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Wales has an unbroken tradition of harp playing. It was used as a dance instrument and for playing tunes and airs. The tradition owes its survival to the gypsy families of Wales who kept harp ...
This article presents the work of three scholars from three disciplinary areas, surveying the history of the Irish harp through the lenses of organology and musicology, supported by literary and ...
the Irish word for head is 'eann' (pronounced cen), where as in Welsh it is 'pen'. It appears that Brittonic was spoken by the majority of people in present-day Wales, England and southern Scotland.
The first Guinness labels featuring the now-iconic harp were printed in August of that year, according to "Guinness's Brewery in the Irish Economy 1759 - 1876" by Patrick Lynch and John Vaizey.
"If green is the color of Ireland, and a soft day the touch, and poteen the taste, and harp music the sound, then a turf fire ...
Wales has an unbroken tradition of harp playing. It was used as a dance instrument and for playing tunes and airs. The tradition owes its survival to the gypsy families of Wales who kept harp ...
the Irish word for head is 'eann' (pronounced cen), where as in Welsh it is 'pen'. It appears that Brittonic was spoken by the majority of people in present-day Wales, England and southern Scotland.