Bibliography

McDonough, Ciaran, “Learning Irish in late-eighteenth and nineteenth-century Belfast: the antiquarian influence”, Studia Celtica Fennica 11 (2014): 39–47.

  • journal article
Citation details
Contributors
Article
“Learning Irish in late-eighteenth and nineteenth-century Belfast: the antiquarian influence”
Periodical
Studia Celtica Fennica 11 (2014)
Studia Celtica Fennica 11 (2014).
Studia Celtica Fennica: <link>
Volume
11
Pages
39–47
Description
Abstract (cited)
While learned societies and individuals in the rest of Ireland were interested in Old and Middle Irish literature and creating translations of them, individuals and institutions in nineteenth-century Belfast differed by being interested in Modern Irish and attempts to keep it as a living vernacular. It was home to the first organisations to promote Irish learning and saw the publication of materials and aids for Irish language education. Despite the efforts made by Belfast based scholars to keep the language alive, they were all done in the spirit of antiquarian enterprise. Irish was seen as a suitable subject for antiquarian investigation as it was on the decline and there was a sense of recording things for posterity and also as the non-sectarian, inclusive nature of antiquarian societies could be applied to language classes. This article looks at why Belfast differed from the rest of the country and how efforts to learn the language can be equated with antiquarian research.
Subjects and topics
Headings
Ireland 18th century 19th century Irish language Modern Irish
History, society and culture
Places
Keywords
antiquarianism