Gaël (Gwazel in Breton language) is a small commune of France, in the Ille-et-Vilaine département, located southwest of Rennes. This page is about the Breton language. ... The commune is an administrative division of France. ... Ille-et-Vilaine is a département of France, located in Brittany (Bretagne in French) in the northwest corner of France. ... The départements (or departments) are administrative units of France, roughly analogous to British counties and are now grouped into 22 metropolitan and four overseas régions. ... Location within France The Parlement de Bretagne (Parliament of Brittany), the most famous building in Rennes, was rebuilt after a terrible fire in 1994. ...
This name Gaël is for Gaelic. Goidelic is one of two major divisions of modern-day Celtic languages (the other being Brythonic). ...
In 1990 it had a population of 1351. It covers an area of 5210 km². 1990 is a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
It is located between Saint-Méen-le-Grand and Mauron. Saint-Méen-le-Grand is a small commune of France, in the Ille-et-Vilaine département, located southwest of Rennes. ...
The Glencolmcille Folk Village Museum - a replica of a thatched cottage village in rural Ireland that offers a glimpse of daily life during the past centuries.
The Folk Village is in an ideal location for viewing and photographing the spectacular scenery of the Glen, the spectacular beach and rolling waves of nearby Glenbay, and the breathtaking Glen Head.
The folk village is open from Easter Saturday until the end of September.
The Gaels are an ethno-linguistic group in Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man, whose language is of the Gaelic (Goidelic) family, a division of Insular Celtic languages.
Gael or Gaoidheal was first used as a collective term to describe people from Ireland; it is thought to have come from Welsh Gwyddel, originally "raider", now "Irish person".
The Gaels, during the beginning of the Christian era (at which time Gaelic people were mostly restricted to Ireland), believed themselves to be descendants of the Milesians (the sons of Míl Espáine) coming from the north of Iberia, mainly Gallaecia (modern Galicia and northern Portugal), where there existed also an early form of Ogham script.