Project ERSKINE | Radical Gaelic Magazines 1900s – 1930s
@erskineproject.bsky.social
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Exploring Gaelic magazines founded by Ruaraidh Erskine (1869–1960) | erskine.glasgow.ac.uk | Marie Curie Actions postdoctoral fellowship, guaranteed by UKRI, carried out at the University of Glasgow | investigated by Dr Petra Johana Poncarová
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erskineproject.bsky.social
Aonghas MacDhonnchaidh | Angus Robertson was born #OTD 6 October 1871 in Breakish, Skye. Author of one of the two earliest Gaelic novels and an important figure in Gaelic initiatives in Glasgow, Robertson also contributed to Erskine's magazines. Find out more: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/people/angus...
erskineproject.bsky.social
Today is National Poetry Day in Scotland! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Erskine’s magazines provided a platform for publishing new poetry in Gaelic, English, and Scots. They featured the works of 8 winners of the Bardic Crown at the National Mòd. Find out more: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/poetry/
erskineproject.bsky.social
30 September is the International Translation Day! Erskine’s magazines published a substantial amount of translated content and featured the works of translators such as Ùisdean Laing | Hugh Laing and Dòmhnall MacCaluim | Donald MacCallum. Find out more: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/trans...
erskineproject.bsky.social
On 20 August 1901 #OTD, a pan-Celtic congress opened in Dublin. Ruaraidh Erskine was involved as one of the vice-presidents, and the event brought together many future contributors to his magazines. Find out more about the coverage of pan-Celtic initiatives: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/pan-c...
erskineproject.bsky.social
A video recording of the seminar 'Twentieth-Century Radical Scottish Gaelic Magazines and Contacts with Wales' by @poncarova.bsky.social at @yganolfangeltaidd.bsky.social, including findinds from Project ERSKINE, is now available on YouTube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiKk...
yganolfangeltaidd.bsky.social
Diolch i Petra Johana Poncarová am ei seminar ar ‘Twentieth-Century Radical Scottish Gaelic Magazines and Contacts with Wales’. Thank you to @poncarova.bsky.social for her seminar last week. A recording can be watched on our YouTube channel 👇
youtu.be/wiKkgWYyhW8?...
‘Twentieth-Century Radical Scottish Gaelic Magazines and Contacts with Wales’
YouTube video by Y Ganolfan Geltaidd / CAWCS
youtu.be
erskineproject.bsky.social
On Thursday (22 May, 5 pm UK time) in person and online at the Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies: 'Twentieth-Century Radical Scottish Gaelic Magazines and Contacts with Wales', including the latest findings about Welsh contributors and content in Erskine's magazines. All welcome! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
erskineproject.bsky.social
This Wednesday (14 May, 3 pm) at the University of Aberdeen @uniofaberdeen.bsky.social. All welcome!
erskineproject.bsky.social
On Monday 12 May at the Centre for Poetic Innovation, @standrewsenglish.bsky.social & Modern Languages: seminar with Petra Johana Poncarová @poncarova.bsky.social on 'New Perspectives on Ruaraidh Erskine’s Gaelic Magazines and Translation Activities', 2.30 pm: poeticinnovation.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk
Centre for Poetic Innovation – University of St Andrews, Schools of English and Modern Languages
poeticinnovation.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk
erskineproject.bsky.social
Wednesday 30 April 2025 10 am CET, at Université de Bretagne Occidentale and online (ZOOM): 'Radical Scottish Gaelic Magazines in the Twentieth Century and Contacts with Brittany' by @poncarova.bsky.social, including latest findings about Breton contributors to Erskine's magazines.
Radical Scottish Gaelic Magazines in the Twentieth Century and Contacts with Brittany | Héritage et Création dans le Texte et l'Image
Conférence de Petra Johana Poncarová
www.univ-brest.fr
erskineproject.bsky.social
A blog post on women contributors involved in Erskine's Scottish magazines by @poncarova.bsky.social has just been published by @womenshistscot.bsky.social: womenshistoryscotland.org/2025/04/21/w...
womenshistscot.bsky.social
📣New Blog!

