Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Blasket Islands

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Location
  
Atlantic Ocean

Major islands
  
Great Blasket Island

Population
  
0 (2011)

Total islands
  
6

County
  
Kerry

Blasket Islands httpswwwgreatblasketislandnetwpcontentuplo

Dingle peninsula slea head and the blasket islands county kerry ireland cruise with bruce


The Blasket Islands (Na Blascaodaí in Irish - etymology uncertain: it may come from the Norse word "brasker", meaning "a dangerous place") are a group of islands off the west coast of Ireland, forming part of County Kerry.

Contents

Map of Blasket Islands, Co. Kerry, Ireland

Exploring the blasket islands county kerry


Geography

The six principal islands of the Blaskets are:

  • Great Blasket Island (An Bhlascaod Mór)
  • Beginish (Beiginis)
  • Inishnabro (Inis na Bró)
  • Inishvickillane (Inis Mhic Uileáin)
  • Inishtooskert (Inis Tuaisceart)
  • Tearaght Island (An Tiaracht)
  • History

    They were inhabited until 1953 by a completely Irish-speaking population, and today are part of the Gaeltacht. The inhabitants were evacuated by the government to the mainland on 17 November 1953 due to the declining population and harsh nature of life on the island. Many of the descendants currently live in Springfield, Massachusetts, and some former residents still live on the Dingle Peninsula, within sight of their former home.

    The islanders were the subject of much anthropological and linguistic study around the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries particularly from writers and linguists such as Robin Flower, George Derwent Thomson and Kenneth H. Jackson. Thanks to their encouragement and that of others, a number of books were written by islanders that record much of the islands' traditions and way of life. These include An tOileánach (The Islandman) by Tomás Ó Criomhthain, Peig by Peig Sayers and Fiche Blian ag Fás (Twenty Years A-Growing) by Muiris Ó Súilleabháin.

    The Blasket Islands have been called Next Parish America, based on the erroneous idea that the next parish west of the islands would be the United States. The actual next parish west of the Blasket Island would be located in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

    Transport

    There is a ferry service that calls only to the Great Blasket and sails from Dunquin. This ferry service is mainly for day-trippers. Passengers are transferred to a SIB once the ferry gets close to the island, as there are no adequate landing facilities for a larger vessel.

    References

    Blasket Islands Wikipedia