This article examines the linguistic landscape of the nineteenth-century Highlands through the lens of the labour market. It analyses a corpus of over 600 job advertisements seeking Gaelic speakers which appeared in The Inverness Courier between 1817 and 1899 and draws on a further 200 from selected years of The Glasgow Herald and The Scotsman. It examines the range of roles in which an ability to speak Gaelic, alongside English, was seen as either a necessity or advantageous by employers, considering in turn, education, health and social welfare, commerce, domestic service, law and order, estate and land, and the church. Some of the factors behind growing opportunities for skilled and semi-skilled Gaelic speakers are explored, such as the ...
Chapter 1 Gaelic to the early 19thc: (Gaelic was never spoken in every part of Scotland; Indeed, it ...
The nascent Gaelic periodical press which emerged in the period between 1829 and 1850 is of fundamen...
Gaelic Medium Education (GME) has grown in popularity since the early 1980s, but Scotland is not uni...
Historians have occasionally recognized the presence of Scottish Gaelic-speaking immigrants in the U...
This review considers the revitalisation programme for Scottish Gaelic (referred to simply as ‘Gaeli...
For minority languages in the twenty-first century increasingly overshadowed by their global counter...
Scottish Gaelic, along with English, is an official language of Scotland. It developed out of old Ir...
The Scottish Gaelic learners\u27 movement is a recent development in North America that parallels th...
This article considers the role and place of Gaelic television output looking at how Gaelic content ...
First paragraph: The Scots language has largely been excluded, historically, within Scottish institu...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Springer in Handbook on Promoting Social J...
Through their native languages, certain groups of people claim political, social, geographical, and ...
The complex relationship that has always existed between Scots and Gaelic, and indeed between Gaelic...
Scots Gaelic is considered one of the founding languages of Scotland. It was introduced in 500 CE an...
This paper discussses an example of Highland-Lowland migration in the early stages of industrializat...
Chapter 1 Gaelic to the early 19thc: (Gaelic was never spoken in every part of Scotland; Indeed, it ...
The nascent Gaelic periodical press which emerged in the period between 1829 and 1850 is of fundamen...
Gaelic Medium Education (GME) has grown in popularity since the early 1980s, but Scotland is not uni...
Historians have occasionally recognized the presence of Scottish Gaelic-speaking immigrants in the U...
This review considers the revitalisation programme for Scottish Gaelic (referred to simply as ‘Gaeli...
For minority languages in the twenty-first century increasingly overshadowed by their global counter...
Scottish Gaelic, along with English, is an official language of Scotland. It developed out of old Ir...
The Scottish Gaelic learners\u27 movement is a recent development in North America that parallels th...
This article considers the role and place of Gaelic television output looking at how Gaelic content ...
First paragraph: The Scots language has largely been excluded, historically, within Scottish institu...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Springer in Handbook on Promoting Social J...
Through their native languages, certain groups of people claim political, social, geographical, and ...
The complex relationship that has always existed between Scots and Gaelic, and indeed between Gaelic...
Scots Gaelic is considered one of the founding languages of Scotland. It was introduced in 500 CE an...
This paper discussses an example of Highland-Lowland migration in the early stages of industrializat...
Chapter 1 Gaelic to the early 19thc: (Gaelic was never spoken in every part of Scotland; Indeed, it ...
The nascent Gaelic periodical press which emerged in the period between 1829 and 1850 is of fundamen...
Gaelic Medium Education (GME) has grown in popularity since the early 1980s, but Scotland is not uni...