fbpx
Wikipedia

Pan-Celticism

Pan-Celticism (Irish: Pan-Cheilteachas, Scottish Gaelic: Pan-Cheilteachas, Breton: Pan-Keltaidd, Welsh: Pan-Geltaidd, Cornish: Pan-Keltaidh, Manx: Pan-Cheltaghys), also known as Celticism or Celtic nationalism is a political, social and cultural movement advocating solidarity and cooperation between Celtic nations (both the Brythonic and Gaelic branches) and the modern Celts in Northwestern Europe.[1] Some pan-Celtic organisations advocate the Celtic nations seceding from the United Kingdom and France and forming their own separate federal state together, while others simply advocate very close cooperation between independent sovereign Celtic nations, in the form of Breton, Cornish, Irish, Manx, Scottish, and Welsh nationalism.

A Pan-Celtic Flag of two interlaced Triskelion, designed by Breton Robert Berthelier in 1950.
A Pan-Celtic flag of the six Celtic nations.

As with other pan-nationalist movements such as pan-Americanism, pan-Arabism, pan-Germanism, pan-Hispanism, pan-Iranism, pan-Latinism, pan-Slavism, pan-Turanianism, and others, the pan-Celtic movement grew out of Romantic nationalism and specific to itself, the Celtic Revival. The pan-Celtic movement was most prominent during the 19th and 20th centuries (roughly 1838 until 1939). Some early pan-Celtic contacts took place through the Gorsedd and the Eisteddfod, while the annual Celtic Congress was initiated in 1900. Since that time the Celtic League has become the prominent face of political pan-Celticism. Initiatives largely focused on cultural Celtic cooperation, rather than explicitly politics, such as music, arts and literature festivals, are usually referred to instead as inter-Celtic.

Terminology edit

There is some controversy surrounding the term Celts. One such example was the Celtic League's Galician crisis.[1] This was a debate over whether the Spanish region of Galicia should be admitted. The application was rejected on the basis of a lack of a presence of a Celtic language.[1]

Some Austrians claim that they have a Celtic heritage that became Romanized under Roman rule and later Germanized after Germanic invasions.[2] Austria is the location of the first characteristically Celtic culture to exist.[2] After the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938, in October 1940 a writer from the Irish Press interviewed Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger who spoke of Celtic heritage of Austrians, saying "I believe there is a deeper connection between us Austrians and the Celts. Names of places in the Austrian Alps are said to be of Celtic origin."[3] Contemporary Austrians express pride in having Celtic heritage and Austria possesses one of the largest collections of Celtic artefacts in Europe.[4]

Organisations such as the Celtic Congress and the Celtic League use the definition that a 'Celtic nation' is a nation with recent history of a traditional Celtic language.[1]

History edit

Modern conception of the Celtic peoples edit

 
George Buchanan was one of the first modern historians to note the connection between Celtic peoples.

Before the Roman Empire and the rise of Christianity, people lived in Iron Age Britain and Ireland, speaking languages from which the modern Gaelic languages (including Irish, Scottish Gaelic and Manx) and Brythonic languages (including Welsh, Breton and Cornish) descend. These people, along with others in Continental Europe who once spoke now extinct languages from the same Indo-European branch (such as the Gauls, Celtiberians and Galatians), have been retroactively referred to in a collective sense as the Celts, particularly in a wide spread manner since the turn of the 18th century. Variations of the term "Celt", such as Keltoi had been used in antiquity by the Greeks and the Romans to refer to some groups of these people, such as Herodotus' use of it in regards to the Gauls.

The modern usage of "Celt" in reference to these cultures grew up gradually. A pioneer in the field was George Buchanan, a 16th-century Scottish scholar, Renaissance humanist and tutor to king James IV of Scotland. From a Scottish Gaelic-speaking family, Buchanan in his Rerum Scoticarum Historia (1582), went over the writings of Tacitus who had discussed the similarity between the language of the Gauls and the ancient Britons. Buchanan concluded, if the Gauls were Celtae, as they were described as in Roman sources, then the Britons were Celtae too. He began to see a pattern in place names and concluded that the Britons and Irish Gaels once spoke one Celtic language which later diverged. It wouldn't be until over a century later when these ideas were widely popularised; first by the Breton scholar Paul-Yves Pezron in his Antiquité de la Nation et de la langue celtes autrement appelez Gaulois (1703) and then by the Welsh scholar Edward Lhuyd in his Archaeologia Britannica: An Account of the Languages, Histories and Customs of the Original Inhabitants of Great Britain (1707).

By the time the modern concept of the Celts as a people had emerged, their fortunes had declined substantially, taken over by Germanic people. Firstly, the Celtic Britons of sub-Roman Britain were swamped by a tide of Anglo-Saxon settlement from the fifth century on and lost most of their territory to them. They were subsequently referred to as the Welsh people and the Cornish people. A group of these fled Britain altogether and settled in Continental Europe in Armorica, becoming the Breton people. The Gaels for a while actually expanded, pushing out of Ireland to conquer Pictland in Britain, establishing Alba by the ninth century. From the 11th century onward, the arrival of the Normans, caused problems not only for the English but also for the Celts. The Normans invaded the Welsh kingdoms (establishing the Principality of Wales), the Irish kingdoms (establishing the Lordship of Ireland) and took control of the Scottish monarchy through intermarrying. This advance was often done in conjunction with the Catholic Church's Gregorian Reform, which was centralising the religion in Europe.

 
Arthur, Prince of Wales. The Tudors played up their Celtic background, while accelerating Anglicisation.

The dawning of early modern Europe affected the Celtic peoples in ways which saw what small amount of independence they had left firmly subordinated to the emerging British Empire and in the case of the Duchy of Brittany, the Kingdom of France. Although both the Kings of England (the Tudors) and the Kings of Scotland (the Stewarts) of the day claimed Celtic ancestry and used this in Arthurian cultural motifs to lay the basis for a British monarchy ("British" being suggested by Elizabethan John Dee), both dynasties promoted a centralising policy of Anglicisation. The Gaels of Ireland lost their last kingdoms to the Kingdom of Ireland after the Flight of the Earls in 1607, while the Statutes of Iona attempted to de-Gaelicise the Highland Scots in 1609. The effects of these initiates were mixed, but took from the Gaels their natural leadership element, which had patronised their culture.

Under Anglocentric British rule, the Celtic-speaking peoples were reduced to a marginalised, largely poor people, small farmers and fishermen, clinging to the coast of the North Atlantic. Following the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century, greater multitudes were Anglicised and fled into a diaspora around the British Empire as an industrial proletariat. Further de-Gaelicisation took place for the Irish during the Great Hunger and the Highland Scots during the Highland Clearances. Similarly for the Bretons, after the French Revolution, the Jacobins demanded greater centralisation, against regional identities and for Francization, enacted by the French Directory in 1794. However, Napoleon Bonaparte was greatly attracted to the romantic image of the Celt, which was partly based on Jean-Jacques Rousseau's glorification of the noble savage and the popularity of James Macpherson's Ossianic tales throughout Europe. Bonaparte's nephew, Napoleon III, would later have the Vercingétorix monument erected to honour the Celtic Gaulish leader.[5] Indeed, in France the phrase "nos ancêtres les Gaulois" (our ancestors the Gauls) was invoked by Romantic nationalists,[5] typically in a republican fashion, to refer to the majority of the people, contrary to the aristocracy (claimed to be of Frankish-Germanic descent).

Dawning of Pan-Celticism as a political idea edit

Following the dying down of Jacobitism as a political threat in Britain and Ireland, with the firm establishment of Hanoverian Britain under the liberal, rationalist philosophy of the Enlightenment, a backlash of Romanticism in the late 18th century occurred and "the Celt" was rehabilitated in literature, in a movement which is sometimes known as "Celtomania." The most prominent native representatives of the initial stages of this Celtic Revival were James Macpherson, author of the Poems of Ossian (1761) and Iolo Morganwg, founder of the Gorsedd. The imagery of the "Celtic World" also inspired English and Lowland Scots poets such as Blake, Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley and Scott. In particular the Druids inspired fascination for outsiders, as English and French antiquarians, such as William Stukeley, John Aubrey, Théophile Corret de la Tour d'Auvergne and Jacques Cambry, began to associate ancient megaliths and dolmens with the Druids.[nb 1]

 
The Breton scholar Théodore Hersart de La Villemarqué attended the first Pan-Celtic Congress in 1838.

In the 1820s, early pan-Celtic contacts began to develop, firstly between the Welsh and the Bretons, as Thomas Price and Jean-François Le Gonidec worked together to translate the New Testament into Breton.[6] The two men were champions of their respective languages and both highly influential in their own countries. It was in this spirit that a Pan-Celtic Congress took place at the Cymreigyddion y Fenni's annual Eisteddfod in Abergavenny in 1838, where Bretons attended. Among these participants was Théodore Hersart de La Villemarqué, author of the Macpherson-Morganwg influenced Barzaz Breiz, who imported the Gorsedd idea into Brittany. Indeed, the Breton nationalists would be the most enthusiastic pan-Celticists,[6] acting as a lynch-pin between the different parts; "trapped" within another state (France), this allowed them to draw strength from kindred peoples across the Channel and they also shared a strong attachment to the Catholic faith with the Irish.

Across Europe, modern Celtic Studies were developing as an academic discipline. The Germans led the way in the field with Indo-European linguist Franz Bopp in 1838, followed up by Johann Kaspar Zeuss' Grammatica Celtica (1853). Indeed, as German power was growing in rivalry with France and England, the Celtic Question was of interest to them and they were able to perceive the shift towards Celtic-based nationalisms. Heinrich Zimmer, the Professor of Celtic at Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin (predecessor of Kuno Meyer), spoke in 1899 of the powerful agitation in the "Celtic fringe of the United Kingdom's rich overcoat" and predicted that pan-Celticism would become a political force as important to the future of European politics as the much more established movements of pan-Germanism and pan-Slavism.[7] Other academic treatments included Ernest Renan's La Poésie des races celtiques (1854) and Matthew Arnold's The Study of Celtic Literature (1867). The attention given by Arnold was a double-edged sword; he lauded Celtic poetic and musical achievements, but effeminised them and suggested they needed the cement of a sober, orderly Anglo-Saxon rule.

A concept arose among some European philologists, particularly articulated by Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel, whereby the "care of the national language is a sacred trust",[8] or put more simply, "no language, no nation." This dictum was also adopted by nationalists in Celtic nations, particularly Thomas Davis of the Young Ireland movement, who, contrary to the earlier Catholic-based "civic rights" activism of a Daniel O'Connell, asserted an Irish nationalism where the Irish language would become hegemonic once again. As he claimed a "people without a language of its own is only half a nation."[8] In a less explicitly political context, language revivalist groups emerged such as the Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, which would later become the Gaelic League. In a Pan-Celtic context, Charles de Gaulle (uncle of the more famous General Charles de Gaulle), who involved himself in Breton autonomism and advocated for a Celtic Union in 1864, argued that "so long as a conquered people speaks another language than their conquers, the best part of them remains free." De Gaulle corresponded with people in Brittany, Ireland, Scotland and Wales, arguing that each needed to cooperate in a spirit of Celtic unity and above all defend their native languages or otherwise their position as Celtic nations would be extinct. A Pan-Celtic review was founded by de Gaulle's comrade Henri Gaidoz in 1873, known as Revue Celtique.

In 1867 de Gaulle organised the first ever Pan-Celtic gathering in Saint-Brieuc, Brittany. No Irish attended and the guests were mainly Welsh and Breton.[9]: 108 

T. E. Ellis, the leader of Cymru Fydd was a proponent of Pan-Celticism, stating "We must work for bringing together Celtic reformers and Celtic peoples. The interests of Irishmen, Welshmen and [Scottish] Crofters are almost identical. Their past history is very similar, their present oppressors are the same and their immediate wants are the same.[9]: 78 

Pan-Celtic Congress and the Celtic Association era edit

 
 
Bernard FitzPatrick, Lord Castletown and Edmund Edward Fournier d'Albe, founders of the Celtic Association. Through their activities, three Pan-Celtic Congresses were held at the start of the 20th century.

