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http://www.crystalinks.com/druids.html
In the Celtic religion,
the modern words Druidry or Druidism denote the practices of the
ancient druids, the priestly class in ancient Celtic societies through much of
Western Europe north of the Alps and in the British Isles. Druidic practices
were part of the culture of all the tribal peoples called Keltoi and Galatai by
Greeks and Celtae and Galli by Romans, which evolved into modern English
"Celtic" and "Gaulish". Modern attempts at
reconstructing practising druidism are called Neo-druidism. From what little we know
of late druidic practice it appears deeply traditional, and conservative in the
sense that the druids were conserving repositories of culture and lore. It is
impossible now to judge whether this continuity had deep historical roots and
originated in the social transformations of late La Tene time, or whether there
had been a discontinuity and a druidic religious innovation. The etymological
origins of the word druid are varied and doubtful enough that the word may be
pre-Indo-European. The most widespread view is that "druid" derives
from the Celtic word for an oak tree (doire in Irish Gaelic), a word whose root
also meant "wisdom." From what little we know
of late druidic practice it appears deeply traditional, and conservative in the
sense that the druids were conserving repositories of culture and lore. It is
impossible now to judge whether this continuity had deep historical roots and
originated in the social transformations of late La Tene time, or whether there
had been a discontinuity and a druidic religious innovation. The etymological
origins of the word druid are varied and doubtful enough that the word may be
pre-Indo-European. The most widespread view is that "druid" derives
from the Celtic word for an oak tree (doire in Irish Gaelic), a word whose root
also meant "wisdom." Their influence was as
much social as religious. Druids used not only to take the part that modern
priests would, but were often the philosophers, scientists, lore-masters, teachers,
judges and councillors to the kings. The Druids linked the Celtic peoples with
their numerous gods, the lunar calendar and the sacred natural order. With the
arrival of Christianity in each area, all these roles were assumed by the
bishop and the abbot, who were never the same individual, however, and might
find themselves in direct competition. Our historical knowledge
of the druids is very limited. Druidic lore consisted of a large number of
verses learned by heart, and we are told that sometimes twenty years were
required to complete the course of study. There may have been a Druidic
teaching center on Anglesey (Ynys Mon) centered on magical lakes, but what was
taught, whether poetry, astronomy or whether possibly even the Greek language,
is conjecture. Of their oral literature of sacred songs, formulas for prayers
and incantations, rules of divination and magic, not one verse has survived,
even in translation, nor is there even a legend that we can call purely
druidic, without a Christian overlay or interpretation. Much traditional rural
religious practice can still be discerned beneath Christian interpretation,
nevertheless, and survives in practices like Halloween observances, corn
dollies and other harvest rituals, the myths of Puck, woodwoses,
"lucky" and "unlucky" plants and animals and the like.
Orally-transmitted material may have exaggerated deep origins in antiquity,
however, and is constantly subject to influence from surrounding culture. Roman Sources We find in Caesar's
Gallic Wars the first and fullest account of the Druids. Caesar notes that all
men of any rank and dignity in Gaul were included either among the Druids or
among the nobles, two separate classes. The Druids constituted
the learned priestly class, and they were guardians of the unwritten ancient
customary law and had the power of executing judgment, of which excommunication
from society was the most dreaded. Druids were not a hereditary caste, though
they enjoyed exemption from service in the field as well as from payment of
taxes. The course of training to which a novice had to submit was protracted.
