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David MacRitchie

David MacRitchie (16 April 1851 – 14 January 1925) was a Scottish folklorist and antiquarian. He proposed that stories of fairies originated with an aboriginal race that occupied the British Isles before Celts and other groups arrived.

Early life Edit

David MacRitchie was the younger son of William Dawson MacRitchie and Elizabeth Elder MacRitchie. He was born in Edinburgh and attended the Edinburgh Southern Academy, the Edinburgh Institute and the University of Edinburgh. He did not gain a degree but qualified as a Chartered Accountant. His father had been a surgeon in the East India Company.[1][2]

Career as folklorist Edit

In 1888 MacRitchie founded the Gypsy Lore Society to study the history and lore of Gypsies.[3] He was also a member of several folklore societies. In 1914 he joined the Council of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, serving as vice-president from 1917 – 1920. He was noted for his interest in archaeology, being appointed as a trustee for Lord Abercromby's endowment for an Archaeology department at the University of Edinburgh. He was also a member of the Scottish Arts Club and Vice-president of the Philosophical Institution.

In 1922 until his death he served as the treasurer of the Scottish Anthropological and Folklore Society.[4]

Fairy euhemerism Edit

David MacRitchie was a prominent proponent of the euhemeristic origin of fairies, a theory traceable to the early 19th century that considers fairies in British folklore to have been rooted in a historical pygmy, dwarf or short-sized aboriginal race, that lived during Neolithic Britain or even earlier.[5]

Origins Edit

MacRitchie is often credited as being the founder of the euhemerist school regarding British fairies.[6] However, historian Edward J. Cowan has noted that the folklorist John Francis Campbell first founded this school of thought about 30 years before MacRitchie.[7][8][9] Carole G. Silver, Professor of English at Yeshiva University has also traced the euhemerist theory of fairies further back to Walter Scott in his Letters on Demonology (1830).[10] With the emergence of anthropological schools in the late 19th century, various renowned anthropologists such as Edward Burnett Tylor (1871) became proponents of the euhemeristic origin of fairies, in direct conflict with the religious or psychological theories of their origin.[11]

The theory Edit

 
Illustration of a short-statured Ainu from David MacRitchie's The Testimony of Tradition (1890). MacRitchie believed the native inhabitants of Britain looked similar.

Fairy Euhemerism, as developed by MacRitchie attempts to rationally explain the origin of fairies in British folklore and regards fairies as being a folk-memory of a "small-statured pre-Celtic race" or what Tylor theorised as possible folk memories of the aborigines of Britain.[12][13] MacRitchie's theory subsequently became known in the late 19th century by folklorists as the "Ethnological or Pygmy Theory".[14] The euhemeristic theory of fairies became considerably popular through MacRitchie's key works The Testimony of Tradition (1890) and Fians, Fairies and Picts (1893).[15][16] Different theories, however, in the late 19th century and early 20th century surfaced concerning the racial origin of the proposed dwarf aborigines of Britain and these theories ranged from proposing that they were real African Pygmies, Eskimos or a short statured Mediterranean race.[17][18][19] MacRitchie himself argued in his Testimony of Tradition, under a chapter subheading entitled "A Hairy Race" (p. 167), that they were somewhat connected to the Lapps or Eskimos, but were a distinct race because of their very long beards, concluding: "one seems to see the type of a race that was even more like the Ainu than the Lapp, or the Eskimo, although closely connected in various ways with all of these" (p. 173). In MacRitchie's view the indigenous population of Britain were thus a "quasi-European" Ainu race, with minor Mongoloid traits whom he considered ancestral to the Picts, a view earlier proposed by Walter Scott.[20][21][22] The identification of fairies with Picts MacRitichie based primarily on the earlier accounts by Adam of Bremen and the Historia Norwegiæ which describe the Picts of Orkney as "only a little exceeding pygmies in stature".[23] MacRitchie also discovered through The Orcadian Sketch-Book by Walter Traill Dennison (1880) that legends across Scotland describe the homes (usually underground dwellings) of the fairies as "Pict's Houses" and so he believed the Picts were literally the basis of fairies in British folklore.[24][25] In Fians, Fairies and Picts (1893), The Northern Trolls (1898) and The Aborigines of Shetland and Orkney (1924) MacRitchie attempted to further identify the fairies of British folklore with the Finfolk of Orkney mythology, the Trows of Shetland myth, the Fianna of Old Irish Literature and the Trolls as well as the Svartálfar and Svartálfaheimr (elves or dwarfs) of Norse mythology. A 12th-century Irish manuscript is found referenced in Fians, Fairies and Picts which equates the Fianna to fairies, but this is one of the few literary sources MacRitchie used as evidence; instead he turned to philology and comparative mythology.[26]