The first major Pan-Celtic Congress was organised by Edmund Edward Fournier d'Albe and Bernard FitzPatrick, 2nd Baron Castletown, under the auspices of their Celtic Association and was held in August 1901 in Dublin. This had followed on from an earlier sentiment of pan-Celtic feeling at the National Eisteddfod of Wales, held in Liverpool in 1900. Another influence was Fournier's attendance at Feis Ceoil in the late 1890s, which drew musicians from the different Celtic nations. The two leaders formed somewhat of an idiosyncratic pair; Fournier, of French parentage embraced an ardent Hibernophilia and learned the Irish language, while FitzPatrick descended from ancient Irish royalty (the Mac Giolla Phádraig of Osraige), but was serving in the British Army and had earlier been a Conservative MP (indeed, the original Pan-Celtic Congress was delayed for a year because of the Second Boer War).[10] The main intellectual organ of the Celtic Association was Celtia: A Pan-Celtic Monthly Magazine, edited by Fournier, which ran from January 1901 until 1904 and was briefly revived in 1907 before finally ending for good in May 1908. Its inception was welcomed by Breton François Jaffrennou.[11] An unrelated publication "The Celtic Review" was founded in 1904 and ran until 1908.[11]

Historian Justin Dolan Stover of Idaho State University describes the movement as having "uneven successes".[11]

In total, the Celtic Association was able to organise three Pan-Celtic Congresses: Dublin (1901), Caernarfon (1904) and Edinburgh (1907). Each of these opened with an elaborate neo-druidic ceremony, with the laying of the Lia Cineil ("Race Stone"), which drew inspiration from the Lia Fáil and Stone of Scone. The stone was five foot high and consisted of five granite blocks, each with a letter of the respective Celtic nation etched into it in their own language (i.e. - "E" for Ireland, "A" for Scotland, "C" for Wales).[nb 2] At the laying of the stone, the Archdruid of the Eisteddfod, Hwfa Môn would say three times in Gaelic, while holding a partly unsheathed sword, "Is there peace?" to which the people responded "Peace."[12] The symbolism inherent in this was meant to represent a counterpoise to the British Empire's assimilating Anglo-Saxonism as articulated by the likes of Rudyard Kipling.[13] For the pan-Celts, they imagined a restored "Celtic race", but where each Celtic people would have its own national space without assimilating all into a uniformity. The Lia Cineil was also intended as a phallic symbol, referencing the ancient megaliths historically associated with the Celts and overturning the "feminisation of the Celts by their Saxon neighbours."[13]

The response of the most advanced and militant nationalism of a "Celtic" people; Irish nationalism; was mixed. The pan-Celts were lampooned by D. P. Moran in The Leader, under the title of "Pan-Celtic Farce."[12] The folk costumes and druidic aesthetics were especially mocked, meanwhile Moran, who associated Irish nationality with Catholicism, was suspicious of the Protestantism of both Fournier and FitzPatrick.[12] The participation of the latter as a "Tommy Atkins" against the Boers (whom Irish nationalists supported with the Irish Transvaal Brigade) was also highlighted as unsound.[12] Moran concluded that pan-Celticism was "parasitic" from Irish nationalism, created by a "foreigner" (Fournier) and sought to misdirect Irish energies.[12] Others were less polemical; opinion in the Gaelic League was divided and though they elected not to send an official representative, some members did attend Congress meetings (including Douglas Hyde, Patrick Pearse and Michael Davitt).[14] More enthusiastic was Lady Gregory, who imagined an Ireland-led "Pan-Celtic Empire", while William Butler Yeats also attended the Dublin meeting.[14] Prominent Gaelic League activists such as Pearse, Edward Martyn, John St. Clair Boyd, Thomas William Rolleston, Thomas O'Neill Russell, Maxwell Henry Close and William Gibson all made financial contributions to the Pan-Celtic Congress.[15] Ruaraidh Erskine was an attendant. Erskine himself was an advocate of a "Gaelic confederation" between Ireland and Scotland.[16]

David Lloyd George, who would later to go on to be the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, delivered a speech at the 1904 Celtic Congress.[17]

Breton Regionalist Union founder Régis de l'Estourbeillon attended the 1907 congress, headed the Breton faction of the procession and placed the Breton stone on the Lia Cineill. Henry Jenner, Arthur William Moore and John Crichton-Stuart, fourth Marquess of Bute likewise attended the 1907 congress.[18]

Erskine made an effort to set up a "union of Welsh, Scots and Irish with a view to action on behalf of Celtic communism". He wrote to Thomas Gwynn Jones asking for suggestions on Welshmen to invite to London for a meeting on setting such a thing up. It is unknown if such a meeting ever took place.[19]

John de Courcy Mac Donnell founded a Celtic Union in Belgium in 1908, which organised the fourth Pan-Celtic congress as part of the 1910 Brussels International Exposition.[20] Exhibitions of hurling were held there and at nearby at Fontenoy, commemorating the Irish Brigade at the 1745 battle.[21] The Celtic Union held further events up to the fifth Pan-Celtic congress 1913 in Ghent/Brussels/Namur.[20]

In Paris, 1912 the "La Ligue Celtique Francaise" was launched and had a magazine called "La Poetique" which published news and literature from all around the Celtic world.[11]

Pan-Celticism after the Easter Rising edit

Celtic nationalisms were boosted immensely by the Irish Easter Rising of 1916, where a group of revolutionaries belonging to the Irish Republican Brotherhood struck militantly against the British Empire during the First World War to assert an Irish Republic. Part of their political vision, building on earlier Irish-Ireland policies was a re-Gaelicisation of Ireland: that is to say a de-colonisation of Anglo cultural, linguistic and economic hegemony and a re-assertion of the native Celtic culture. After the initial rising, their politics coalesced in Ireland around Sinn Féin. In other Celtic nations, groups were founded holding similar views and voiced solidarity with Ireland during the Irish War of Independence: this included the Breton-journal Breiz Atao, the Scots National League of Ruaraidh Erskine and various figures in Wales who would later go on to found Plaid Cymru. The presence of James Connolly and the October Revolution in Russia taking place at the same time, also led some to imagine a Celtic socialism or communism; an idea associated with Erskine, as well as the revolutionary John Maclean and William Gillies. Erskine claimed the "collectivist ethos in the Celtic past", had been, "undermined by Anglo-Saxon values of greed and selfishness."

The hope of some Celtic nationalists that a semi-independent Ireland could act as a springboard for Irish Republican Army-esque equivalents for their own nations and the "liberation" of the rest of the Celtosphere would prove a disappointment. A militant Scottish volunteer force founded by Gillies, Fianna na hAlba; which like the Óglaigh na hÉireann advocated republicanism and Gaelic nationalism; was discouraged by Michael Collins who advised Gillies that the British state was stronger in Scotland than Ireland and that public opinion was more against them. Once the Irish Free State was established, the ruling parties; Fine Gael or Fianna Fáil; were content to engage in inter-governmental diplomacy with the British state in an effort to have returned the counties in Northern Ireland, rather than supporting Celtic nationalist militants within Britain. The Irish state, particularly under Éamon de Valera did make some effort on the cultural and linguistic front in regards to Pan-Celticism. For instance in the summer of 1947, the Irish Taoiseach de Valera visited the Isle of Man and met with Manxman, Ned Maddrell. While there he had the Irish Folklore Commission make recordings of the last, old, native Manx Gaelic-speakers, including Maddrell.

Post-war initiatives and the Celtic League edit

 
A flag of the Celtic nations, which included the flag of Galicia in the top left corner. They are today, generally not considered a Celtic nation.

A group called "Aontacht na gCeilteach" (Celtic Unity) was set up to promote the pan-Celtic vision in November 1942. It was headed by Éamonn Mac Murchadha. MI5 believed it to be a secret front for the Irish fascist party Ailtiri na hAiseirghe and was to serve as "a rallying point for Irish, Scottish, Welsh and Breton nationalists". The group had the same postal address as the party. At its foundation the group stated that "the present system is utterly repugnant to the celtic conception of life" and called for a new order based upon a "distinctive celtic philosophy". Ailtiri na hAiseirghe itself had a pan-Celtic vision and had established contacts with pro-Welsh independence political party Plaid Cymru and Scottish independence activist Wendy Wood. One day the party covered South Dublin city with posters saying "Rhyddid i Gymru" (Freedom for Wales)[22][23][24][25] Rhisiart Tal-e-bot, former President of the European Free Alliance Youth is a member.[26][23][27]

The rejuvenation of Irish republicanism during the post-war period and into The Troubles had some inspiration not only for other Celtic nationalists, but militant nationalists from other "small nations", such as the Basques with the ETA. Indeed, this was particularly pertinent to the secessionist nationalisms of Spain, as the era of Francoist Spain was coming to a close. As well as this, there was renewed interest in all things Celtic in the 1960s and 1970s. In a less militant fashion, elements within Galician nationalism and Asturian nationalism began to court Pan-Celticism, attending the Festival Interceltique de Lorient and the Pan Celtic Festival at Killarney, as well as joining the International Section of the Celtic League.[28] Although this region had once been under Iberian Celts, had a strong resonance in Gaelic mythology (i.e. - Breogán) and even during the Early Middle Ages had a small enclave of Celtic Briton emigrants at Britonia (similar to the case with Brittany), no Celtic language had been spoken there since the eighth century and today they speak Romance languages.[29] During the so-called "Galician crisis" of 1986,[28] the Galicians were admitted to the Celtic League as a Celtic nation (Paul Mosson had argued for their inclusion in Carn since 1980).[28] This was subsequently overturned the following year, as the Celtic League reaffirmed the Celtic languages as the integral and defining factor in what is a Celtic nation.[30]

21st century edit

Following the Brexit referendum there were calls for Pan-Celtic Unity. In November 2016, the First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon stated the idea of a "Celtic Corridor" of the island of Ireland and Scotland appealed to her.[31]

In January 2019 the leader of the Welsh nationalist Plaid Cymru party, Adam Price spoke in favour of cooperation among the Celtic nations of Britain and Ireland following Brexit. Among his proposals were a Celtic Development Bank for joint infrastructure and investment projects in energy, transport and communications in Ireland, Wales, Scotland, and the Isle of Man, and the foundation of a Celtic union, the structure of which is already existent in the Good Friday Agreement according to Price. Speaking to RTÉ, the Irish national broadcaster he proposed Wales and Ireland working together to promote the indigenous languages of each nation.[32]

Blogger Owen Donavan published, on his blog State of Wales, his views on a Celtic confederation, "a voluntary union of sovereign nation-states – between Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The Isle of Man would presumably be a candidate for inclusion too. Cornwall and Brittany could be added as future members if they can attain a measure of self-government." He also considered a Celtic Council, a similar co-operation that was proposed by Adam Price.[33] Journalist Jamie Dalgety has also proposed the concept of a Celtic Union involving Scotland and Ireland but suggests that lack of support for Welsh independence may mean that a Gaelic Celtic Union involving may be more appropriate.[34] Bangor University lecturer and journalist, Ifan Morgan Jones has suggested that "a short-term fix for Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland might be a greater degree of cooperation with each other, as a union within a union." he also suggested that "If they could find a way of working together in their mutual interest, that’s a fair degree of combined influence, particular if the next General Election produces a hung parliament."[35]

Anti-Celticism edit

A movement among some archeologists known as "Celtoscepticism" emerged from the late 1980s, through the 1990s.[36] This school of thought, initiated by John Collis sought to undermine the basis of Celticism and cast doubts on the legitimacy of the very concept or any usage of the term "Celts". This strain of thought was particularly hostile to all but archaeological evidence.[37] Partly a reaction to the rise in Celtic devolutionist tendencies, these scholars were opposed to describing the Iron Age people of Britain as Celtic Britons and even disliked the use of the phrase Celtic in describing the Celtic language family.[citation needed] Collis, an Englishman from the University of Cambridge, was hostile to the methodology of German professor Gustaf Kossinna and was hostile to Celts as an ethnic identity coalescing around a concept of hereditary ancestry, culture and language (claiming this was "racist"). Aside from this Collis was hostile to the use of Classical literature and Irish literature as a source for the Iron Age period, as exemplified by Celtic scholars such as Barry Cunliffe. Throughout the duration of the debate on the historicity of the ancient Celts, John T. Koch stated that it is "the scientific fact of a Celtic family of languages that has weathered unscathed the Celtosceptic controversy."[38]

Collis was not the only figure in this field. The two other figures most prominent in the field were Malcolm Chapman with his The Celts: The Construction of a Myth (1992) and Simon James of the University of Leicester with his The Atlantic Celts: Ancient People or Modern Invention? (1999).[39] In particular, James engaged in a particularly heated exchange with Vincent Megaw (and his wife Ruth) on the pages of Antiquity.[40] The Megaws (along with others such as Peter Berresford Ellis)[41] suspected a politically motivated agenda; driven by English nationalist resentment and anxiety at British Imperial decline; in the whole premise of Celtosceptic theorists (such as Chapman, Nick Merriman and J. D. Hill) and that the anti-Celtic position was a reaction to the formation of a Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly. For his part, James stepped forward to defend his fellow Celtosceptics, claiming that their rejection of the Celtic idea was politically motivated, but invoked "multiculturalism" and sought to deconstruct the past and imagine it as more "diverse", rather than a Celtic uniformity.[40]

Attempts to identify a distinct Celtic Race were made by the "Harvard Archaeological Mission to Ireland" in the 1930s, led by Earnest Hooton, which drew the conclusions needed by its sponsor-government. The findings were vague and did not stand up to scrutiny, and were not pursued after 1945.[42][43] The genetic studies by David Reich suggest that the Celtic areas had three major population changes, and that the last group in the Iron Age, who spoke Celtic languages, had arrived in about 1000 BCE, after the building of iconic supposedly-Celtic monuments like Stonehenge and Newgrange.[44] Reich confirmed that the Indo-European root of the Celtic languages reflected a population shift, and was not just a linguistic adoption.

