As well as revealing various things about our past, place-names offer us unique opportunities to reconnect with our cultural heritage in the present. In Glasgow in west central Scotland, these opportunities include learning about the natural environment of the area through a language which was the mother tongue in the area’s communities for a significant period of time in the Middle Ages: Gaelic.
Gaelic is now a minoritized language in Scotland but it was the first language of the kingdom of Alba (later known as Scotland within an English-speaking context) from the time of its formation around the year 900. We cannot tell exactly when Gaelic became the predominant language in the Glasgow area but place-names provide incontrovertible evidence that this happened. When Glasgow’s place-names first begin to be recorded in numbers in our historical sources from the twelfth century onwards, many of the names are of Gaelic origin. These names could not have become established without a significant number of local people speaking Gaelic for a significant period of time. The number of Gaelic-speakers in Glasgow has ebbed and flowed since but, in short, the story of Gaelic in Glasgow goes back around 1,000 years.




