths of the two people. Folklorist Mary L. Fraser has examined some of
these correspondences and concludes that, "The closeness of the (mythic)
parallels show that the Indians and the Celts in the far distant past were in direct
communications with one another, or were in touch with the same source of inspiration.
According to Indian tradition, the white man came from the East, and the Indians from the
West, yet there must have been a (very early) common meeting-ground somewhere,
sometime."