Manifestations edit

Pan-Celticism can operate on one or all of the following levels listed below:

Linguistics edit

Linguistic organisations promote linguistic ties, notably the Gorsedd in Wales, Cornwall and Brittany, and the Irish government-sponsored Columba Initiative between Ireland and Scotland. Often, there is a split here between the Irish, Scots and Manx, who use Q-Celtic Goidelic languages, and the Welsh, Cornish and Bretons, who speak P-Celtic Brythonic languages.

Music edit

Our blossom is red as the life's blood we shed
For Liberty's cause against alien laws
When Lochiel and O'Neill and Llewellyn drew steel
For Alba and Erin and Cambria's weal

The flower of the free, the heather, the heather
The Bretons and Scots and Irish together
The Manx and the Welsh and Cornish forever
Six nations are we all Celtic and free!

Alfred Perceval Graves, Song of the Celts.

Music is a notable aspect of Celtic cultural links. Inter-Celtic festivals have been gaining popularity, and some of the most notable include those at Lorient, Killarney, Kilkenny, Letterkenny and Celtic Connections in Glasgow.[45][46]

Cuisine edit

Pan-Celtic Cuisine edit

Pan-Celtic cuisine, as defined by chef Colbhin MacEochaidh on the Pan Celtic Cuisine website refers to the culinary traditions shared among the Celtic nations, which include Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall, and the Isle of Man. This culinary style is characterized by a rich tapestry of flavors, incorporating local ingredients, traditional cooking methods, and cultural influences unique to each region.

Characteristics edit

Emphasis on Local Ingredients edit

Pan-Celtic cuisine places a strong emphasis on locally sourced ingredients, reflecting the diverse landscapes of the Celtic nations. Staples such as oats, seafood, dairy, root vegetables, and game meats form the foundation of many dishes.

Traditional Cooking Methods edit

The cuisine incorporates traditional cooking methods, including Open fire, baking, boiling, and slow-cooking. Many dishes showcase the simplicity and robustness of Celtic culinary heritage.

Common Ingredients edit

Commonly used ingredients in Pan-Celtic cuisine include: Oats: Oat-based dishes, such as porridge and oatcakes, are prevalent in Celtic cooking. Seafood:Given the proximity to the sea, seafood plays a prominent role, with dishes featuring fish, shellfish, and seaweed. Dairy Milk and dairy products, especially cheeses, are integral to Celtic recipes. Root Vegetables Potatoes, turnips, and carrots are often but featured prominently.

Regional Variations edit

Irish Cuisine

Irish cuisine is known for hearty and comforting dishes, including Irish stew, colcannon, and soda bread.

Scottish Cuisine

Scottish cuisine features dishes like haggis, neeps and tatties, and Scotch broth.

Welsh Cuisine

Welsh cuisine includes specialties such as Welsh rarebit, cawl, and bara brith.

Breton Cuisine

Breton cuisine, influenced by its coastal location, emphasizes seafood, crepes, and galettes.

Modern Interpretations

In recent years, chefs and culinary enthusiasts have reimagined Pan-Celtic cuisine, blending traditional recipes with modern techniques and global influences. This has resulted in a dynamic culinary landscape that celebrates Celtic heritage while embracing innovation.

Promotion and Awareness edit

Efforts to promote Pan-Celtic cuisine include culinary events, festivals, and collaborations among chefs from different Celtic regions. Additionally, online platforms and publications contribute to the dissemination of recipes and the celebration of Celtic culinary diversity.

Sports edit

Wrestling edit

There are similarities across Celtic wrestling styles, with many commentators suggesting that this indicates they stem from a common style.[47]

In the Middle Ages it is known that the "champions from the Emerald Isle (the Green Island or Ireland) met the Cornish regularly to wrestle".[47] The Irish style is known as Collar-and-elbow wrestling and uses a "jacket" as does Cornish wrestling. This was still true in the 1800s when Irish champions regularly came to London to wrestle Cornish and Devonian champions.[48][49][50][51]

Cornwall and Brittany have similar wrestling styles (Cornish wrestling and Gouren respectively). There have been matches between wrestlers in these styles over centuries. For example, in 1551 between Cornish soldiers, involved with Edward VI's investing Henri II with the Order of the Garter, and Breton "farmers".[47] There is folklore that fishing disputes between Cornish and Breton fishermen were settled with wrestling matches.[47]

More formally Inter-Celtic championships between Cornwall and Brittany started in 1928, but became less frequent since the 1980s.[47][52][53]

The Celtic wrestling championship started in 1985 comprising Gouren and Scottish Backhold or Cumberland and Westmorland wrestling and sometimes other styles such as Cornish wrestling.[47]

Teams that have competed in the Celtic wrestling championship include:

  • Brittany
  • Canaries
  • Cornwall
  • England
  • Fryslan
  • Iceland
  • Ireland
  • Leon
  • Salzburg
  • Sardinia
  • Scotland
  • Sweden[47]

Hurling and Shinty edit

Ireland and Scotland play each other at hurling/shinty internationals.[54]

Handball edit

As with Hurling and Shinty, Irish handball and Welsh handball (Welsh: Pêl-Law) share an ancient Celtic origin, but over the centuries they developed into two separate sports with different rules and international organisations.

Informal inter-Celtic matches were very likely a feature of industrial southern Wales in the nineteenth century, with Irish immigrant workers said to have enjoyed playing the Welsh game. However, attempts to play formal inter-Celtic matches would only begin after the formation of The Welsh Handball Association in 1987. The association was tasked with playing international matches against nations with similar sports such as Ireland, USA (American Handball) and England (Fives). To facilitate international competition, a new set of rules were devised, and even Wales' most famous Pêl-Law court (The Nelson Court) was given new markings, more in-keeping with the Irish game.[55]

Meaningful Welsh-Irish matches finally became a reality in October 1994, with "The One Wall World Championships" held in Dublin and an inaugural "European One Wall Handball Tournament" held at three courts across southern Wales the following May.[56] The 1990s were the high point for these inter-Celtic rivalries. The success of Wales' Lee Davies (World Champion in 1997) saw large crowds and high public interest. In recent years however, the decline of handball in Wales has resulted in little interest in inter-Celtic competition.[57]

Rugby edit

A Pan-Celtic rugby tournament had been the subject of intermittent discussions throughout the early years of professionalism. The first material steps toward a Pan-Celtic league were taken in the 1999–2000 season, when the Scottish districts Edinburgh and Glasgow were invited to join the fully professional Welsh Premier Division, creating the Welsh–Scottish League. In 2001, the four provinces of the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) joined, with the new format being named the Celtic League.[58]

Today, the tournament is known as the United Rugby Championship, and has since expanded into Italy and South Africa, with no plans for expansion into the other Celtic nations. However, inter-Celtic rivalries continue within the league, under the legal name of the body running the competition Celtic Rugby DAC.

In Women's rugby union, The IRFU, WRU and SRU established the Celtic Challenge competition in 2023. While the first tournament was contested by one team from each nation (Combined Provinces XV, Welsh Developmment XV and the Thistles), it is hoped that the tournament will expand to six competing teams (two from each union) in 2024, with further expansions planned over the next 3 to 5 years.[59][60]

Political edit

Political groups such as the Celtic League, along with Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party have co-operated at some levels in the Parliament of the United Kingdom,[citation needed] and Plaid Cymru has asked questions in Parliament about Cornwall and cooperates with Mebyon Kernow. The Regional Council of Brittany, the governing body of the Region of Brittany, has developed formal cultural links with the Welsh Senedd and there are fact-finding missions. Political pan-Celticism can be taken to include everything from a full federation of independent Celtic states, to occasional political visits. During the Troubles, the Provisional IRA adopted a policy of not mounting attacks in Scotland and Wales, as they viewed England alone as the colonial force occupying Ireland.[61] This was also possibly influenced by the IRA chief of staff Seán Mac Stíofáin (John Stephenson), a London-born republican with pan-Celtic views.[61]

In 2023 a 'Celtic Forum' took place in Brittany. Attendees included First Minister of Wales Mark Drakeford, Deputy First Minister of Scotland, Shona Robinson, Leader of the Cornwall Council, Linda Taylor, Republic of Ireland Ambassador to France, Niall Burgess and Loïg Chesnais-Girard, the President of the Regional Council of Brittany. Political representatives from Asturias and Galicia were also present. Drakeford described the forum as "an excellent opportunity to come together as Celtic nations and regions, to build on our cultural and historical links and seek out areas for future collaboration, such as marine energy."[62]

Town twinnings edit

Town twinning is common between Wales – Brittany and Ireland – Brittany, covering hundreds of communities, with exchanges of local politicians, choirs, dancers and school groups.[63]

Historical connections edit

The kingdom of Dál Riata was a Gaelic overkingdom on the western seaboard of Scotland with some territory on the northern coasts of Ireland. In the late sixth and early seventh century it encompassed roughly what is now Argyll and Bute and Lochaber in Scotland and also County Antrim in Northern Ireland.[64]

As recently as the 13th century, "members of the Scottish elite were still proud to proclaim their Gaelic-Irish origins and identified Ireland as the homeland of the Scots."[65] The 14th century Scottish King Robert the Bruce asserted a common identity for Ireland and Scotland.[65] However, in later medieval times, Irish and Scottish interests diverged for a number of reasons, and the two peoples grew estranged.[66] The conversion of the Scots to Protestantism was one factor.[66] The stronger political position of Scotland in relation to England was another.[66] The disparate economic fortunes of the two was a third reason; by the 1840s Scotland was one of the richest areas in the world and Ireland one of the poorest.[66]

Over the centuries there was considerable migration between Ireland and Scotland, primarily as Scots Protestants took part in the plantation of Ulster in the 17th century and then later, as many Irish began to be evicted from their homes, some emigrating to Scottish cities in the 19th century to escape the "Irish famine". Recently the field of Irish-Scottish studies has developed considerably, with the Irish-Scottish Academic Initiative (ISAI) founded in 1995. To date, three international conferences have been held in Ireland and Scotland, in 1997, 2000 and 2002.[67]

Organisations edit

  • The International Celtic Congress is a non-political cultural organisation that promotes the Celtic language in the six nations of Ireland, Scotland, Brittany, Wales, Isle of Man and Cornwall.
  • The Celtic League, is a Pan-Celtic political organization.

Celtic regions/countries edit

 
The Celtic Kingdom of Noricum covering most of present Austria in 1 A.D.

A number of Europeans from the central and western regions of the continent have some Celtic ancestry. As such it is generally claimed that the 'litmus test' of Celticism is a surviving Celtic language [1] and it was on this criterion that the Celtic league rejected Galicia. The following regions have a surviving Celtic language and it on this criterion that they are considered, by The Pan Celtic Congress in 1904 and Celtic League, to be the Celtic nations.[1][68]

Other regions with Celtic heritage are:

Celts outside Europe edit

Areas with a Celtic language speaking population edit

There are notable Irish and Scottish Gaelic speaking enclaves in Atlantic Canada.[72]

The Patagonia region of Argentina has a sizeable Welsh speaking population. The Welsh settlement in Argentina started in 1865 and is known as Y Wladfa.