Support Edit

MacRitchie's rationalisation of fairies, as having their basis as a historical population of diminutive size, won over much support from anthropologists from the late 19th century who questioned the religious or psychological origin of fairies.[27][28] A notable proponent of the theory who had read MacRitchie's earlier works published in the Celtic Review was Grant Allen, who became convinced that fairies were modelled on an indigenous population of Britain, specifically the Neolithic long barrow makers.[29][30] The archaeologist William Boyd Dawkins found MacRitchie's views also appealing, since in his Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period (1880) he considered Upper Paleolithic culture across Europe (including Britain) to have been founded by a proto-Eskimo or Lapp race, a view at the time which was popularised after the discovery of "Chancelade Man", in southwestern France by Leo Testut in 1889.[31][32] Scientific consensus after the 1930s, however, agreed that the remains of "Chancelade Man" were Cro-Magnon. Within folklore, MacRitchie's euhemeristic view of fairies developed a racialist school which considered that the fairies and other beings such as elves and goblins of British myth represented primitive pre-Aryans, a view proposed most notably by John S. Stuart Glennie, Laurence Waddell and Alfred Cort Haddon.[33][34][35] According to Haddon: "fairy tales were stories told by men of the Iron Age of events which happened to men of the Bronze Age in their conflicts with men of the Neolithic Age".[36] In both Haddon's and Waddell's view, the fairies or other beings of British folklore were based on the Neolithic inhabitants of Britain.

Among folklorists who considered, supported or praised MacRitchie's views were Laurence Gomme, who in 1892 published Ethnology in Folklore, which argued folklore preserved a strong racial history of conquered or replaced indigenous peoples. The folklorist Charles G. Leland, who positively reviewed MacRitchie's book The Testimony of Tradition (1890), wrote "The book should be of exceptional interest to every folk-lorist, both on account of its subject-matter and also on account of the manner in which it is treated".[37]

Criticism Edit

MacRitchie's theories of fairies sparked criticism from proponents of the religious or psychological origin of fairies.[38] Walter Evans-Wentz strongly criticised MacRitchie's theory in his The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries (1911).[39] This prompted MacRitchie to respond to such criticisms in several articles published in the Celtic Review (October 1909, January 1910).[40] It was mostly however MacRitchie's theory that the Picts were a dwarf or short statured race which was strongly rejected.[41] Most historians of the day rejected Mackenzie's "Pygmy-Pict" theory. T. Rice Holmes, for example, mocked MacRitchie's claims, considering them eccentric and baseless since no archaeological evidence had ever proven of a "race of pre-neolithic or even prehistoric pygmies existed in this country".[42] Critics attempted to pick holes in MacRitchie's claims on mythology; for example, Evans-Wentz noted that the Fianna of Irish myth are sometimes described as "giants". MacRitchie acknowledged these criticisms in his own writings but attempted to work around them and provide solutions:

"In regarding the Fians as a race of dwarfs, I do not overlook the fact that they are also spoken of as "giants." But to assume them to have been of gigantic stature is both totally at variance with the bulk of the evidence regarding them, and at variance with the fact that the word "giant" has very frequently been used to denote a savage, or a cave−dweller."[43]

Therefore in MacRitchie's view the Irish myths and folkloric accounts which describe the Fianna as "giants" only did so in a non-literal figurative sense to describe their savage type nature, not size. This idea was later expanded upon in his The Savages of Gaelic Tradition (1920) yet was not well received by contemporary folklorists.[44] However, ancient authors such as Macrobius shared MacRitchie's beliefs that the "giants" of mythology were not giants in size, but huge in impiety (or their primitiveness).[45] According to MacRitchie there were also "two" Pictish races, the former were the aboriginal dark Lappish or Ainu race, while a later white-skinned, red-headed group invaded them, who he considered the Caledonians.[46]

British origin of Gypsies Edit

In his Ancient and Modern Britons, MacRitchie claimed that the Gypsies were not of foreign origin, but were in fact the more conservative element of the native British population who had retained their nomadic way of life while the majority adopted a settled lifestyle.

