Latin (Gaelic variant)

European

script: Latg
family: European
type: alphabet
whitespace: between words
open_type_tag: none
complex_positioning: unknown
unicode: true
diacritics: true
status: Historical
baseline: bottom
ligatures: optional
direction: ltr

The Gaelic variant of the Latin script was used between the 16th and 20th centuries for writing Irish. Modern and digital forms of the script are based on traditional hand-written manuscript styles.

There are a number of typefaces subsumed under the term ‘Gaelic type’. Michael Everson identifies over 100 Gaelic typefaces dating from 1567 to the present. All Gaelic typefaces include the twenty-six letters of the Latin alphabet, plus the accented vowels and dotted consonants used for writing Irish, and the Tironian sign et, which represents the Irish word agus, meaning “and”. Archaic ligatures are also sometimes included.

Gaelic type is now largely restricted to decorative contexts. Modern Irish is written using the following Latin letters:

a á b c d e é f g h i í l m n o ó p r s t u ú
j k q v w x y z (for loanwords only)

More information can be found here.