The Celtic diaspora edit

The Celtic diaspora in the Americas, as well as New Zealand and Australia, is significant and organised enough that there are numerous organisations, cultural festivals and university-level language classes available in major cities throughout these regions.[73] In the United States, Celtic Family Magazine is a nationally distributed publication providing news, art, and history on Celtic people and their descendants.[74]

The Irish Gaelic games of Gaelic football and hurling are played across the world and are organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association while the Scottish game shinty has seen recent growth in the United States.[75]

Timeline of Pan-Celticism edit

J.T. Koch observes that modern Pan-Celticism arose in the contest of European romantic pan-nationalism, and like other pan-nationist movements, flourished mainly before the First World War.[76] He sees twentieth century efforts in this regard as possibly arising out of a post-modern search for identity in the face of increased industrialization, urbanization and technology.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The current of neo-Druidism, deriving from the writings of the likes of William Stukeley and Iolo Morganwag, had its origins more in the milieu of freemasonry than any lineal connection to the ancient Celtic Druids and their culture, which survived latest in the Gaelic world with the filí and seanchaí (existing alongside Christianity). Thus neo-paganism had a very limited appeal to most people in Celtic nations, instead being largely English and Welsh based. English-based quasi-masonic groups such as the Ancient Order of Druids provided the inspiration for Iolo's Gorsedd. Later masonic groups and writers such as Godfrey Higgins and then Robert Wentworth Little's Ancient and Archaeological Order of Druids, were English founded or based.
  2. ^ Due to the all-but-extinction of the Cornish language, the movement of Cornish nationalism would not be included within the Pan-Celtic Congress until 1904, after Henry Jenner and L. C. R. Duncombe-Jewell of the Cornish Celtic Society made their argument to the Celtic Association. Cornwall ("K") was subsequently added to the Lia Cineil and the Cornish have been recognised as the sixth Celtic nation ever since.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Ellis, Peter Berresford (2002). Celtic dawn: the dream of Celtic unity. Y Lolfa. ISBN 9780862436438. Retrieved 19 January 2010.
  2. ^ a b c Carl Waldman, Catherine Mason. Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Infobase Publishing, 2006. P. 42.
  3. ^ Walter J. Moore. Schrödinger: Life and Thought. Cambridge, England, UK: Press Syndicate of Cambridge University Press, 1989. p.373.
  4. ^ Kevin Duffy. Who Were the Celts? Barnes & Noble Publishing, 1996. P. 20.
  5. ^ a b Fenn 2001, p. 65.
  6. ^ a b Haywood 2014, p. 190.
  7. ^ O'Donnell 2008, p. 134.
  8. ^ a b Motherway 2016, p. 87.
  9. ^ a b De Barra, Caoimhín (2018). The Coming of the Celts, AD 1860: Celtic Nationalism in Ireland and Wales. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 9780268103378.
  10. ^ Platt 2011, p. 61.
  11. ^ a b c d Stover, Justin Dolan (2012). "Modern Celtic Nationalism in the Period of the Great War: Establishing Transnational Connections". Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium. 32: 286–301. JSTOR 23630944.
  12. ^ a b c d e Platt 2011, p. 62.
  13. ^ a b Platt 2011, p. 64.
  14. ^ a b Platt 2011, p. 63.
  15. ^ De Barra, Caoimhín (30 March 2018). The Coming of the Celts, AD 1862: Celtic Nationalism in Ireland and Wales. University of Notre Dame Press. p. 198. ISBN 9780268103408.
  16. ^ "Connections across the North Channel: Ruaraidh Erskine and Irish Influence in Scottish Discontent, 1906-1920". 17 April 2013.
  17. ^ "Celts divided by more than the Irish Sea". The Irish Times.
  18. ^ "Meriden Morning Record - Google News Archive Search".
  19. ^ De Barra 2018 p. 295
  20. ^ a b
    • O'Leary, Philip (1986). ""Children of the Same Mother": Gaelic Relations with the Other Celtic Revival Movements 1882–1916". Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium. 6: 106. ISSN 1545-0155. JSTOR 20557176.
    • "Union Celtique" (PDF). The Pan-Celtic Quarterly (1). Brussels: Union Celtique: 7–8. 1911. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
    • "Chronique: XIII [Congrės pan-celtique à Gand]". Révue Celtique (in French). 34. Paris: Honoré Champion: 353. 1913.
  21. ^ Smith, Raymond (1966). Decades of Glory: A Comprehensive History of the National Game. Little & McClean. p. 78.
  22. ^ Architects of Resurrection: Ailtiri na hAiserighe and the fascist 'new order' in Ireland by R. M. Douglas (pg 271)
  23. ^ a b Pittock, Murray (1999). Celtic Identity and the British Image. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719058264.
  24. ^ "Resurgence". 1966.
  25. ^ Williams, Derek R. (1 July 2014). Following 'An Gof': Leonard Truran, Cornish Activist and Publisher. The Cornovia Press. ISBN 9781908878113.
  26. ^ Ó Luain, Cathal (13 October 2008). "Celtic League: General Secretary in Udb Interview". Agence Bretagne Presse.
  27. ^ Robert William White (2006). Ruairí Ó Brádaigh: The Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253347084.
  28. ^ a b c Berresford Ellis 2002, p. 27.
  29. ^ Berresford Ellis 2002, p. 26.
  30. ^ Berresford Ellis 2002, p. 28.
  31. ^ "Scottish first minister backs calls for 'Celtic corridor'". independent.ie. 29 November 2016.
  32. ^ Nualláin, Irene Ní (10 January 2019). "Welsh party leader calls for Celtic political union". RTÉ.ie.
  33. ^ "Could a Celtic Union work?". State of Wales. 11 March 2019. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  34. ^ says, Austen Lynch (25 September 2021). "Thought Experiment: A Celtic Union". The Glasgow Guardian. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  35. ^ "Might a 'Celtic union' be one route to shifting the balance of power within the UK?". Nation.Cymru. 12 June 2022. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  36. ^ Hood, Laura (13 July 2015). "How being Celtic got a bad name – and why you should care". The Conversation. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  37. ^ "Celtoscepticism, a convenient excuse for ignoring non-archaeological evidence?". Raimund Karl. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  38. ^ Williams, Daniel G. (2009). "Another lost cause? Pan-Celticism, race and language". Irish Studies Review. 17: 89–101. doi:10.1080/09670880802658174. S2CID 143640161.
  39. ^ "The Rise and Fall of the 'C' word (Celts)". Heritage Daily. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  40. ^ a b . University of Leicester. Archived from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  41. ^ "Historical notes: Did the ancient Celts really exist?". The Independent. 5 January 1999. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  42. ^ Carew M. The Quest for the Irish Celt - The Harvard Archaeological Mission to Ireland, 1932-1936. Irish Academic Press, 2018
  43. ^ "Skulls, a Nazi director and the quest for the 'true' Celt". independent. 29 April 2018.
  44. ^ Reich D. Who we are and how we got here; Oxford UP 2018, pp.114-121.
  45. ^ "ALTERNATIVE MUSIC PRESS-Celtic music for a "New World Paradigm"". Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  46. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 February 2010. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  47. ^ a b c d e f g Guy Jaouen and Matthew Bennett Nicols: Celtic Wrestling, The Jacket Styles, Fédération Internationale des Luttes Associées (Switzerland) 2007, p1-183.
  48. ^ Wrestling, Globe, 25 September 1826, p3.
  49. ^ Wrestling, Weekly Dispatch (London), 23 November 1828, p5.
  50. ^ Egan, Pierce: Book of Sport, No XXI The Wrestlers, T T & J Tegg, 1832, p321-336.
  51. ^ Wrestling, Morning Advertiser, 30 May 1849, p3.
  52. ^ Historic Event - Bretons hosted at Cornish Gorsedd, Western Mail, 27 August 1929, p6.
  53. ^ Wrestling in Brittany: How the Cornishmen Fared, Cornish Guardian' 30 August 1928, p14.
  54. ^ "BBC - A Sporting Nation - The first combined shinty/hurling match 1897". www.bbc.co.uk.
  55. ^ Moore, Joe (December 1996). "The Handball Court at Nelson". The Green Dragon. 1 (1).
  56. ^ Hughes, Tony. "The 1995 European One Wall Handball Championships". fivesonline.net.
  57. ^ Jenkins, James O. "Pêl-law". A Fine Beginning.
  58. ^ "Y Gynghrair Geltaidd". BBC Chwaraeon (in Welsh). British Broadcasting Corporation. 28 September 2005. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  59. ^ "Scottish Rugby, IRFU & WRU have created a pilot Celtic Challenge competition, supported by World Rugby, to provide a high-performance tournament window ahead of the 2023 TikTok Six Nations Championship". Scottish Rugby. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  60. ^ "Combined Provinces XV to Compete in Women's Celtic Challenge Tournament". Ulster Rugby. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  61. ^ a b Pittock, Murray. Celtic Identity and the British Image. Manchester University Press, 1999. p. 111
  62. ^ Evans, Tomos. "What is the Celtic Forum and why are leaders meeting in Brittany?". Sky News.
  63. ^ . Cardiff Council. 15 June 2010. Archived from the original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 10 August 2010.
  64. ^ Oxford Companion to Scottish History p. 161 162, edited by Michael Lynch, Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-923482-0.
  65. ^ a b "Making the Caledonian Connection: The Development of Irish and Scottish Studies." by T.M. Devine. Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies, University of Aberdeen. in Radharc: A Journal of Irish Studies Vol 3: 2002 pg 4. The article in turn cites "Myth and Identity in Early Medieval Scotland" by E.J. Cowan, Scottish Historical Review, xxii (1984) pgs 111–135.
  66. ^ a b c d "Making the Caledonian Connection: The Development of Irish and Scottish Studies." by T.M. Devine. Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies, University of Aberdeen. in Radharc: A Journal of Irish Studies Vol 3: 2002 pgs 4–8
  67. ^ Devine, T.M. "Making the Caledonian Connection: The Development of Irish and Scottish Studies." Radharc Journal of Irish Studies. New York. Vol 3, 2002.
  68. ^ "The Celtic League". www.celticleague.net.
  69. ^ "We're nearly all Celts under the skin". The Scotsman. 21 September 2006.
  70. ^ Koch, John (5 March 2013). "Tartessian, Europe's newest and oldest Celtic language". History Ireland. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  71. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  72. ^ Ó Broin, Brian (2011). "An Analysis of the Irish-Speaking Communities of North America: Who are they, what are their opinions, and what are their needs?". academia.edu. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  73. ^ . University of Sydney. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  74. ^ "The Welsh in America". Wales Arts Review. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  75. ^ "Thursday's Scottish gossip". BBC News. 20 August 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  76. ^ Celtic Culture: A-Celti. ABC-CLIO. 20 August 2006. ISBN 9781851094400 – via Google Books.
  77. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  78. ^ "Celtic Congresses in other countries". Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  79. ^ "The International Celtic Congress Resolutions and Themes". Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  80. ^ a b Hughes, J. B. (1953). "The Pan-Celtic Society". The Irish Monthly. 81 (953): 15–38. JSTOR 20516479.
  81. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 8 January 2011. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  82. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  83. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  84. ^ "Welcome to the 2010 Pan Celtic Festival". Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  85. ^ . 16 December 1997. Archived from the original on 25 January 2012. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  86. ^ "Scottish Parliament". Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  87. ^ "Queen and Welsh Assembly". Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  88. ^ a b "Campaign for a Cornish assembly". Retrieved 5 February 2010.

Bibliography edit

  • Bailyn, Bernard (2012). Strangers Within the Realm: Cultural Margins of the First British Empire. UNC Press Books. ISBN 978-0807839416.
  • Berresford Ellis, Peter (1985). The Celtic Revolution: Study in Anti-Imperialism. Y Lolfa Cyf. ISBN 978-0862430962.
  • Berresford Ellis, Peter (2002). Celtic Dawn: The Dream of Celtic Unity. Y Lolfa Cyf. ISBN 978-0862436438.
  • Carruthers, Gerard (2003). English Romanticism and the Celtic World. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1139435949.
  • Collins, Kevin (2008). Catholic Churchmen and the Celtic Revival in Ireland, 1848-1916. Four Courts Press. ISBN 978-1851826582.
  • Fenn, Richard K (2001). Beyond Idols: The Shape of a Secular Society. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198032854.
  • Hechter, Michael (1975). Internal Colonialism: The Celtic Fringe in British National Development, 1536-1966. Routledge. ISBN 978-0710079886.
  • Dudley Edwards, Owen (1968). Celtic Nationalism. Routledge. ISBN 978-0710062536.
  • Gaskill, Howard (2008). The Reception of Ossian in Europe. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1847146007.
  • Haywood, John (2014). The Celts: Bronze Age to New Age. Routledge. ISBN 978-1317870166.
  • Jensen, Lotte (2016). The Roots of Nationalism: National Identity Formation in Early Modern Europe, 1600-1815. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-9048530649.
  • Motherway, Susan (2016). The Globalization of Irish Traditional Song Performance. Routledge. ISBN 978-1317030041.
  • O'Donnell, Ruán (2008). The Impact of the 1916 Rising: Among the Nations. Irish Academic Press. ISBN 978-0716529651.
  • O'Driscoll, Robert (1985). The Celtic Consciousness. George Braziller. ISBN 978-0807611364.
  • O'Rahilly, Cecile (1924). Ireland and Wales: Their Historical and Literary Relations. Longman's.
  • Ortenberg, Veronica (2006). In Search of the Holy Grail: The Quest for the Middle Ages. A&B Black. ISBN 978-1852853839.
  • Pittock, Murray G. H. (1999). Celtic Identity and the British Image. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719058264.
  • Pittock, Murray G. H. (2001). Scottish Nationality. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1137257246.
  • Platt, Len (2011). Modernism and Race. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1139500258.
  • Tanner, Marcus (2006). The Last of the Celts. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300115352.
  • Loffler, Marion (2000). A Book of Mad Celts: John Wickens and the Celtic Congress of Caernaroon 1904. Gomer Press. ISBN 978-1859028964.