References Edit

  1. ^ Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society, 1925, p. 49.
  2. ^ "Review of Scottish culture", Issue 10, National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, 1997, p. 131.
  3. ^ "The English Gypsy Lore Society", The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 34, No. 134, Oct. – Dec. 1921, p. 399.
  4. ^ Records of The Scottish Anthropological and Folklore Society
  5. ^ Bihet, Francesca (2019) Late-Victorian Folklore Studies and Fairy-Lore. In: Betwixt and Between, 18-19 May 2019, Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Boscastle. http://eprints.chi.ac.uk/4685/
  6. ^ Scottish fairy belief: a history Edward J. Cowan, Dundurn Press Ltd., 2001, p. 21.
  7. ^ Cowan, 2001, pp. 21–22.
  8. ^ MacRitchie himself acknowledged the earlier work of Campbell in his Fians, Fairies and Picts (1893).
  9. ^ The idea is also found in Sven Nilsson's The primitive inhabitants of Scandinavia (1868).
  10. ^ "On the Origin of Fairies: Victorians, Romantics, and Folk Belief", Carole Silver, Browning Institute Studies, Vol. 14, The Victorian Threshold, 1986, p. 143.
  11. ^ Silver, 1986, p. 149.
  12. ^ The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries, by W.Y. Evans-Wentz, 1911, p. 234 [1]
  13. ^ Tylor, "Primitive Culture", 1871, pp. 385–386.
  14. ^ Wentz, 1911, pp. 234–235.
  15. ^ "Were Fairies an Earlier Race of Men?", Canon J. A. Macculloch, Folklore, Vol. 43, No. 4, 31 December 1932, p. 366.
  16. ^ "Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics", Part 9, James Hastings, Kessinger Publishing (reprint), 2003. p. 126.
  17. ^ "Folklore and the fantastic in nineteenth-century British fiction", Jason Marc Harris, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2008, pp.64–66.
  18. ^ The fairy tales of Oscar Wilde, Jarlath Killeen, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007, p. 137.
  19. ^ The different racial theories are found discussed at length by T. Rice Holmes in his Ancient Britain and the invasions of Julius Caesar (1907).
  20. ^ Scott pioneered the "Lapp−Dwarf parallel", writing "there seems reason to conclude that these duergar [dwarfs] were originally nothing else than the diminutive natives of the Lappish, Lettish and Finnish nations."
  21. ^ Science, Vol. 21, No. 523, 10 February 1893, pp. 82–83.
  22. ^ Cowan, 2001, p. 21.
  23. ^ Fians, Fairies and Picts (1893), footnote 51
  24. ^ The testimony of tradition, David MacRitchie, Paul. Trench, Trübner, 1890, pp.60–67.
  25. ^ Cowan, 2001, p. 21.
  26. ^ Fians, Fairies and Picts (1893), footnote 21
  27. ^ Silver, 1986, pp. 47–52.
  28. ^ Professor J. Kollmann, of Basel, in his Pygmden in Europa (1894), argues for the existence of a European pygmy race in Neolithic times
  29. ^ Macculloch, 1932, p. 362.
  30. ^ "Who were the Fairies", Cornhill Magazine, 1881, xliii. 338f.
  31. ^ "The Arrival of Man in Britain in the Pleistocene Age", W. Boyd Dawkins, The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 40, Jul. – Dec. 1910, pp. 233–263.
  32. ^ Recherches anthropologiques sur le Squelette quaternaire de Chancelade, Bull. Soc. d'Anthrop. de Lyon, 1889.
  33. ^ Phoenician Origin of the Britons, Scots, and Anglo-Saxons (1924, 2nd ed. 1925), in this work Waddell cites MacRitchie.
  34. ^ Silver, 1986, p. 150.
  35. ^ Folk Memory Or the Continuity of British Archaeology by Walter Johnson (1908) is another work in this vein.
  36. ^ Quoted in "Fairies in nineteenth-century art and literature", Nicola Bown, Cambridge University Press, 2001, p. 166.
  37. ^ The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 3, No. 11, Oct. – Dec. 1890, pp. 319–320.
  38. ^ Macculloch; 1932, p. 366 ff; Silver, 1986, pp. 143–152.
  39. ^ The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries
  40. ^ "A New Solution of the Fairy Problem", David MacRitchie, The Celtic Review, Vol. 6, No. 22, Oct. 1909, pp. 160–176.
  41. ^ Cowan, 2001, pp. 21–35.
  42. ^ Ancient Britain and the invasions of Julius Caesar, Clarendon Press, 1907, p. 393.
  43. ^ Fians, Fairies and Picts
  44. ^ Celtic Review, "The Pygmy-Fairy theory examined" (June 1921).
  45. ^ Macrobius well explains the meaning of " giants" as distinguished for their enormous impiety : "Gigantes autem, quid aliud fuisse credendum est, quam Hominum quandam impiam gentem, Deos negantem ?" Saturnal. I. 20.
  46. ^ Ancient and modern Britons, a retrospect, Vol. I, 1884; see also "Memories of the Picts", David MacRitchie, The Scottish Antiquary, or, Northern Notes and Queries, Vol. 14, No. 55 (Jan. 1900), pp. 121–139.