All instruction was communicated orally, but for ordinary purposes, Caesar
reports, the Gauls had a written language in which they used the Greek
characters. No druidic documents
have survived. "The principal point of their doctrine", says Caesar,
"is that the soul does not die and that after death it passes from one
body into another". This led several ancient writers to the unlikely
conclusion that the druids must have been influenced by the teachings of the
Greek philosopher Pythagoras. Caesar also notes the druidic sense of the
guardian spirit of the tribe, whom he translated as Dispater, with a general
sense of Father Hades.Writers like Diodorus and Strabo with less firsthand
experience than Caesar, were of the opinion that this class included Druids,
bards and soothsayers. Pomponius Mela is the
first author who says that their instruction was secret and carried on in caves
and forests. We know that certain groves within forests were sacred because
Romans and Christians alike cut them down and burned the wood. Human sacrifice
is sometimes attributed to Druidism; it was an old inheritance in Europe,
(although this might be Roman propaganda). The Gauls were accustomed to offer
human sacrifices, usually criminals. Britain was a
headquarters of Druidism, but once every year a general assembly of the order
was held within the territories of the Carnutes in Gaul. Cicero remarks on the
existence among the Gauls of augurs or soothsayers, known by the name of
Druids; he had made the acquaintance of one Divitiacus, an Aeduan. Diodorus
informs us that a sacrifice acceptable to the gods must be attended by a Druid,
for they are the intermediaries. Before a battle they often throw themselves
between two armies to bring about peace. Druids were seen as
essentially non-Roman: a prescript of Augustus forbade Roman citizens to
practise druidical rites. In Strabo we find the Druids still acting as arbiters
in public and private matters, but they no longer deal with cases of murder.
Under Tiberius the Druids were suppressed by a decree of the Senate, but this
had to be renewed by Claudius in 54 CE. In Pliny their activity
is limited to the practice of medicine and sorcery. According to him, the
Druids held the mistletoe in the highest veneration. Groves of oak were their
chosen retreat. When thus found, the mistletoe was cut with a golden knife by a
priest clad in a white robe, two white bulls being sacrificed on the spot. Tacitus, in describing
the attack made on the island of Mona (Anglesey or Ynys Mon in Welsh) by the
Romans under Suetonius Paulinus, represents the legionaries as being awestruck
on landing by the appearance of a band of Druids, who, with hands uplifted
towards heaven, poured forth terrible imprecations on the heads of the
invaders. The courage of the Romans, however, soon overcame such fears; the
Britons were put to flight; and the sacred groves of Mona were cut down.After
the 1st century CE, the continental Druids disappeared entirely, and were only
referred to on very rare occasions. Ausonius, for instance, apostrophizes the
rhetorician Attius Patera as sprung from a race of Druids. Early Druids in Britain The story of Vortigern
as reported by Nennius is one of the very few glimpses of Druidic survival in
Britain after the Roman conquest. After being excommunicated by Germanus, the
British leader invites twelve Druids to assist him. In Irish literature,
however, the Druids are frequently mentioned, and their functions in the island
seem to correspond fairly well to those of Gaul. The functions of Druids we
here find distributed amongst Druids, bards and poets, but even in very early
times the poet has usurped many of the duties of the Druid (at least to judge
from poetry) and finally supplants him with the spread of Christianity. The most important Irish
documents are contained in manuscripts of the 12th century, but the texts
themselves go back in large measure to about 700. In the heroic cycles the
Druids do not appear to have formed any corporation, nor do they seem to have
been exempt from military service. Cathbu (Cathbad), the Druid connected with
Conchobar, king of Ulster, in the older cycle is accompanied by a number of
youths (100 according to the oldest version) who are desirous of learning his
art. The Druids are
represented as being able to foretell the future: before setting out on the
great expedition against Ulster, Medb, queen of Connaught, goes to consult her
Druid, and just before the famous heroine Derdriu (Deirdre) is born, Cathbu
prophesies what sort of a woman she will be. Druids also have magical
skills: the hero Cuchulainn has returned from the land of the fairies after
having been enticed thither by a fairywoman named Fand, whom he is now unable
to forget. He is given a potion by some Druids, which banishes all memory of
his recent adventures and which also rids his wife Emer of the pangs of
jealousy. More remarkable still is the story of Etain. This lady, now the wife
of Eochaid Arem, high-king of Ireland, was in a former existence the beloved of
the god Mider, who again seeks her love and carries her off. The king has