External links edit

  • The Celtic League
  • Columba Initiative

celticism, irish, cheilteachas, scottish, gaelic, cheilteachas, breton, keltaidd, welsh, geltaidd, cornish, keltaidh, manx, cheltaghys, also, known, celticism, celtic, nationalism, political, social, cultural, movement, advocating, solidarity, cooperation, bet. Pan Celticism Irish Pan Cheilteachas Scottish Gaelic Pan Cheilteachas Breton Pan Keltaidd Welsh Pan Geltaidd Cornish Pan Keltaidh Manx Pan Cheltaghys also known as Celticism or Celtic nationalism is a political social and cultural movement advocating solidarity and cooperation between Celtic nations both the Brythonic and Gaelic branches and the modern Celts in Northwestern Europe 1 Some pan Celtic organisations advocate the Celtic nations seceding from the United Kingdom and France and forming their own separate federal state together while others simply advocate very close cooperation between independent sovereign Celtic nations in the form of Breton Cornish Irish Manx Scottish and Welsh nationalism A Pan Celtic Flag of two interlaced Triskelion designed by Breton Robert Berthelier in 1950 A Pan Celtic flag of the six Celtic nations As with other pan nationalist movements such as pan Americanism pan Arabism pan Germanism pan Hispanism pan Iranism pan Latinism pan Slavism pan Turanianism and others the pan Celtic movement grew out of Romantic nationalism and specific to itself the Celtic Revival The pan Celtic movement was most prominent during the 19th and 20th centuries roughly 1838 until 1939 Some early pan Celtic contacts took place through the Gorsedd and the Eisteddfod while the annual Celtic Congress was initiated in 1900 Since that time the Celtic League has become the prominent face of political pan Celticism Initiatives largely focused on cultural Celtic cooperation rather than explicitly politics such as music arts and literature festivals are usually referred to instead as inter Celtic Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Modern conception of the Celtic peoples 2 2 Dawning of Pan Celticism as a political idea 2 3 Pan Celtic Congress and the Celtic Association era 2 4 Pan Celticism after the Easter Rising 2 5 Post war initiatives and the Celtic League 2 6 21st century 3 Anti Celticism 4 Manifestations 4 1 Linguistics 4 2 Music 4 3 Cuisine 4 3 1 Pan Celtic Cuisine 4 4 Characteristics 4 4 1 Emphasis on Local Ingredients 4 4 2 Traditional Cooking Methods 4 4 3 Common Ingredients 4 4 4 Regional Variations 4 4 5 Promotion and Awareness 4 5 Sports 4 5 1 Wrestling 4 5 2 Hurling and Shinty 4 5 3 Handball 4 5 4 Rugby 4 6 Political 4 7 Town twinnings 5 Historical connections 6 Organisations 7 Celtic regions countries 8 Celts outside Europe 8 1 Areas with a Celtic language speaking population 8 2 The Celtic diaspora 9 Timeline of Pan Celticism 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 13 External linksTerminology editFurther information Celts There is some controversy surrounding the term Celts One such example was the Celtic League s Galician crisis 1 This was a debate over whether the Spanish region of Galicia should be admitted The application was rejected on the basis of a lack of a presence of a Celtic language 1 Some Austrians claim that they have a Celtic heritage that became Romanized under Roman rule and later Germanized after Germanic invasions 2 Austria is the location of the first characteristically Celtic culture to exist 2 After the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938 in October 1940 a writer from the Irish Press interviewed Austrian physicist Erwin Schrodinger who spoke of Celtic heritage of Austrians saying I believe there is a deeper connection between us Austrians and the Celts Names of places in the Austrian Alps are said to be of Celtic origin 3 Contemporary Austrians express pride in having Celtic heritage and Austria possesses one of the largest collections of Celtic artefacts in Europe 4 Organisations such as the Celtic Congress and the Celtic League use the definition that a Celtic nation is a nation with recent history of a traditional Celtic language 1 History editModern conception of the Celtic peoples edit Main article Celts modern nbsp George Buchanan was one of the first modern historians to note the connection between Celtic peoples Before the Roman Empire and the rise of Christianity people lived in Iron Age Britain and Ireland speaking languages from which the modern Gaelic languages including Irish Scottish Gaelic and Manx and Brythonic languages including Welsh Breton and Cornish descend These people along with others in Continental Europe who once spoke now extinct languages from the same Indo European branch such as the Gauls Celtiberians and Galatians have been retroactively referred to in a collective sense as the Celts particularly in a wide spread manner since the turn of the 18th century Variations of the term Celt such as Keltoi had been used in antiquity by the Greeks and the Romans to refer to some groups of these people such as Herodotus use of it in regards to the Gauls The modern usage of Celt in reference to these cultures grew up gradually A pioneer in the field was George Buchanan a 16th century Scottish scholar Renaissance humanist and tutor to king James IV of Scotland From a Scottish Gaelic speaking family Buchanan in his Rerum Scoticarum Historia 1582 went over the writings of Tacitus who had discussed the similarity between the language of the Gauls and the ancient Britons Buchanan concluded if the Gauls were Celtae as they were described as in Roman sources then the Britons were Celtae too He began to see a pattern in place names and concluded that the Britons and Irish Gaels once spoke one Celtic language which later diverged It wouldn t be until over a century later when these ideas were widely popularised first by the Breton scholar Paul Yves Pezron in his Antiquite de la Nation et de la langue celtes autrement appelez Gaulois 1703 and then by the Welsh scholar Edward Lhuyd in his Archaeologia Britannica An Account of the Languages Histories and Customs of the Original Inhabitants of Great Britain 1707 By the time the modern concept of the Celts as a people had emerged their fortunes had declined substantially taken over by Germanic people Firstly the Celtic Britons of sub Roman Britain were swamped by a tide of Anglo Saxon settlement from the fifth century on and lost most of their territory to them They were subsequently referred to as the Welsh people and the Cornish people A group of these fled Britain altogether and settled in Continental Europe in Armorica becoming the Breton people The Gaels for a while actually expanded pushing out of Ireland to conquer Pictland in Britain establishing Alba by the ninth century From the 11th century onward the arrival of the Normans caused problems not only for the English but also for the Celts The Normans invaded the Welsh kingdoms establishing the Principality of Wales the Irish kingdoms establishing the Lordship of Ireland and took control of the Scottish monarchy through intermarrying This advance was often done in conjunction with the Catholic Church s Gregorian Reform which was centralising the religion in Europe nbsp Arthur Prince of Wales The Tudors played up their Celtic background while accelerating Anglicisation The dawning of early modern Europe affected the Celtic peoples in ways which saw what small amount of independence they had left firmly subordinated to the emerging British Empire and in the case of the Duchy of Brittany the Kingdom of France Although both the Kings of England the Tudors and the Kings of Scotland the Stewarts of the day claimed Celtic ancestry and used this in Arthurian cultural motifs to lay the basis for a British monarchy British being suggested by Elizabethan John Dee both dynasties promoted a centralising policy of Anglicisation The Gaels of Ireland lost their last kingdoms to the Kingdom of Ireland after the Flight of the Earls in 1607 while the Statutes of Iona attempted to de Gaelicise the Highland Scots in 1609 The effects of these initiates were mixed but took from the Gaels their natural leadership element which had patronised their culture Under Anglocentric British rule the Celtic speaking peoples were reduced to a marginalised largely poor people small farmers and fishermen clinging to the coast of the North Atlantic Following the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century greater multitudes were Anglicised and fled into a diaspora around the British Empire as an industrial proletariat Further de Gaelicisation took place for the Irish during the Great Hunger and the Highland Scots during the Highland Clearances Similarly for the Bretons after the French Revolution the Jacobins demanded greater centralisation against regional identities and for Francization enacted by the French Directory in 1794 However Napoleon Bonaparte was greatly attracted to the romantic image of the Celt which was partly based on Jean Jacques Rousseau s glorification of the noble savage and the popularity of James Macpherson s Ossianic tales throughout Europe Bonaparte s nephew Napoleon III would later have the Vercingetorix monument erected to honour the Celtic Gaulish leader 5 Indeed in France the phrase nos ancetres les Gaulois our ancestors the Gauls was invoked by Romantic nationalists 5 typically in a republican fashion to refer to the majority of the people contrary to the aristocracy claimed to be of Frankish Germanic descent Dawning of Pan Celticism as a political idea edit Main articles Celtic Revival and Celtic studies Following the dying down of Jacobitism as a political threat in Britain and Ireland with the firm establishment of Hanoverian Britain under the liberal rationalist philosophy of the Enlightenment a backlash of Romanticism in the late 18th century occurred and the Celt was rehabilitated in literature in a movement which is sometimes known as Celtomania The most prominent native representatives of the initial stages of this Celtic Revival were James Macpherson author of the Poems of Ossian 1761 and Iolo Morganwg founder of the Gorsedd The imagery of the Celtic World also inspired English and Lowland Scots poets such as Blake Wordsworth Byron Shelley and Scott In particular the Druids inspired fascination for outsiders as English and French antiquarians such as William Stukeley John Aubrey Theophile Corret de la Tour d Auvergne and Jacques Cambry began to associate ancient megaliths and dolmens with the Druids nb 1 nbsp The Breton scholar Theodore Hersart de La Villemarque attended the first Pan Celtic Congress in 1838 In the 1820s early pan Celtic contacts began to develop firstly between the Welsh and the Bretons as Thomas Price and Jean Francois Le Gonidec worked together to translate the New Testament into Breton 6 The two men were champions of their respective languages and both highly influential in their own countries It was in this spirit that a Pan Celtic Congress took place at the Cymreigyddion y Fenni s annual Eisteddfod in Abergavenny in 1838 where Bretons attended Among these participants was Theodore Hersart de La Villemarque author of the Macpherson Morganwg influenced Barzaz Breiz who imported the Gorsedd idea into Brittany Indeed the Breton nationalists would be the most enthusiastic pan Celticists 6 acting as a lynch pin between the different parts trapped within another state France this allowed them to draw strength from kindred peoples across the Channel and they also shared a strong attachment to the Catholic faith with the Irish Across Europe modern Celtic Studies were developing as an academic discipline The Germans led the way in the field with Indo European linguist Franz Bopp in 1838 followed up by Johann Kaspar Zeuss Grammatica Celtica 1853 Indeed as German power was growing in rivalry with France and England the Celtic Question was of interest to them and they were able to perceive the shift towards Celtic based nationalisms Heinrich Zimmer the Professor of Celtic at Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin predecessor of Kuno Meyer spoke in 1899 of the powerful agitation in the Celtic fringe of the United Kingdom s rich overcoat and predicted that pan Celticism would become a political force as important to the future of European politics as the much more established movements of pan Germanism and pan Slavism 7 Other academic treatments included Ernest Renan s La Poesie des races celtiques 1854 and Matthew Arnold s The Study of Celtic Literature 1867 The attention given by Arnold was a double edged sword he lauded Celtic poetic and musical achievements but effeminised them and suggested they needed the cement of a sober orderly Anglo Saxon rule A concept arose among some European philologists particularly articulated by Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel whereby the care of the national language is a sacred trust 8 or put more simply no language no nation This dictum was also adopted by nationalists in Celtic nations particularly Thomas Davis of the Young Ireland movement who contrary to the earlier Catholic based civic rights activism of a Daniel O Connell asserted an Irish nationalism where the Irish language would become hegemonic once again As he claimed a people without a language of its own is only half a nation 8 In a less explicitly political context language revivalist groups emerged such as the Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language which would later become the Gaelic League In a Pan Celtic context Charles de Gaulle uncle of the more famous General Charles de Gaulle who involved himself in Breton autonomism and advocated for a Celtic Union in 1864 argued that so long as a conquered people speaks another language than their conquers the best part of them remains free De Gaulle corresponded with people in Brittany Ireland Scotland and Wales arguing that each needed to cooperate in a spirit of Celtic unity and above all defend their native languages or otherwise their position as Celtic nations would be extinct A Pan Celtic review was founded by de Gaulle s comrade Henri Gaidoz in 1873 known as Revue Celtique In 1867 de Gaulle organised the first ever Pan Celtic gathering in Saint Brieuc Brittany No Irish attended and the guests were mainly Welsh and Breton 9 108 T E Ellis the leader of Cymru Fydd was a proponent of Pan Celticism stating We must work for bringing together Celtic reformers and Celtic peoples The interests of Irishmen Welshmen and Scottish Crofters are almost identical Their past history is very similar their present oppressors are the same and their immediate wants are the same 9 78 Pan Celtic Congress