A DNA expert has suggested that the Irish language can trace its roots to the arrival of settlers from the Pontic-Caspian Steppe in Eastern Europe around 4,500 years ago. Professor Emeritus Jim ...
The first exhibition in the Irish language ever held at the Public Records Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) has opened. The Mná na hAthbheochana exhibition tells the story of the women who revived ...
Under British rule, Gaeilge became a minority language in Ireland, yet it was never allowed to die out and over the centuries, Ireland’s mother tongue was kept alive by people all over the island, ...