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The ''Department of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs'', under the leadership of the [[Irish Minister for the Gaeltacht|Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs]], is responsible for the overall [[Irish Government]] policy with respect to the Gaeltacht, and supervises the work of the [[Údarás na Gaeltachta]] and other bodies. [[Raidió na Gaeltachta]] is the [[Radio Telefís Éireann|RTÉ]] [[radio station]] serving the Ghaeltacht and Irish speakers generally. [[TG4]] is the [[television station]] which is focused on promoting the Irish language and is based in the [[County Galway]] Gaeltacht.
The ''Department of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs'', under the leadership of the [[Irish Minister for the Gaeltacht|Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs]], is responsible for the overall [[Irish Government]] policy with respect to the Gaeltacht, and supervises the work of the [[Údarás na Gaeltachta]] and other bodies. [[Raidió na Gaeltachta]] is the [[Radio Telefís Éireann|RTÉ]] [[radio station]] serving the Ghaeltacht and Irish speakers generally. [[TG4]] is the [[television station]] which is focused on promoting the Irish language and is based in the [[County Galway]] Gaeltacht.


[[Image:geill sli.jpg|250px|thumb|[[Traffic sign]], meaning "Give Way" (i.e. "Yield"), in [[County Waterford]]]]
[[Image:geill sli.jpg|250px|thumb|[[Traffic sign]], meaning "Give Way", in [[County Waterford]]]]


In March of [[2005]], Irish [[Irish Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs|Gaeltacht Affairs Minister]] [[Éamon Ó Cuív]] announced that the government of Ireland would begin listing only the [[Irish language]] versions of place names in the Gaeltachts as the official names, stripping the official [[Ordnance Survey Ireland|Ordnance Survey]] of their English equivalents, to bring them up to date with roadsigns in the Gaeltacht, which have been in Irish only since 1970.
In March of [[2005]], Irish [[Irish Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs|Gaeltacht Affairs Minister]] [[Éamon Ó Cuív]] announced that the government of Ireland would begin listing only the [[Irish language]] versions of place names in the Gaeltachts as the official names, stripping the official [[Ordnance Survey Ireland|Ordnance Survey]] of their English equivalents, to bring them up to date with roadsigns in the Gaeltacht, which have been in Irish only since 1970.

Revision as of 14:53, 21 August 2006

File:Gaeltachtai na hEireann.png
Gaeltacht regions in Ireland

Gaeltacht (IPA: [ˈgɰeːɫt̪əxt̪]; plural Gaeltachtaí) is an Irish word for an Irish-speaking region. In Ireland, The Gaeltacht, or An Ghaeltacht, refers to any of the regions in Ireland where the Irish language is officially the major language, that is, the vernacular spoken at home. These regions were first officially recognised during the early years of the Irish Free State after the Gaelic Revival as part of government policy to restore the Irish language. The Gaeltacht boundaries have been changed once since they were set in the 1950s, with Clochán-Bréanann in Co Kerry and part of West Muskerry, in Co. Cork being added to the Gaeltacht in 1974 though the Irish-speaking population has seriously decreased from what it was before the 1950s. In most Gaeltacht areas, Irish speakers are now in the minority.

The current population of the Gaeltacht regions is approximately 85,000 with major concentrations of Irish speakers in the western counties of Donegal, Mayo, Galway, Kerry, and Cork. There are smaller concentrations in the counties of Waterford in the south and Meath in the east. The Meath Gaeltacht, Ráth Cairn, came about when the government provided a house and 22 acres for each of 41 families from Connemara and Mayo in the 1930s, in exchange for their original lands. It was not recognised as an official Gaeltacht area until 1967.

The Department of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs, under the leadership of the Minister for Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs, is responsible for the overall Irish Government policy with respect to the Gaeltacht, and supervises the work of the Údarás na Gaeltachta and other bodies. Raidió na Gaeltachta is the RTÉ radio station serving the Ghaeltacht and Irish speakers generally. TG4 is the television station which is focused on promoting the Irish language and is based in the County Galway Gaeltacht.

Traffic sign, meaning "Give Way", in County Waterford

In March of 2005, Irish Gaeltacht Affairs Minister Éamon Ó Cuív announced that the government of Ireland would begin listing only the Irish language versions of place names in the Gaeltachts as the official names, stripping the official Ordnance Survey of their English equivalents, to bring them up to date with roadsigns in the Gaeltacht, which have been in Irish only since 1970.

Ireland has also negotiated with other European Union member states and made Irish an official language of the EU. This will come into effect on 1 January 2007, but with a derogation.

Gweedore (Gaoth Dobhair), in County Donegal is the largest Gaeltacht parish in Ireland, which is home to regional studios of Raidió na Gaeltachta and world-class musicians, such as Proinsias Ó Maonaigh, Altan, Enya and Clannad, who were all brought up with Irish as their first language.

See also