Works Edit

 
Accounts of the Gypsies of India (1886)

Publications by MacRitchie include:

  • Ancient and Modern Britons, a Retrospect, 1884
  • Accounts of the Gypsies of India, 1886
  • The Testimony of Tradition, 1890
  • The Ainos, 1892
  • The Underground Life, 1892
  • Fians, Fairies and Picts, 1893
  • Scottish Gypsies under the Stewarts 1894
  • Pygmies in Northern Scotland, 1892
  • Some Hebridean Antiquities, 1895
  • Diary of a Tour through Great Britain, (editor) 1897
  • The Northern Trolls, 1898
  • Memories of the Picts, 1900
  • Underground Dwellings, 1900
  • Fairy Mounds, 1900
  • Shelta, the Caird's Language, 1901
  • Hints of Evolution in Tradition, 1902
  • The Arctic Voyage of 1653, 1909
  • Celtic Civilisation, No date
  • Druids and Mound Dwellers, 1910
  • Les Pygmies chez les Anciens Egyptiens et les Hebreux (with S.T.H. Hurwitz), pp 418-422, 1912
  • Les kayaks dans le nord de l'Europe, 1912
  • Great and Little Britain, 1915
  • The Celtic Numerals of Strathclyde, 1915
  • The Duns of the North, 1917
  • The Savages of Gaelic Tradition, 1920
  • The Aborigines of Shetland and Orkney, 1924

