History, asked by pradhananju49, 9 months ago

Question 11 "Ireland suffered a similar fate as like that of Scotland" discuss.​

Answers

Answered by SGAkshayGRA
5

Answer:

This is because there is a shared root between the native languages of Ireland (Irish) and the Scottish Highlands (Scots Gaelic). Both are part of the Goidelic family of languages, which come from the Celts who settled in both Ireland and Scotland.

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Answered by tahreemrehmany
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Scottish and Irish citizens were forbidden from speaking their own tongues.

Scottish Highlanders faced a variety of problems, such as being forbidden from speaking Gaelic.

They are not permitted to dress in official attire.

They were forced to leave their country of origin.

Ireland experienced a similar circumstance.

The development of affluent English society imitated the birth of a new British nation.

Ireland and the United Kingdom were not united before to 1801. The Irish Parliament was abolished in 1800 as a result of a United Irishmen revolution. Ireland eventually became a part of the UK after that. On January 1st 1801, the UK and Ireland were united under the Act of Union.

British nationalism contends that the British constitute a country and promotes the ethnic unity of Britons, with a definition of Britishness that may encompass people of English, Scottish, Welsh, and Irish ancestry.

People from Scotland and Ireland were compelled to leave their home towns and were forbidden from speaking in their own tongues or donning traditional clothing.

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