Depending on when you first encountered him, Alan Rickman was the villainous Sherriff of Nottingham Forest, the mastermind terrorist Hans Gruber in Die Hard, Russia’s...
Celts of all sizes and sorts will gather in South Carolina this weekend for the 6th annual Tartan Day South Highland Games & Celtic Festival....
Known as the ‘Scottish Alcatraz’, the Bass Rock has held royals, ministers and a few Jacobites for good measure. Learn more here!
Surfing in Scotland? Absolutely! Read more here!
Ireland's 1916 Rising was an armed rebellion against British rule that began on Easter Monday and lasted a week. Read our blow-by-blow guide of the events here!...
In the second installment of a two part feature article on Ireland's Easter Rising commemorations, Celtic Life International’s senior correspondent Eimear O’Callaghan brings the past to the present.
The American novelist William Faulkner once wrote, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” As Celtic Life International’s senior correspondent Eimear O’Callaghan reports,...
Irish mythology is riddled with powerful women, yet they are quite an enigma. Learn more here!
Even a working visit to Scotland can uncover precious pieces of the ancestry puzzle. Read more here!
Week-long celebrations for St. Patrick's Day begs the question, what does it mean to be "Irish"? Find out here!
Bretagne, with its fine climate and spirited culture, is the best and best-known wine producer of the seven Celtic nations. Read more here!
St. Patrick's Day is celebrated in many communities across the world each year on March 17th. Read more here!
The Irish flag – also known as the Irish tricolor – was flown publicly for the first time during the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848....
Past, present and future are woven together in a personal Celtic knot for Belfast’s Máirtín Ó Muilleoir. Read more here!
Celts of all sorts will gather under the sunny skies of Florida over the coming days for the St. Augustine Celtic Music & Heritage Festival....
The International Welsh Poetry Competition has been taking place every year for the last decade. Read more here!
Nova Scotia’s Office of Gaelic Affairs says the traditional Scottish language isn’t dead — it’s just sleeping. Read more here!
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