The People &
Language of Early Scotland
The
Britons
Throughout the first millennium the Britons dominated much of central
and southern Scotland. They spoke a language closely related to old Welsh
or Cornish and left proof of this in the place names around Strathclyde
and Glasgow.
Glasgow |
Glasgau |
Green
Hollow |
Lanark |
Lanerc |
The
Clearing |
Penicuik |
Pen
y gog |
Cuckoo's
Headland |
Bathgate |
Baeddgoed |
Boar-wood |
Partick |
Perthec |
Coppice:
small group of trees |
Click
for video lesson in deciphering Scotland's place names.
Early Poetry
The following verses are a cradle song sang from mother to son, written
in old Welsh around AD 650. It may well be the earliest poem composed
by a women in the whole of the literature of Britain.
Click
for video reading of 'Dinogad's Coat'
Dinogad's
Coat
Specked, specked, Dinogad's Coat,
I fashioned it of pelts of stoat.
Twit, twit, a twittering,
I sang, and so eight slaves would sing.
When your daddy went off to hunt,
Spear on his shoulder, club in his hand,
He'd call the hounds so swift of foot:
'Giff, Gaff - seek 'im, seek 'im, fetch, fetch.'
He'd strike fish from a coracle
As a lion strikes a small animal.
When to the mountain your daddy would go,
He'd bring back a stag, a boar, a roe,
A speckled mountain grouse,
A fish from Derwennydd Falls.
Of those your daddy reached with his lance,
Whether a boar, a fox, or a lynx,
None could escape unless it has wings.
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