- Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill (19
February 1898 – 4 June 1934),
alias the Bàrd Bheàrnaraigh ("the Bard of Berneray") was a
Scottish World War I
veteran of...
-
service on the
Western Front.
Among them were
regimental bagpiper Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill (1898-1934), and poet Dòmhnall
Ruadh Chorùna (1887-1967). Hunstanton...
-
Scottish Gaelic English Ref Note
Eachann Hector Eacharn Hector Eairdsidh Archie SG
equivalent of En Archie.
Ealar Ellar Eanraig Henry SG
equivalent of...
- Before.
Berneray is the
birthplace of the
giant Angus MacAskill. Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill, a
World War I
veteran of the King's Own
Cameron Highlanders...
-
professional footballer Iain
Durrant (born 1966),
Scottish footballer Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill (1898–1934),
Scottish poet and
piper Iain
Evans (field hockey)...
-
Meredith Les
Murray Banjo Paterson Bill
Scott (balladeer and collector) Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill (1898–1934)
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to Bush ballads...
-
Antigonish newspaper The
Casket on
February 14, 1924. The
Gaelic poet Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill, (1898—1934), who is
widely known as the Bàrd Bheàrnaraigh...
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Proof Fence and the
abandoned gold
mining town of
Hatters Hill. Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill, (1898—1934),
alias the Bàrd Bheàrnaraigh ("the Bard of Bernera")...
- or the
sound of the cart
taking the
peats home, or of our
neighbour Eairdsidh Beag
playing the bagpipes, or of
someone singing in the village. I went...
- the
Cameron Highlanders over the top was Berneray-born bush poet Iain
Eairdsidh MacAsgaill, who is also an
important figure in
modern Scottish Gaelic...