External links Edit

david, macritchie, april, 1851, january, 1925, scottish, folklorist, antiquarian, proposed, that, stories, fairies, originated, with, aboriginal, race, that, occupied, british, isles, before, celts, other, groups, arrived, contents, early, life, career, folklo. David MacRitchie 16 April 1851 14 January 1925 was a Scottish folklorist and antiquarian He proposed that stories of fairies originated with an aboriginal race that occupied the British Isles before Celts and other groups arrived Contents 1 Early life 2 Career as folklorist 3 Fairy euhemerism 3 1 Origins 3 2 The theory 3 2 1 Support 3 2 2 Criticism 4 British origin of Gypsies 5 References 6 Works 7 External linksEarly life EditDavid MacRitchie was the younger son of William Dawson MacRitchie and Elizabeth Elder MacRitchie He was born in Edinburgh and attended the Edinburgh Southern Academy the Edinburgh Institute and the University of Edinburgh He did not gain a degree but qualified as a Chartered Accountant His father had been a surgeon in the East India Company 1 2 Career as folklorist EditIn 1888 MacRitchie founded the Gypsy Lore Society to study the history and lore of Gypsies 3 He was also a member of several folklore societies In 1914 he joined the Council of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland serving as vice president from 1917 1920 He was noted for his interest in archaeology being appointed as a trustee for Lord Abercromby s endowment for an Archaeology department at the University of Edinburgh He was also a member of the Scottish Arts Club and Vice president of the Philosophical Institution In 1922 until his death he served as the treasurer of the Scottish Anthropological and Folklore Society 4 Fairy euhemerism EditDavid MacRitchie was a prominent proponent of the euhemeristic origin of fairies a theory traceable to the early 19th century that considers fairies in British folklore to have been rooted in a historical pygmy dwarf or short sized aboriginal race that lived during Neolithic Britain or even earlier 5 Origins Edit MacRitchie is often credited as being the founder of the euhemerist school regarding British fairies 6 However historian Edward J Cowan has noted that the folklorist John Francis Campbell first founded this school of thought about 30 years before MacRitchie 7 8 9 Carole G Silver Professor of English at Yeshiva University has also traced the euhemerist theory of fairies further back to Walter Scott in his Letters on Demonology 1830 10 With the emergence of anthropological schools in the late 19th century various renowned anthropologists such as Edward Burnett Tylor 1871 became proponents of the euhemeristic origin of fairies in direct conflict with the religious or psychological theories of their origin 11 The theory Edit nbsp Illustration of a short statured Ainu from David MacRitchie s The Testimony of Tradition 1890 MacRitchie believed the native inhabitants of Britain looked similar Fairy Euhemerism as developed by MacRitchie attempts to rationally explain the origin of fairies in British folklore and regards fairies as being a folk memory of a small statured pre Celtic race or what Tylor theorised as possible folk memories of the aborigines of Britain 12 13 MacRitchie s theory subsequently became known in the late 19th century by folklorists as the Ethnological or Pygmy Theory 14 The euhemeristic theory of fairies became considerably popular through MacRitchie s key works The Testimony of Tradition 1890 and Fians Fairies and Picts 1893 15 16 Different theories however in the late 19th century and early 20th century surfaced concerning the racial origin of the proposed dwarf aborigines of Britain and these theories ranged from proposing that they were real African Pygmies Eskimos or a short statured Mediterranean race 17 18 19 MacRitchie himself argued in his Testimony of Tradition under a chapter subheading entitled A Hairy Race p 167 that they were somewhat connected to the Lapps or Eskimos but were a distinct race because of their very long beards concluding one seems to see the type of a race that was even more like the Ainu than the Lapp or the Eskimo although closely connected in various ways with all of these p 173 In MacRitchie s view the indigenous population of Britain were thus a quasi European Ainu race with minor Mongoloid traits whom he considered ancestral to the Picts a view earlier proposed by Walter Scott 20 21 22 The identification of fairies with Picts MacRitichie based primarily on the earlier accounts by Adam of Bremen and the Historia Norwegiae which describe the Picts of Orkney as only a little exceeding pygmies in stature 23 MacRitchie also discovered through The Orcadian Sketch Book by Walter Traill Dennison 1880 that legends across Scotland describe the homes usually underground dwellings of the fairies as Pict s Houses and so he believed the Picts were literally the basis of fairies in British folklore 24 25 In Fians Fairies and Picts 1893 The Northern Trolls 1898 and The Aborigines of Shetland and Orkney 1924 MacRitchie attempted to further identify the fairies of British folklore with the Finfolk of Orkney mythology