recourse to his Druid Dalgn, who requires a whole year to discover the haunt of
the couple. This he accomplished by means of four wands of yew inscribed with
ogam characters. The following
description of the band of Cathbus Druids occurs in the epic tale, the Tain bo
Cuailnge: The attendant raises his eyes towards heaven and observes the clouds
and answers the band around him. They all raise their eyes towards heaven,
observe the clouds, and hurl spells against the elements, so that they arouse
strife amongst them and clouds of fire are driven towards the camp of the men
of Ireland. We are further told that at the court of Conchobar no one had the
right to speak before the Druids had spoken. In other texts the Druids are able
to produce insanity. Druidic sites:
Druids in Christian
literature In the lives of saints,
martyrs and missionaries, the Druids are represented as magicians and diviners
opposing the Christian missionaries, though we find two of them acting as
tutors to the daughters of Lóegaire mac Néill, the High King, at the coming of Saint
Patrick. They are represented as endeavouring to prevent the progress of
Patrick and Saint Columba by raising clouds and mist. Before the battle of
Culdremne (561) a Druid made an airbe drtiad (fence of protection?) round one
of the armies, but what is precisely meant by the phrase is obscure. The Irish
Druids seem to have had a peculiar tonsure. The word drtu is always used to
render the Latin magus, and in one passage St Columba speaks of Christ as his
Druid. Druid Revival
William Stukeley created
this version of a Druid - shortening the beard, removed the mistletoe, turned
the bag at his side into a sort of bottle or gourd, and placed an axe-head in
his belt. In the 18th century,
England and Wales experienced a Druid revival, inspired by e. g. John Aubrey,
John Toland and William Stukely. There is strong evidence to suggest that
William Blake was involved in the Druid revival and may have been an Archdruid.
Aubrey was the first
modern writer to connect Stonehenge
and other megalithic monuments with Druidry, a misconception that shaped
ideas of Druidry during much of the 19th century. Modern Druidic groups
have their roots in this revival, and some claim that Aubrey was an archdruid
in possession of an uninterrupted tradition of Druidic knowledge, though
Aubrey, an uninhibited collector of lore and gossip, never entered a
corroborating word in his voluminous surviving notebooks. Toland was fascinated by
Aubrey's Stonehenge theories, and wrote his own book, without crediting Aubrey.
He has also been claimed as an Archdruid. The Ancient Druid Order claim that
Toland held a gathering of Druids from all over Britain and Ireland in a London
tavern, the Appletree, in 1717. The Ancient Order of
Druids itself was founded in 1781, led by Henry Hurle and apparently
incorporating Masonic ideas. A central figure of the
Druidic revival is Edward Williams, better known as Iolo Morganwg. His
writings, published posthumously as The Iolo Manuscripts (1848), and Barddas
(1862), remain influential in the contemporary Druidic movements. Williams
claimed to have collected ancient knowledge in a "Gorsedd of Bards of the
Isles of Britain" he had organized, but in the 1970s, draft manuscripts of
the texts were discovered among Williams' papers, exposing the texts as his own
compositions. Druidism Today Modern Druidism (a.k.a.
Modern Druidry) is a continuation of the 18th-century revival and is thus
thought to have some, though not many, connections to the Ancient Religion.
Modern Druidism has two strands, the cultural and the religious. Cultural
Druids hold a competition of poetry, literature and music known as the Eisteddfod
amongst the Celtic peoples (Welsh, Irish, Cornish, Breton, etc). Modern
religious Druidry is a form of Neopaganism built largely around writings
produced in the 18th century and later, plus the relatively sparse Roman and
early medieval sources. It is not always easy to
distinguish between the two strands, because religiously-oriented Druid orders
may welcome members of any or no religious background while culturally-oriented
orders may not inquire about the religious beliefs of members. Both types of
Druid order, then, may contain both religiously-oriented and non-religiously
oriented members. Many notable Britons have been initiated into Druidic orders,
including Winston Churchill. Churchill's case illustrates the difficulty of
distinguishing between the two strands, because historians are not even certain
which order he joined, the Ancient Order of Druids or the Ancient and
Archaeological Order of Druids, let alone for what purpose he joined.
This nineteenth-century
painting shows a Druidess holding both the sickle and a sprig of mistletoe. She
is also standing next to a megalithic structure - a dolmen. Many Druids were
women; the Celtic woman enjoyed more freedom and rights than women in any other
contemporary culture, including the rights to enter battle, and divorce her
husband. Druids
at Stone Circles - Stonehenge
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Modified Tuesday, November 02, 2010 Copyright @ 2010 by Fathers' Manifesto & Christian Party |