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  2. Gaels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaels

    The Gaels are then said to have sailed to Ireland via Galicia in the form of the Milesians, sons of Míl Espáine. [13] The Gaels fight a battle of sorcery with the Tuatha Dé Danann, the gods, who inhabited Ireland at the time. Ériu, a goddess of the land, promises the Gaels that Ireland shall be theirs so long as they pay tribute to her.

  3. Iain mac Mhurchaidh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iain_mac_Mhurchaidh

    Even though Loyalist Gaels in North Carolina were often accused at the time accused of ingratitude by their Patriot neighbors, according Michael Newton, they themselves felt very differently; "Gaelic poetry of the Jacobite period discussed the conflict in the following terms: the ultimate reason for taking action is consistently presented as a ...

  4. Clan na Gael - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_na_Gael

    Clan na Gael (CnG) (Irish: Clann na nGael, pronounced [ˈklˠaːn̪ˠ n̪ˠə ˈŋeːlˠ]; "family of the Gaels") is an Irish republican organization, founded in the United States in the late 19th and 20th centuries, successor to the Fenian Brotherhood and a sister organization to the Irish Republican Brotherhood. [1]

  5. Canadian Gaelic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Gaelic

    Canadian Gaelic or Cape Breton Gaelic (Scottish Gaelic: Gàidhlig Chanada, A' Ghàidhlig Chanadach or Gàidhlig Cheap Bhreatainn), often known in Canadian English simply as Gaelic, is a collective term for the dialects of Scottish Gaelic spoken in Atlantic Canada.

  6. Gaelic Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_Ireland

    Scoti was a Latin name that first referred to all the Gaels, whether in Ireland or Great Britain, but later came to refer only to the Gaels in northern Britain. [59] As time went on, the Gaels began intensifying their raids and colonies in Roman Britain (c. 200–500 AD).

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  8. Dál Riata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dál_Riata

    Dál Riata or Dál Riada (also Dalriada) (/ d æ l ˈ r iː ə d ə /) was a Gaelic kingdom that encompassed the western seaboard of Scotland and north-eastern Ireland, on each side of the North Channel. At its height in the 6th and 7th centuries, it covered what is now Argyll ("Coast of the Gaels") in Scotland and part of County Antrim in ...

  9. United States GAA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_GAA

    Hurling and Gaelic football have been played in North America ever since Irish immigrants began landing on North American shores. The earliest games of hurling in North America were played in St. John's, Newfoundland in 1788, [2] and there are records of football being played in Hyde Park (now the site of the Civic Center) in San Francisco as early as the 1850s.