and the Celtic Association era edit nbsp nbsp Bernard FitzPatrick Lord Castletown and Edmund Edward Fournier d Albe founders of the Celtic Association Through their activities three Pan Celtic Congresses were held at the start of the 20th century The first major Pan Celtic Congress was organised by Edmund Edward Fournier d Albe and Bernard FitzPatrick 2nd Baron Castletown under the auspices of their Celtic Association and was held in August 1901 in Dublin This had followed on from an earlier sentiment of pan Celtic feeling at the National Eisteddfod of Wales held in Liverpool in 1900 Another influence was Fournier s attendance at Feis Ceoil in the late 1890s which drew musicians from the different Celtic nations The two leaders formed somewhat of an idiosyncratic pair Fournier of French parentage embraced an ardent Hibernophilia and learned the Irish language while FitzPatrick descended from ancient Irish royalty the Mac Giolla Phadraig of Osraige but was serving in the British Army and had earlier been a Conservative MP indeed the original Pan Celtic Congress was delayed for a year because of the Second Boer War 10 The main intellectual organ of the Celtic Association was Celtia A Pan Celtic Monthly Magazine edited by Fournier which ran from January 1901 until 1904 and was briefly revived in 1907 before finally ending for good in May 1908 Its inception was welcomed by Breton Francois Jaffrennou 11 An unrelated publication The Celtic Review was founded in 1904 and ran until 1908 11 Historian Justin Dolan Stover of Idaho State University describes the movement as having uneven successes 11 In total the Celtic Association was able to organise three Pan Celtic Congresses Dublin 1901 Caernarfon 1904 and Edinburgh 1907 Each of these opened with an elaborate neo druidic ceremony with the laying of the Lia Cineil Race Stone which drew inspiration from the Lia Fail and Stone of Scone The stone was five foot high and consisted of five granite blocks each with a letter of the respective Celtic nation etched into it in their own language i e E for Ireland A for Scotland C for Wales nb 2 At the laying of the stone the Archdruid of the Eisteddfod Hwfa Mon would say three times in Gaelic while holding a partly unsheathed sword Is there peace to which the people responded Peace 12 The symbolism inherent in this was meant to represent a counterpoise to the British Empire s assimilating Anglo Saxonism as articulated by the likes of Rudyard Kipling 13 For the pan Celts they imagined a restored Celtic race but where each Celtic people would have its own national space without assimilating all into a uniformity The Lia Cineil was also intended as a phallic symbol referencing the ancient megaliths historically associated with the Celts and overturning the feminisation of the Celts by their Saxon neighbours 13 The response of the most advanced and militant nationalism of a Celtic people Irish nationalism was mixed The pan Celts were lampooned by D P Moran in The Leader under the title of Pan Celtic Farce 12 The folk costumes and druidic aesthetics were especially mocked meanwhile Moran who associated Irish nationality with Catholicism was suspicious of the Protestantism of both Fournier and FitzPatrick 12 The participation of the latter as a Tommy Atkins against the Boers whom Irish nationalists supported with the Irish Transvaal Brigade was also highlighted as unsound 12 Moran concluded that pan Celticism was parasitic from Irish nationalism created by a foreigner Fournier and sought to misdirect Irish energies 12 Others were less polemical opinion in the Gaelic League was divided and though they elected not to send an official representative some members did attend Congress meetings including Douglas Hyde Patrick Pearse and Michael Davitt 14 More enthusiastic was Lady Gregory who imagined an Ireland led Pan Celtic Empire while William Butler Yeats also attended the Dublin meeting 14 Prominent Gaelic League activists such as Pearse Edward Martyn John St Clair Boyd Thomas William Rolleston Thomas O Neill Russell Maxwell Henry Close and William Gibson all made financial contributions to the Pan Celtic Congress 15 Ruaraidh Erskine was an attendant Erskine himself was an advocate of a Gaelic confederation between Ireland and Scotland 16 David Lloyd George who would later to go on to be the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom delivered a speech at the 1904 Celtic Congress 17 Breton Regionalist Union founder Regis de l Estourbeillon attended the 1907 congress headed the Breton faction of the procession and placed the Breton stone on the Lia Cineill Henry Jenner Arthur William Moore and John Crichton Stuart fourth Marquess of Bute likewise attended the 1907 congress 18 Erskine made an effort to set up a union of Welsh Scots and Irish with a view to action on behalf of Celtic communism He wrote to Thomas Gwynn Jones asking for suggestions on Welshmen to invite to London for a meeting on setting such a thing up It is unknown if such a meeting ever took place 19 John de Courcy Mac Donnell founded a Celtic Union in Belgium in 1908 which organised the fourth Pan Celtic congress as part of the 1910 Brussels International Exposition 20 Exhibitions of hurling were held there and at nearby at Fontenoy commemorating the Irish Brigade at the 1745 battle 21 The Celtic Union held further events up to the fifth Pan Celtic congress 1913 in Ghent Brussels Namur 20 In Paris 1912 the La Ligue Celtique Francaise was launched and had a magazine called La Poetique which published news and literature from all around the Celtic world 11 Pan Celticism after the Easter Rising edit Celtic nationalisms were boosted immensely by the Irish Easter Rising of 1916 where a group of revolutionaries belonging to the Irish Republican Brotherhood struck militantly against the British Empire during the First World War to assert an Irish Republic Part of their political vision building on earlier Irish Ireland policies was a re Gaelicisation of Ireland that is to say a de colonisation of Anglo cultural linguistic and economic hegemony and a re assertion of the native Celtic culture After the initial rising their politics coalesced in Ireland around Sinn Fein In other Celtic nations groups were founded holding similar views and voiced solidarity with Ireland during the Irish War of Independence this included the Breton journal Breiz Atao the Scots National League of Ruaraidh Erskine and various figures in Wales who would later go on to found Plaid Cymru The presence of James Connolly and the October Revolution in Russia taking place at the same time also led some to imagine a Celtic socialism or communism an idea associated with Erskine as well as the revolutionary John Maclean and William Gillies Erskine claimed the collectivist ethos in the Celtic past had been undermined by Anglo Saxon values of greed and selfishness The hope of some Celtic nationalists that a semi independent Ireland could act as a springboard for Irish Republican Army esque equivalents for their own nations and the liberation of the rest of the Celtosphere would prove a disappointment A militant Scottish volunteer force founded by Gillies Fianna na hAlba which like the oglaigh na hEireann advocated republicanism and Gaelic nationalism was discouraged by Michael Collins who advised Gillies that the British state was stronger in Scotland than Ireland and that public opinion was more against them Once the Irish Free State was established the ruling parties Fine Gael or Fianna Fail were content to engage in inter governmental diplomacy with the British state in an effort to have returned the counties in Northern Ireland rather than supporting Celtic nationalist militants within Britain The Irish state particularly under Eamon de Valera did make some effort on the cultural and linguistic front in regards to Pan Celticism For instance in the summer of 1947 the Irish Taoiseach de Valera visited the Isle of Man and met with Manxman Ned Maddrell While there he had the Irish Folklore Commission make recordings of the last old native Manx Gaelic speakers including Maddrell Post war initiatives and the Celtic League edit nbsp A flag of the Celtic nations which included the flag of Galicia in the top left corner They are today generally not considered a Celtic nation A group called Aontacht na gCeilteach Celtic Unity was set up to promote the pan Celtic vision in November 1942 It was headed by Eamonn Mac Murchadha MI5 believed it to be a secret front for the Irish fascist party Ailtiri na hAiseirghe and was to serve as a rallying point for Irish Scottish Welsh and Breton nationalists The group had the same postal address as the party At its foundation the group stated that the present system is utterly repugnant to the celtic conception of life and called for a new order based upon a distinctive celtic philosophy Ailtiri na hAiseirghe itself had a pan Celtic vision and had established contacts with pro Welsh independence political party Plaid Cymru and Scottish independence activist Wendy Wood One day the party covered South Dublin city with posters saying Rhyddid i Gymru Freedom for Wales 22 23 24 25 Rhisiart Tal e bot former President of the European Free Alliance Youth is a member 26 23 27 The rejuvenation of Irish republicanism during the post war period and into The Troubles had some inspiration not only for other Celtic nationalists but militant nationalists from other small nations such as the Basques with the ETA Indeed this was particularly pertinent to the secessionist nationalisms of Spain as the era of Francoist Spain was coming to a close As well as this there was renewed interest in all things Celtic in the 1960s and 1970s In a less militant fashion elements within Galician nationalism and Asturian nationalism began to court Pan Celticism attending the Festival Interceltique de Lorient and the Pan Celtic Festival at Killarney as well as joining the International Section of the Celtic League 28 Although this region had once been under Iberian Celts had a strong resonance in Gaelic mythology i e Breogan and even during the Early Middle Ages had a small enclave of Celtic Briton emigrants at Britonia similar to the case with Brittany no Celtic language had been spoken there since the eighth century and today they speak Romance languages 29 During the so called Galician crisis of 1986 28 the Galicians were admitted to the Celtic League as a Celtic nation Paul Mosson had argued for their inclusion in Carn since 1980 28 This was subsequently overturned the following year as the Celtic League reaffirmed the Celtic languages as the integral and defining factor in what is a Celtic nation 30 21st century edit See also Celtic union Following the Brexit referendum there were calls for Pan Celtic Unity In November 2016 the First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon stated the idea of a Celtic Corridor of the island of Ireland and Scotland appealed to her 31 In January 2019 the leader of the Welsh nationalist Plaid Cymru party Adam Price spoke in favour of cooperation among the Celtic nations of Britain and Ireland following Brexit Among his proposals were a Celtic Development Bank for joint infrastructure and investment projects in energy transport and communications in Ireland Wales Scotland and the Isle of Man and the foundation of a Celtic union the structure of which is already existent in the Good Friday Agreement according to Price Speaking to RTE the Irish national broadcaster he proposed Wales and Ireland working together to promote the indigenous languages of each nation 32 Blogger Owen Donavan published on his blog State of Wales his views on a Celtic confederation a voluntary union of sovereign nation states between Ireland Northern Ireland Scotland and Wales The Isle of Man would presumably be a candidate for inclusion too Cornwall and Brittany could be added as future members if they can attain a measure of self government He also considered a Celtic Council a similar co operation that was proposed by Adam Price 33 Journalist Jamie Dalgety has also proposed the concept of a Celtic Union involving Scotland and Ireland but suggests that lack of support for Welsh independence may mean that a Gaelic Celtic Union involving may be more appropriate 34 Bangor University lecturer and journalist Ifan Morgan Jones has suggested that a short term fix for Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland might be a greater degree of cooperation with each other as a union within a union he also suggested that If they could find a way of working together in their mutual interest that s a fair degree of combined influence particular if the next General Election produces a hung parliament 35 Anti Celticism editA movement among some archeologists known as Celtoscepticism emerged from the late 1980s through the 1990s 36 This school of thought initiated by John Collis sought to undermine the basis of Celticism and cast doubts on the legitimacy of the very concept or any usage of the term Celts This strain of thought was particularly hostile to all but archaeological evidence 37 Partly a reaction to the rise in Celtic devolutionist tendencies these scholars were opposed to describing the Iron Age people of Britain as Celtic Britons and even disliked the use of the phrase Celtic in describing the Celtic language family citation needed Collis an Englishman from the University of Cambridge was hostile to the methodology of German professor Gustaf Kossinna and was hostile to Celts as an ethnic identity coalescing around a concept of hereditary ancestry culture and language claiming this was racist Aside from this Collis was hostile to the use of Classical literature and Irish literature as a source for the Iron Age period as exemplified by Celtic scholars such as Barry Cunliffe Throughout the duration of the debate on the historicity of the ancient Celts John T Koch stated that it is the scientific fact of a Celtic family of languages that has weathered unscathed the Celtosceptic controversy 38 Collis was not the only figure in this field The two other figures most prominent in the field were Malcolm Chapman with his The Celts The Construction of a Myth 1992 and Simon James of the University of Leicester with his The Atlantic Celts Ancient People or Modern Invention 1999 39 In particular James engaged in a particularly heated exchange with Vincent Megaw and his wife Ruth on the pages of Antiquity 40 The Megaws along with others such as Peter Berresford Ellis 41 suspected a politically motivated agenda driven by English nationalist resentment and anxiety at British Imperial decline in the whole premise of Celtosceptic