the Trows of Shetland myth the Fianna of Old Irish Literature and the Trolls as well as the Svartalfar and Svartalfaheimr elves or dwarfs of Norse mythology A 12th century Irish manuscript is found referenced in Fians Fairies and Picts which equates the Fianna to fairies but this is one of the few literary sources MacRitchie used as evidence instead he turned to philology and comparative mythology 26 Support Edit MacRitchie s rationalisation of fairies as having their basis as a historical population of diminutive size won over much support from anthropologists from the late 19th century who questioned the religious or psychological origin of fairies 27 28 A notable proponent of the theory who had read MacRitchie s earlier works published in the Celtic Review was Grant Allen who became convinced that fairies were modelled on an indigenous population of Britain specifically the Neolithic long barrow makers 29 30 The archaeologist William Boyd Dawkins found MacRitchie s views also appealing since in his Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period 1880 he considered Upper Paleolithic culture across Europe including Britain to have been founded by a proto Eskimo or Lapp race a view at the time which was popularised after the discovery of Chancelade Man in southwestern France by Leo Testut in 1889 31 32 Scientific consensus after the 1930s however agreed that the remains of Chancelade Man were Cro Magnon Within folklore MacRitchie s euhemeristic view of fairies developed a racialist school which considered that the fairies and other beings such as elves and goblins of British myth represented primitive pre Aryans a view proposed most notably by John S Stuart Glennie Laurence Waddell and Alfred Cort Haddon 33 34 35 According to Haddon fairy tales were stories told by men of the Iron Age of events which happened to men of the Bronze Age in their conflicts with men of the Neolithic Age 36 In both Haddon s and Waddell s view the fairies or other beings of British folklore were based on the Neolithic inhabitants of Britain Among folklorists who considered supported or praised MacRitchie s views were Laurence Gomme who in 1892 published Ethnology in Folklore which argued folklore preserved a strong racial history of conquered or replaced indigenous peoples The folklorist Charles G Leland who positively reviewed MacRitchie s book The Testimony of Tradition 1890 wrote The book should be of exceptional interest to every folk lorist both on account of its subject matter and also on account of the manner in which it is treated 37 Criticism Edit MacRitchie s theories of fairies sparked criticism from proponents of the religious or psychological origin of fairies 38 Walter Evans Wentz strongly criticised MacRitchie s theory in his The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries 1911 39 This prompted MacRitchie to respond to such criticisms in several articles published in the Celtic Review October 1909 January 1910 40 It was mostly however MacRitchie s theory that the Picts were a dwarf or short statured race which was strongly rejected 41 Most historians of the day rejected Mackenzie s Pygmy Pict theory T Rice Holmes for example mocked MacRitchie s claims considering them eccentric and baseless since no archaeological evidence had ever proven of a race of pre neolithic or even prehistoric pygmies existed in this country 42 Critics attempted to pick holes in MacRitchie s claims on mythology for example Evans Wentz noted that the Fianna of Irish myth are sometimes described as giants MacRitchie acknowledged these criticisms in his own writings but attempted to work around them and provide solutions In regarding the Fians as a race of dwarfs I do not overlook the fact that they are also spoken of as giants But to assume them to have been of gigantic stature is both totally at variance with the bulk of the evidence regarding them and at variance with the fact that the word giant has very frequently been used to denote a savage or a cave dweller 43 Therefore in MacRitchie s view the Irish myths and folkloric accounts which describe the Fianna as giants only did so in a non literal figurative sense to describe their savage type nature not size This idea was later expanded upon in his The Savages of Gaelic Tradition 1920 yet was not well received by contemporary folklorists 44 However ancient authors such as Macrobius shared MacRitchie s beliefs that the giants of mythology were not giants in size but huge in impiety or their primitiveness 45 According to MacRitchie there were also two Pictish races the former were the aboriginal dark Lappish or Ainu race while a later white skinned red headed group invaded them who he considered the Caledonians 46 British origin of Gypsies EditIn his Ancient and Modern Britons MacRitchie claimed that the Gypsies were not of foreign origin but were in fact the more conservative element of the native British population who had retained their nomadic way of life while the majority adopted a settled lifestyle References Edit Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 1925 p 49 Review of Scottish culture Issue 10 