djwebb2021 wrote:
Yes, it was referred to as Irish usually even then - and I think it has basically always been called Irish as its main name in the English language. When Q. Elizabeth I had a primer drawn up for her in the 1570s, it was a primer of Irish, not Gaelic. Donovan's 1845 grammar was a Grammar of the Irish Language.
But the revival organisation was the Gaelic League, and their journal was the Gaelic Journal. Gaelic really refers to the unity of Gaelic, in Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man, rather than one specific national form, although the use of it in Scotland to refer to just Scottish Gaelic has its own specific justification (Gaelic vs. Scots). I think you could say Irish is a Gaelic language, not the Gaelic language, but use of "Gaelic" as a term by native speakers is not wrong as such.
It seems to be that Irish/Iryshe and Gaelic were interchangeable, though. Scottish Gaelic used to be referred to as Ershe (though I think it's considered derogatory now). Nevertheless, it can be found in this stanza from
Scenes and Legends of the North of Scotland (1869) in reference to the speech of a gathering of Highlanders:
Fu’ loud in Ershe they begowt to clatter,
And rouped like revin and ruke.What's interesting about it to me is that in the Modern day "Irish" is used to specify "Irish Gaelic, and no other variety" as if to establish it as a language in its own right, though it seems it used be just as general as "Gaelic", which seems to imply the opposite, that the varieties are connected so closely as to not represent distinct languages at all, but only dialects.
djwebb2021 wrote:
Elizabeth I's primer of Irish can be seen here:
https://www.isos.dias.ie/MARSH/Irish_Primer.html On p25 the English has "cann you speake Iryshe?" and the Irish is "in eol duit gaelag do lauairt?", which strikes me as not the best way of phrasing it. An eól duit is talking about knowledge of a fact, right?
The primer is from 1564, and uses the first ever typeface created for Irish.
Another product of that committee in Dublin, no doubt!