theorists such as Chapman Nick Merriman and J D Hill and that the anti Celtic position was a reaction to the formation of a Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly For his part James stepped forward to defend his fellow Celtosceptics claiming that their rejection of the Celtic idea was politically motivated but invoked multiculturalism and sought to deconstruct the past and imagine it as more diverse rather than a Celtic uniformity 40 Attempts to identify a distinct Celtic Race were made by the Harvard Archaeological Mission to Ireland in the 1930s led by Earnest Hooton which drew the conclusions needed by its sponsor government The findings were vague and did not stand up to scrutiny and were not pursued after 1945 42 43 The genetic studies by David Reich suggest that the Celtic areas had three major population changes and that the last group in the Iron Age who spoke Celtic languages had arrived in about 1000 BCE after the building of iconic supposedly Celtic monuments like Stonehenge and Newgrange 44 Reich confirmed that the Indo European root of the Celtic languages reflected a population shift and was not just a linguistic adoption Manifestations editPan Celticism can operate on one or all of the following levels listed below Linguistics edit Linguistic organisations promote linguistic ties notably the Gorsedd in Wales Cornwall and Brittany and the Irish government sponsored Columba Initiative between Ireland and Scotland Often there is a split here between the Irish Scots and Manx who use Q Celtic Goidelic languages and the Welsh Cornish and Bretons who speak P Celtic Brythonic languages Music edit Our blossom is red as the life s blood we shedFor Liberty s cause against alien lawsWhen Lochiel and O Neill and Llewellyn drew steelFor Alba and Erin and Cambria s wealThe flower of the free the heather the heatherThe Bretons and Scots and Irish togetherThe Manx and the Welsh and Cornish foreverSix nations are we all Celtic and free Alfred Perceval Graves Song of the Celts Music is a notable aspect of Celtic cultural links Inter Celtic festivals have been gaining popularity and some of the most notable include those at Lorient Killarney Kilkenny Letterkenny and Celtic Connections in Glasgow 45 46 Cuisine edit Pan Celtic Cuisine edit Pan Celtic cuisine as defined by chef Colbhin MacEochaidh on the Pan Celtic Cuisine website refers to the culinary traditions shared among the Celtic nations which include Ireland Scotland Wales Brittany Cornwall and the Isle of Man This culinary style is characterized by a rich tapestry of flavors incorporating local ingredients traditional cooking methods and cultural influences unique to each region Characteristics edit Emphasis on Local Ingredients edit Pan Celtic cuisine places a strong emphasis on locally sourced ingredients reflecting the diverse landscapes of the Celtic nations Staples such as oats seafood dairy root vegetables and game meats form the foundation of many dishes Traditional Cooking Methods edit The cuisine incorporates traditional cooking methods including Open fire baking boiling and slow cooking Many dishes showcase the simplicity and robustness of Celtic culinary heritage Common Ingredients edit Commonly used ingredients in Pan Celtic cuisine include Oats Oat based dishes such as porridge and oatcakes are prevalent in Celtic cooking Seafood Given the proximity to the sea seafood plays a prominent role with dishes featuring fish shellfish and seaweed Dairy Milk and dairy products especially cheeses are integral to Celtic recipes Root Vegetables Potatoes turnips and carrots are often but featured prominently Regional Variations edit Irish CuisineIrish cuisine is known for hearty and comforting dishes including Irish stew colcannon and soda bread Scottish CuisineScottish cuisine features dishes like haggis neeps and tatties and Scotch broth Welsh CuisineWelsh cuisine includes specialties such as Welsh rarebit cawl and bara brith Breton CuisineBreton cuisine influenced by its coastal location emphasizes seafood crepes and galettes Modern InterpretationsIn recent years chefs and culinary enthusiasts have reimagined Pan Celtic cuisine blending traditional recipes with modern techniques and global influences This has resulted in a dynamic culinary landscape that celebrates Celtic heritage while embracing innovation Promotion and Awareness edit Efforts to promote Pan Celtic cuisine include culinary events festivals and collaborations among chefs from different Celtic regions Additionally online platforms and publications contribute to the dissemination of recipes and the celebration of Celtic culinary diversity Sports edit Wrestling edit There are similarities across Celtic wrestling styles with many commentators suggesting that this indicates they stem from a common style 47 In the Middle Ages it is known that the champions from the Emerald Isle the Green Island or Ireland met the Cornish regularly to wrestle 47 The Irish style is known as Collar and elbow wrestling and uses a jacket as does Cornish wrestling This was still true in the 1800s when Irish champions regularly came to London to wrestle Cornish and Devonian champions 48 49 50 51 Cornwall and Brittany have similar wrestling styles Cornish wrestling and Gouren respectively There have been matches between wrestlers in these styles over centuries For example in 1551 between Cornish soldiers involved with Edward VI s investing Henri II with the Order of the Garter and Breton farmers 47 There is folklore that fishing disputes between Cornish and Breton fishermen were settled with wrestling matches 47 More formally Inter Celtic championships between Cornwall and Brittany started in 1928 but became less frequent since the 1980s 47 52 53 The Celtic wrestling championship started in 1985 comprising Gouren and Scottish Backhold or Cumberland and Westmorland wrestling and sometimes other styles such as Cornish wrestling 47 Teams that have competed in the Celtic wrestling championship include Brittany Canaries Cornwall England Fryslan Iceland Ireland Leon Salzburg Sardinia Scotland Sweden 47 Hurling and Shinty edit Ireland and Scotland play each other at hurling shinty internationals 54 Handball edit As with Hurling and Shinty Irish handball and Welsh handball Welsh Pel Law share an ancient Celtic origin but over the centuries they developed into two separate sports with different rules and international organisations Informal inter Celtic matches were very likely a feature of industrial southern Wales in the nineteenth century with Irish immigrant workers said to have enjoyed playing the Welsh game However attempts to play formal inter Celtic matches would only begin after the formation of The Welsh Handball Association in 1987 The association was tasked with playing international matches against nations with similar sports such as Ireland USA American Handball and England Fives To facilitate international competition a new set of rules were devised and even Wales most famous Pel Law court The Nelson Court was given new markings more in keeping with the Irish game 55 Meaningful Welsh Irish matches finally became a reality in October 1994 with The One Wall World Championships held in Dublin and an inaugural European One Wall Handball Tournament held at three courts across southern Wales the following May 56 The 1990s were the high point for these inter Celtic rivalries The success of Wales Lee Davies World Champion in 1997 saw large crowds and high public interest In recent years however the decline of handball in Wales has resulted in little interest in inter Celtic competition 57 Rugby edit A Pan Celtic rugby tournament had been the subject of intermittent discussions throughout the early years of professionalism The first material steps toward a Pan Celtic league were taken in the 1999 2000 season when the Scottish districts Edinburgh and Glasgow were invited to join the fully professional Welsh Premier Division creating the Welsh Scottish League In 2001 the four provinces of the Irish Rugby Football Union IRFU joined with the new format being named the Celtic League 58 Today the tournament is known as the United Rugby Championship and has since expanded into Italy and South Africa with no plans for expansion into the other Celtic nations However inter Celtic rivalries continue within the league under the legal name of the body running the competition Celtic Rugby DAC In Women s rugby union The IRFU WRU and SRU established the Celtic Challenge competition in 2023 While the first tournament was contested by one team from each nation Combined Provinces XV Welsh Developmment XV and the Thistles it is hoped that the tournament will expand to six competing teams two from each union in 2024 with further expansions planned over the next 3 to 5 years 59 60 Political edit Political groups such as the Celtic League along with Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party have co operated at some levels in the Parliament of the United Kingdom citation needed and Plaid Cymru has asked questions in Parliament about Cornwall and cooperates with Mebyon Kernow The Regional Council of Brittany the governing body of the Region of Brittany has developed formal cultural links with the Welsh Senedd and there are fact finding missions Political pan Celticism can be taken to include everything from a full federation of independent Celtic states to occasional political visits During the Troubles the Provisional IRA adopted a policy of not mounting attacks in Scotland and Wales as they viewed England alone as the colonial force occupying Ireland 61 This was also possibly influenced by the IRA chief of staff Sean Mac Stiofain John Stephenson a London born republican with pan Celtic views 61 In 2023 a Celtic Forum took place in Brittany Attendees included First Minister of Wales Mark Drakeford Deputy First Minister of Scotland Shona Robinson Leader of the Cornwall Council Linda Taylor Republic of Ireland Ambassador to France Niall Burgess and Loig Chesnais Girard the President of the Regional Council of Brittany Political representatives from Asturias and Galicia were also present Drakeford described the forum as an excellent opportunity to come together as Celtic nations and regions to build on our cultural and historical links and seek out areas for future collaboration such as marine energy 62 Town twinnings edit Town twinning is common between Wales Brittany and Ireland Brittany covering hundreds of communities with exchanges of local politicians choirs dancers and school groups 63 Historical connections editMain articles History of Ireland History of Scotland and History of the Isle of Man The kingdom of Dal Riata was a Gaelic overkingdom on the western seaboard of Scotland with some territory on the northern coasts of Ireland In the late sixth and early seventh century it encompassed roughly what is now Argyll and Bute and Lochaber in Scotland and also County Antrim in Northern Ireland 64 As recently as the 13th century members of the Scottish elite were still proud to proclaim their Gaelic Irish origins and identified Ireland as the homeland of the Scots 65 The 14th century Scottish King Robert the Bruce asserted a common identity for Ireland and Scotland 65 However in later medieval times Irish and Scottish interests diverged for a number of reasons and the two peoples grew estranged 66 The conversion of the Scots to Protestantism was one factor 66 The stronger political position of Scotland in relation to England was another 66 The disparate economic fortunes of the two was a third reason by the 1840s Scotland was one of the richest areas in the world and Ireland one of the poorest 66 Over the centuries there was considerable migration between Ireland and Scotland primarily as Scots Protestants took part in the plantation of Ulster in the 17th century and then later as many Irish began to be evicted from their homes some emigrating to Scottish cities in the 19th century to escape the Irish famine Recently the field of Irish Scottish studies has developed considerably with the Irish Scottish Academic Initiative ISAI founded in 1995 To date three international conferences have been held in Ireland and Scotland in 1997 2000 and 2002 67 Organisations editThe International Celtic Congress is a non political cultural organisation that promotes the Celtic language in the six nations of Ireland Scotland Brittany Wales Isle of Man and Cornwall The Celtic League is a Pan Celtic political organization Celtic regions countries edit nbsp The Celtic Kingdom of Noricum covering most of present Austria in 1 A D A number of Europeans from the central and western regions of the continent have some Celtic ancestry As such it is generally claimed that the litmus test of Celticism is a surviving Celtic language 1 and it was on this criterion that the Celtic league rejected Galicia The following regions have a surviving Celtic language and it on this criterion that they are considered by The Pan Celtic Congress in 1904 and Celtic League to be the Celtic nations 1 68 Brittany Cornwall Ireland Isle of Man Scotland Wales Other regions with Celtic heritage are Austria 2 Within the famous Hallstatt cultural region possible home of the Celts Czech Republic Home of the Boii Boiohaemum Bohemia England 69 Cumbria Faroe Islands France Known previously in classical times as Gallia Gaul Classical writings on Gaul and its native Celtic tribes are the most extensive literature we have from the time Northern Italy known as Cisalpine Gaul was inhabited by populations of Celtic lineage Portugal Home to the Lusitani Gallaecian Turdetani and other Celtic tribes Spain A large portion of the Iberian peninsula was inhabited by Celtic tribes Spain and Portugal has been hypothesized as the place of origin of the Celts by Professor John Koch of the University of Wales 70 Asturias 1 71 the principality of Asturias was named after the Astur Celtic tribe Cantabria The current autonomous community former duchy was named after the Cantabri tribe Galicia 1 with North Portugal 71 together as Gallaecia Castile and Leon Castile La Mancha Extremadura Community of Madrid Andalusia Turdetani and other tribes Slovenia Historical part of Celtic Kingdom of NoricumCelts outside Europe editAreas with a Celtic language speaking population edit There are notable Irish and Scottish Gaelic speaking enclaves in Atlantic Canada 72 The Patagonia region of Argentina has a sizeable Welsh speaking population The Welsh settlement in Argentina started in 1865 and is known as Y Wladfa The Celtic diaspora edit The Celtic diaspora in the Americas as well as New Zealand and Australia is significant and