National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland 1997 p 131 The English Gypsy Lore Society The Journal of American Folklore Vol 34 No 134 Oct Dec 1921 p 399 Records of The Scottish Anthropological and Folklore Society Bihet Francesca 2019 Late Victorian Folklore Studies and Fairy Lore In Betwixt and Between 18 19 May 2019 Museum of Witchcraft and Magic Boscastle http eprints chi ac uk 4685 Scottish fairy belief a history Edward J Cowan Dundurn Press Ltd 2001 p 21 Cowan 2001 pp 21 22 MacRitchie himself acknowledged the earlier work of Campbell in his Fians Fairies and Picts 1893 The idea is also found in Sven Nilsson s The primitive inhabitants of Scandinavia 1868 On the Origin of Fairies Victorians Romantics and Folk Belief Carole Silver Browning Institute Studies Vol 14 The Victorian Threshold 1986 p 143 Silver 1986 p 149 The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries by W Y Evans Wentz 1911 p 234 1 Tylor Primitive Culture 1871 pp 385 386 Wentz 1911 pp 234 235 Were Fairies an Earlier Race of Men Canon J A Macculloch Folklore Vol 43 No 4 31 December 1932 p 366 Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Part 9 James Hastings Kessinger Publishing reprint 2003 p 126 Folklore and the fantastic in nineteenth century British fiction Jason Marc Harris Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2008 pp 64 66 The fairy tales of Oscar Wilde Jarlath Killeen Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2007 p 137 The different racial theories are found discussed at length by T Rice Holmes in his Ancient Britain and the invasions of Julius Caesar 1907 Scott pioneered the Lapp Dwarf parallel writing there seems reason to conclude that these duergar dwarfs were originally nothing else than the diminutive natives of the Lappish Lettish and Finnish nations Science Vol 21 No 523 10 February 1893 pp 82 83 Cowan 2001 p 21 Fians Fairies and Picts 1893 footnote 51 The testimony of tradition David MacRitchie Paul Trench Trubner 1890 pp 60 67 Cowan 2001 p 21 Fians Fairies and Picts 1893 footnote 21 Silver 1986 pp 47 52 Professor J Kollmann of Basel in his Pygmden in Europa 1894 argues for the existence of a European pygmy race in Neolithic times Macculloch 1932 p 362 Who were the Fairies Cornhill Magazine 1881 xliii 338f The Arrival of Man in Britain in the Pleistocene Age W Boyd Dawkins The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland Vol 40 Jul Dec 1910 pp 233 263 Recherches anthropologiques sur le Squelette quaternaire de Chancelade Bull Soc d Anthrop de Lyon 1889 Phoenician Origin of the Britons Scots and Anglo Saxons 1924 2nd ed 1925 in this work Waddell cites MacRitchie Silver 1986 p 150 Folk Memory Or the Continuity of British Archaeology by Walter Johnson 1908 is another work in this vein Quoted in Fairies in nineteenth century art and literature Nicola Bown Cambridge University Press 2001 p 166 The Journal of American Folklore Vol 3 No 11 Oct Dec 1890 pp 319 320 Macculloch 1932 p 366 ff Silver 1986 pp 143 152 The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries A New Solution of the Fairy Problem David MacRitchie The Celtic Review Vol 6 No 22 Oct 1909 pp 160 176 Cowan 2001 pp 21 35 Ancient Britain and the invasions of Julius Caesar Clarendon Press 1907 p 393 Fians Fairies and Picts Celtic Review The Pygmy Fairy theory examined June 1921 Macrobius well explains the meaning of giants as distinguished for their enormous impiety Gigantes autem quid aliud fuisse credendum est quam Hominum quandam impiam gentem Deos negantem Saturnal I 20 Ancient and modern Britons a retrospect Vol I 1884 see also Memories of the Picts David MacRitchie The Scottish Antiquary or Northern Notes and Queries Vol 14 No 55 Jan 1900 pp 121 139 Works Edit nbsp Accounts of the Gypsies of India 1886 Publications by MacRitchie include Ancient and Modern Britons a Retrospect 1884 Accounts of the Gypsies of India 1886 The Testimony of Tradition 1890 The Ainos 1892 The Underground Life 1892 Fians Fairies and Picts 1893 Scottish Gypsies under the Stewarts 1894 Pygmies in Northern Scotland 1892 Some Hebridean Antiquities 1895 Diary of a Tour through Great Britain editor 1897 The Northern Trolls 1898 Memories of the Picts 1900 Underground Dwellings 1900 Fairy Mounds 1900 Shelta the Caird s Language 1901 Hints of Evolution in Tradition 1902 The Arctic Voyage of 1653 1909 Celtic Civilisation No date Druids and Mound Dwellers 1910 Les Pygmies chez les Anciens Egyptiens et les Hebreux with S T H Hurwitz pp 418 422 1912 Les kayaks dans le nord de l Europe 1912 Great and Little Britain 1915 The Celtic Numerals of Strathclyde 1915 The Duns of the North 1917 The Savages of Gaelic Tradition 1920 The Aborigines of Shetland and Orkney 1924External links Edit nbsp Media related to David MacRitchie at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Works by or about David MacRitchie at Wikisource Works by David MacRitchie at Project Gutenberg Works by or about David MacRitchie at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David MacRitchie amp oldid 1177871839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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