While the importance of Celtic and Gaelic heritage in education is being recognised widely in the UK and Ireland, only one university offers such courses in the entire Southern Hemisphere. Dunedin and its students have a strong association with Gaelic heritage with the bulk of Dunedin’s European settlers being Scottish. Students have often requested various courses in Celtic or Gaelic Studies — the Bamforth Fund was left to the University of Otago over 100 years ago specifically for the study of Scottish culture.

The latest Gaelic and Celtic Studies campaign began in 1993 when a petition containing 370 student signatures was presented to the History Department at Otago University, requesting that a course in Gaelic and Celtic History be established, concentrating upon Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. The Department agreed to implement such a course, then they postponed it, then more important priorities arose. By 1996 the plan had been shelved.

Interest had grown, however, and the Highland Society and Young Sinn Fein were formed. A second petition with nearly 1,000 signatures was collected. It demanded a course in Gaelic and Celtic Studies be established, not just in history but language, mythology, music, and politics as well. An interdisciplinary paper taught by current staff was envisaged to initially test the viability of a fuller course. The Highland and Gaelic Society is currently composing a submission to the University: The Case for Gaelic Studies.

Dunedin Mayor, Sukhi Turner, offered to jointly present the petition with student representatives on the University Council. But the Chancellor and Chairperson, Judith Medlicott, did not consider it “protocol” for the petition to be received by the Council (despite specifically being a petition of the Council), and hastened to add she did not want the Highland Society “coming into the meeting and causing trouble...”

In September 1997 the Dean of Humanities, Anne Trotter, after some pressure, stated in the Otago Daily Times that “a proposal for a paper dealing with Celtic history is being developed within the History department. It is hoped this will be available in 1999.”

Things are progressing slowly...

2001

A paper titled ‘Celtic Spirituality’ was run in the second semester as a special topic in Religious Studies — we don’t know how it went or if it’s offered again next year. If you are interested show support and enquire at Theology and Religious Studies Department, tel 03-479-8901, fax 03-479-5158.

2004

Chair in Irish Studies established

2006

Chair in Scottish studies established

Irish Chair appointed

2008

Two Scottish Studies professors appointed


Tell the University what you think!

Academic Deputy Vice Chancellor
Dean of Humanities
External Relations
or any of the above at PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Especially if you would like to study Gaelic-Celtic history or culture at University level any time in the future.