Who were the women poets, scholars, editors, and translators shaping Ruaraidh Erskine’s Gaelic magazines? 🖋️Find out in a new blog from @poncarova.bsky.social

📚 Read now: womenshistoryscotland.org/2025/04/21/w...

#WomensHistory #ScotHist #Herstory #GaelicCulture #womenmakehistory
Painted portrait of Ella Carmichael (1870–1928), a Gaelic scholar, editor, and translator. She is seated in a wooden chair, wearing an elegant, polka-dotted gown with lace trim and a green beaded necklace. She holds a scroll in one hand and sits beside a desk filled with papers and books. Carmichael was editor of the Celtic Review from 1904 to 1916 and played a key role in founding the Celtic Union and the Women Students’ Celtic Society in Edinburgh.
erskineproject.bsky.social
6 April marks the Tartan Day! Erskine had a lifelong interest in the Scottish national dress and related etiquette. He published a booklet on the topic, 'The Kilt and How to Wear It' (1901), and an extensive essay series 'The Scottish National Dress' for his quarterly Guth na Bliadhna (1910–1912). 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
erskineproject.bsky.social
The Scottish Review, originally published between 1882 and 1900, was revived by Ruaraidh Erskine in Spring 1914 and came out regularly until Spring 1920. A complete overview of all the issues is now available through the Project ERSKINE website: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/magazines/th...
erskineproject.bsky.social
🌍 'S e Latha Bàrdachd an t-Saoghail a th' ann! It's World Poetry Day! 📚 Erskine's magazines provided a platform for new Gaelic poetry and published works by Allan MacDonald, Donald Sinclair, T. D. MacDonald, James Thomson, and many others. Find out more: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/poetry/
erskineproject.bsky.social
To mark St Patrick's Day, Project ERSKINE highlights the extensive involvement of Irish contributors in Erskine's Scottish magazines - from Douglas Hyde and Peter Toner McGinley to Eoin MacNeill, Patrick Eric MacFhinn, and Patrick Dinneen. Find out more: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/places/irela... 🇮🇪
erskineproject.bsky.social
Monday 24 February, 12-1 pm: an online lunchtime talk for Stirling Magazines and Periodicals Research Group (SMPRG) on Ruaraidh Erskine's Scottish magazines and the online resources created as part of Project ERSKINE. All welcome (DM for Teams links)!
erskineproject.bsky.social
Video recording of the paper ‘Scots and Twentieth-Century Radical Gaelic Magazines’ from the conference of the Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster, held at Ulster University, Belfast, on 29–30 November 2024. More on the topic: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/scots/
Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster 2024: Petra Poncarova
YouTube video by NVTV Belfast
youtu.be
erskineproject.bsky.social
Project ERSKINE at this year's conference of the Scottish Society for Art History, hosted by @natlibscot.bsky.social. More about the artists involved and content related to art, crafts, architecture & aesthetics: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/art-a...
erskineproject.bsky.social
#BurnsWeek Over the years, Erskine's Scottish magazines featured a number of pieces concerning Robert Burns, in Gaelic and English, and an image of the poet based on an oil painting owned by Erskine & based on the famous Nasmyth portrait: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/topics/rober...
erskineproject.bsky.social
Ruaraidh Erskine was born #OTD 15 January 1869 in Brighton. Project ERSKINE website now offers the opportunity to explore in detail the extensive and diverse corpus of writing Erskine supplied for his own magazines, including a significant body of translations. erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/people/ruara...
erskineproject.bsky.social
The first issue of the quarterly Guth na Bliadhna came out in Winter 1904. An interactive annotated overview of all the issues (1904-1925), with a growing database of contributors, is now available through the Project ERSKINE website: erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/magazines/gu...
erskineproject.bsky.social
German scholar Kuno Meyer (1858–1919), born #OTD 20 December, was a major influence on Erskine's periodicals. Meyer lectured in Celtic at @uofglasgow.bsky.social, and translations from and references to his works appeared regularly in the magazines. erskine.glasgow.ac.uk/people/kuno-...