01275cas a2200181 4500008004100000022001300041035002000054050004600074245002200120260001000142310001400152362007400166520051900240650001800759999001500777952017100792952013000963170508n eng u a17556066 a(Sirsi) a202765 ahttp://www.jstor.org/subject/irishstudies aThe Celtic Review aJSTOR aIrreqular aVol. 1 , No. 1 , 1904 - Vol. 10 , No. 40 , 1916 aThe Celtic Review is an early twentieth-century periodical, which aimed to encourage interest in Celtic and Gaelic literature and learning. A scholarly journal with a wide-ranging focus, it includes subjects such as poetry and ballads, music, proverbs, riddles, fairy tales and philology. Especially noteworthy are its translations and adaptations of antiquated Irish manuscript sources, based on Irish mythology, including the famous legend of Deirdre of the Sorrows. Some articles are written in Irish and Welsh. aIrish Studies c5907d5907 00102lccPER4070aMAINbMAINcSERIALl0oHTTP://WWW.JSTOR.ORGp6066111904r2019-08-12 00:00:00t1uhttp://www.jstor.org/subject/irishstudiesw2019-08-12yE-RESOURCE 00102lccPER4070aMAINbMAINcSERIALl0oHTTP://WWW.JSTOR.ORGp606610401916r2019-08-12 00:00:00t2w2019-08-12yE-RESOURCE