organised enough that there are numerous organisations cultural festivals and university level language classes available in major cities throughout these regions 73 In the United States Celtic Family Magazine is a nationally distributed publication providing news art and history on Celtic people and their descendants 74 The Irish Gaelic games of Gaelic football and hurling are played across the world and are organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association while the Scottish game shinty has seen recent growth in the United States 75 Timeline of Pan Celticism editJ T Koch observes that modern Pan Celticism arose in the contest of European romantic pan nationalism and like other pan nationist movements flourished mainly before the First World War 76 He sees twentieth century efforts in this regard as possibly arising out of a post modern search for identity in the face of increased industrialization urbanization and technology 1820 The Royal Celtic Society founded in Scotland 77 1838 First Celtic Congress called Pan Celtic Congress Abergavenny 78 1867 Second Celtic Congress Saint Brieuc 79 1888 Pan Celtic Society formed in Dublin 80 1891 Pan Celtic Society disbands 80 1919 1922 Irish War of Independence five sixths of Ireland becomes independent Northern Ireland gets devolved government 1939 1945 Second World War and German occupation of Brittany 1947 Celtic Union formed 81 1950 Collapse of Celtic Union 81 1950 Cornwall hosts its first Celtic congress 82 1961 Modern Celtic League founded at Rhosllanerchrugog 83 1971 Killarney Pan Celtic Festival begins 84 1997 Columba Initiative begins 85 1999 Scottish Parliament 86 and Welsh Assembly 87 open 2000 The Cornish Constitutional Convention is formed 88 2000 2001 The Cornish Constitutional Convention collect over 50 000 signatures endorsing the call for a Cornish Assembly 88 See also edit nbsp Cornwall portal nbsp Ireland portal nbsp Scotland portal nbsp Wales portal List of movements in Wales Agnes O Farrelly Alan Heusaff Armes Prydein Charles de Gaulle John Stuart Stuart Glennie Mona Douglas Richard Jenkin Ruaraidh Erskine Sophia Morrison Theodore Hersart de la VillemarqueNotes edit The current of neo Druidism deriving from the writings of the likes of William Stukeley and Iolo Morganwag had its origins more in the milieu of freemasonry than any lineal connection to the ancient Celtic Druids and their culture which survived latest in the Gaelic world with the fili and seanchai existing alongside Christianity Thus neo paganism had a very limited appeal to most people in Celtic nations instead being largely English and Welsh based English based quasi masonic groups such as the Ancient Order of Druids provided the inspiration for Iolo s Gorsedd Later masonic groups and writers such as Godfrey Higgins and then Robert Wentworth Little s Ancient and Archaeological Order of Druids were English founded or based Due to the all but extinction of the Cornish language the movement of Cornish nationalism would not be included within the Pan Celtic Congress until 1904 after Henry Jenner and L C R Duncombe Jewell of the Cornish Celtic Society made their argument to the Celtic Association Cornwall K was subsequently added to the Lia Cineil and the Cornish have been recognised as the sixth Celtic nation ever since References edit a b c d e f g h Ellis Peter Berresford 2002 Celtic dawn the dream of Celtic unity Y Lolfa ISBN 9780862436438 Retrieved 19 January 2010 a b c Carl Waldman Catherine Mason Encyclopedia of European Peoples Infobase Publishing 2006 P 42 Walter J Moore Schrodinger Life and Thought Cambridge England UK Press Syndicate of Cambridge University Press 1989 p 373 Kevin Duffy Who Were the Celts Barnes amp Noble Publishing 1996 P 20 a b Fenn 2001 p 65 a b Haywood 2014 p 190 O Donnell 2008 p 134 a b Motherway 2016 p 87 a b De Barra Caoimhin 2018 The Coming of the Celts AD 1860 Celtic Nationalism in Ireland and Wales Notre Dame University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 9780268103378 Platt 2011 p 61 a b c d Stover Justin Dolan 2012 Modern Celtic Nationalism in the Period of the Great War Establishing Transnational Connections Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium 32 286 301 JSTOR 23630944 a b c d e Platt 2011 p 62 a b Platt 2011 p 64 a b Platt 2011 p 63 De Barra Caoimhin 30 March 2018 The Coming of the Celts AD 1862 Celtic Nationalism in Ireland and Wales University of Notre Dame Press p 198 ISBN 9780268103408 Connections across the North Channel Ruaraidh Erskine and Irish Influence in Scottish Discontent 1906 1920 17 April 2013 Celts divided by more than the Irish Sea The Irish Times Meriden Morning Record Google News Archive Search De Barra 2018 p 295 a b O Leary Philip 1986 Children of the Same Mother Gaelic Relations with the Other Celtic Revival Movements 1882 1916 Proceedings of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium 6 106 ISSN 1545 0155 JSTOR 20557176 Union Celtique PDF The Pan Celtic Quarterly 1 Brussels Union Celtique 7 8 1911 Retrieved 4 February 2024 Chronique XIII Congres pan celtique a Gand Revue Celtique in French 34 Paris Honore Champion 353 1913 Smith Raymond 1966 Decades of Glory A Comprehensive History of the National Game Little amp McClean p 78 Architects of Resurrection Ailtiri na hAiserighe and the fascist new order in Ireland by R M Douglas pg 271 a b Pittock Murray 1999 Celtic Identity and the British Image Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719058264 Resurgence 1966 Williams Derek R 1 July 2014 Following An Gof Leonard Truran Cornish Activist and Publisher The Cornovia Press ISBN 9781908878113 o Luain Cathal 13 October 2008 Celtic League General Secretary in Udb Interview Agence Bretagne Presse Robert William White 2006 Ruairi o Bradaigh The Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253347084 a b c Berresford Ellis 2002 p 27 Berresford Ellis 2002 p 26 Berresford Ellis 2002 p 28 Scottish first minister backs calls for Celtic corridor independent ie 29 November 2016 Nuallain Irene Ni 10 January 2019 Welsh party leader calls for Celtic political union RTE ie Could a Celtic Union work State of Wales 11 March 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2022 says Austen Lynch 25 September 2021 Thought Experiment A Celtic Union The Glasgow Guardian Retrieved 12 June 2022 Might a Celtic union be one route to shifting the balance of power within the UK Nation Cymru 12 June 2022 Retrieved 12 June 2022 Hood Laura 13 July 2015 How being Celtic got a bad name and why you should care The Conversation Retrieved 24 November 2017 Celtoscepticism a convenient excuse for ignoring non archaeological evidence Raimund Karl Retrieved 24 November 2017 Williams Daniel G 2009 Another lost cause Pan Celticism race and language Irish Studies Review 17 89 101 doi 10 1080 09670880802658174 S2CID 143640161 The Rise and Fall of the C word Celts Heritage Daily Retrieved 24 November 2017 a b The academic debate on the meaning of Celticness University of Leicester Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 24 November 2017 Historical notes Did the ancient Celts really exist The Independent 5 January 1999 Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 November 2017 Carew M The Quest for the Irish Celt The Harvard Archaeological Mission to Ireland 1932 1936 Irish Academic Press 2018 Skulls a Nazi director and the quest for the true Celt independent 29 April 2018 Reich D Who we are and how we got here Oxford UP 2018 pp 114 121 ALTERNATIVE MUSIC PRESS Celtic music for a New World Paradigm Retrieved 2 January 2010 Scottish Music Festivals Great Gatherings of Artists Archived from the original on 25 February 2010 Retrieved 2 January 2010 a b c d e f g Guy Jaouen and Matthew Bennett Nicols Celtic Wrestling The Jacket Styles Federation Internationale des Luttes Associees Switzerland 2007 p1 183 Wrestling Globe 25 September 1826 p3 Wrestling Weekly Dispatch London 23 November 1828 p5 Egan Pierce Book of Sport No XXI The Wrestlers T T amp J Tegg 1832 p321 336 Wrestling Morning Advertiser 30 May 1849 p3 Historic Event Bretons hosted at Cornish Gorsedd Western Mail 27 August 1929 p6 Wrestling in Brittany How the Cornishmen Fared Cornish Guardian 30 August 1928 p14 BBC A Sporting Nation The first combined shinty hurling match 1897 www bbc co uk Moore Joe December 1996 The Handball Court at Nelson The Green Dragon 1 1 Hughes Tony The 1995 European One Wall Handball Championships fivesonline net Jenkins James O Pel law A Fine Beginning Y Gynghrair Geltaidd BBC Chwaraeon in Welsh British Broadcasting Corporation 28 September 2005 Retrieved 8 August 2011 Scottish Rugby IRFU amp WRU have created a pilot Celtic Challenge competition supported by World Rugby to provide a high performance tournament window ahead of the 2023 TikTok Six Nations Championship Scottish Rugby 21 December 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2023 Combined Provinces XV to Compete in Women s Celtic Challenge Tournament Ulster Rugby Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b Pittock Murray Celtic Identity and the British Image Manchester University Press 1999 p 111 Evans Tomos What is the Celtic Forum and why are leaders meeting in Brittany Sky News Home page of Cardiff Council Cardiff s twin cities Cardiff Council 15 June 2010 Archived from the original on 9 June 2011 Retrieved 10 August 2010 Oxford Companion to Scottish History p 161 162 edited by Michael Lynch Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 923482 0 a b Making the Caledonian Connection The Development of Irish and Scottish Studies by T M Devine Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies University of Aberdeen in Radharc A Journal of Irish Studies Vol 3 2002 pg 4 The article in turn cites Myth and Identity in Early Medieval Scotland by E J Cowan Scottish Historical Review xxii 1984 pgs 111 135 a b c d Making the Caledonian Connection The Development of Irish and Scottish Studies by T M Devine Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies University of Aberdeen in Radharc A Journal of Irish Studies Vol 3 2002 pgs 4 8 Devine T M Making the Caledonian Connection The Development of Irish and Scottish Studies Radharc Journal of Irish Studies New York Vol 3 2002 The Celtic League www celticleague net We re nearly all Celts under the skin The Scotsman 21 September 2006 Koch John 5 March 2013 Tartessian Europe s newest and oldest Celtic language History Ireland Retrieved 20 August 2020 a b National Geographic map of celtic regions Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 20 January 2010 o Broin Brian 2011 An Analysis of the Irish Speaking Communities of North America Who are they what are their opinions and what are their needs academia edu Retrieved 31 March 2012 Modern Irish Linguistics University of Sydney Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 19 May 2012 The Welsh in America Wales Arts Review Retrieved 28 April 2014 Thursday s Scottish gossip BBC News 20 August 2009 Retrieved 20 January 2010 Celtic Culture A Celti ABC CLIO 20 August 2006 ISBN 9781851094400 via Google Books The Royal Celtic Society Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 5 February 2010 Celtic Congresses in other countries Retrieved 5 February 2010 The International Celtic Congress Resolutions and Themes Retrieved 5 February 2010 a b Hughes J B 1953 The Pan Celtic Society The Irish Monthly 81 953 15 38 JSTOR 20516479 a b The Capital Scot Archived from the original on 8 January 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2010 A short history of the Celtic Congress Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2010 Rhosllanerchrugog Archived from the original on 1 January 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2010 Welcome to the 2010 Pan Celtic Festival Retrieved 5 February 2010 Columba Initiative 16 December 1997 Archived from the original on 25 January 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2010 Scottish Parliament Retrieved 5 February 2010 Queen and Welsh Assembly Retrieved 5 February 2010 a b Campaign for a Cornish assembly Retrieved 5 February 2010 Bibliography edit Bailyn Bernard 2012 Strangers Within the Realm Cultural Margins of the First British Empire UNC Press Books ISBN 978 0807839416 Berresford Ellis Peter 1985 The Celtic Revolution Study in Anti Imperialism Y Lolfa Cyf ISBN 978 0862430962 Berresford Ellis Peter 2002 Celtic Dawn The Dream of Celtic Unity Y Lolfa Cyf ISBN 978 0862436438 Carruthers Gerard 2003 English Romanticism and the Celtic World Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139435949 Collins Kevin 2008 Catholic Churchmen and the Celtic Revival in Ireland 1848 1916 Four Courts Press ISBN 978 1851826582 Fenn Richard K 2001 Beyond Idols The Shape of a Secular Society Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198032854 Hechter Michael 1975 Internal Colonialism The Celtic Fringe in British National Development 1536 1966 Routledge ISBN 978 0710079886 Dudley Edwards Owen 1968 Celtic Nationalism Routledge ISBN 978 0710062536 Gaskill Howard 2008 The Reception of Ossian in Europe A amp C Black ISBN 978 1847146007 Haywood John 2014 The Celts Bronze Age to New Age Routledge ISBN 978 1317870166 Jensen Lotte 2016 The Roots of Nationalism National Identity Formation in Early Modern Europe 1600 1815 Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 9048530649 Motherway Susan 2016 The Globalization of Irish Traditional Song Performance Routledge ISBN 978 1317030041 O Donnell Ruan 2008 The Impact of the 1916 Rising Among the Nations Irish Academic Press ISBN 978 0716529651 O Driscoll Robert 1985 The Celtic Consciousness George Braziller ISBN 978 0807611364 O Rahilly Cecile 1924 Ireland and Wales Their Historical and Literary Relations Longman s Ortenberg Veronica 2006 In Search of the Holy Grail The Quest for the Middle Ages A amp B Black ISBN 978 1852853839 Pittock Murray G H 1999 Celtic Identity and the British Image Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0719058264 Pittock Murray G H 2001 Scottish Nationality Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1137257246 Platt Len 2011 Modernism and Race Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139500258 Tanner Marcus 2006 The Last of the Celts Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300115352 Loffler Marion 2000 A Book of Mad Celts John Wickens and the Celtic Congress of Caernaroon 1904 Gomer Press ISBN 978 1859028964 External links editThe Celtic League Celtic Congress Columba Initiative The Celtic Realm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pan Celticism amp oldid 1219541849, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.