dc5danyel wrote:
I am searching my family tree and have hit a brick wall. My 4th great grandmother was from Argyll/Islay Scotland which I know from records. As far as her husband the records here in the USA only say Scotland. It makes it difficult finding any records on him in his homeland. A relative that knew both said they had different accents from each other. I figured that I could rule out areas of search for my my 4 great grandfather with this information.
Back in 1829 how many different dialects of Gaelic were spoken in Scotland? What dialect was spoken in Argyll / Islay? Does anyone have a map of the areas that each dialect was spoken in that time period? This information would be really helpful.
Thank You
Danyel
I'm not an expert on dialects, but there's a lot of Gaelic info online, and I know I've seen a dialect map or two somewhere. Modern Scottish Gaelic has more or less merged into one dialect, with some lingering regional differences in pronunciation and vocabulary, but there was once an entire range of dialects, which were actually part of a continuum from the south of Ireland across the Isle of Man and up through most of Scotland. I'm not sure how you plan to use dialect info in your genealogical research, unless you have some old info about how your respective ancestors spoke Gaelic, but I can help with some info.
There are several pronunciation features which used to distinguish different dialects, but which have now spread almost everywhere that Gaelic is still spoken. Two big ones are these:
-- the sibilant ("sh") sound which occurs within the consonant combinations "rt" and "rd", which end up sounding like "rsht" (as in the word
ard), and
-- "pre-aspiration", which is the guttural sound occurring before p, t, and k in some cases.
I have a pdf document with maps showing the former distribution of those sounds and some others, which I could send you if you send me a message with an email address to use (I can't load the pdf here). None of them are exactly dialect maps, but I if you have some other info to use, they may be helpful. There used to be a link to this document online, but it's now broken.
Wikipedia has an article about Gaelic which briefly discusses dialects, but without a lot of detail:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Gaelic_languageSabhal Mòr Ostaig, the Gaelic college on the Isle of Skye, has a web site with extensive links to online info at:
http://www.smo.uhi.ac.uk/gaidhlig/english.htmlUnfortunately, some of the links are broken or outdated, and I notice that the link for info re dialects is one of the broken ones. You may be able to contact someone through one of the numerous other links who can guide you better than I can to specific info about older dialects
There are also a lot of links at the Gaelic Reference page:
http://home.comcast.net/~kimurho/fios.htmlbut I don't see anything specifically about the history of dialects.
Sorry that i couldn't be of more help, but if i find any additional info, I'll post it.