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Druid

A druid was a member of the high-ranking priestly class in ancient Celtic cultures. Druids were religious leaders as well as legal authorities, adjudicators, lorekeepers, medical professionals and political advisors. Druids left no written accounts. While they were reported to have been literate, they are believed to have been prevented by doctrine from recording their knowledge in written form. Their beliefs and practices are attested in some detail by their contemporaries from other cultures, such as the Romans and the Greeks.

Two Druids, 19th-century engraving based on a 1719 illustration by Bernard de Montfaucon, who said that he was reproducing a bas-relief found at Autun, Burgundy[1]

The earliest known references to the druids date to the 4th century BC. The oldest detailed description comes from Julius Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico (50s BCE). They were described by other Roman writers such as Cicero,[2] Tacitus,[3] and Pliny the Elder.[4] Following the Roman invasion of Gaul, the druid orders were suppressed by the Roman government under the 1st-century CE emperors Tiberius and Claudius, and had disappeared from the written record by the 2nd century.

In about 750 AD, the word druid appears in a poem by Blathmac, who wrote about Jesus, saying that he was "better than a prophet, more knowledgeable than every druid, a king who was a bishop and a complete sage."[5] The druids appear in some of the medieval tales from Christianized Ireland like "Táin Bó Cúailnge", where they are largely portrayed as sorcerers who opposed the coming of Christianity.[6] In the wake of the Celtic revival during the 18th and 19th centuries, fraternal and neopagan groups were founded based on ideas about the ancient druids, a movement known as Neo-Druidism. Many popular notions about druids, based on misconceptions of 18th-century scholars, have been largely superseded by more recent study.[7]

Etymology edit

The English word druid derives from Latin druidēs (plural), which was considered by ancient Roman writers to come from the native Gaulish word for these figures.[8][9][10] Other Roman texts employ the form druidae, while the same term was used by Greek ethnographers as δρυΐδης (druidēs).[11][12] Although no extant Romano-Celtic inscription is known to contain the form,[8] the word is cognate with the later insular Celtic words, Old Irish druí 'druid, sorcerer', Old Cornish druw, Middle Welsh dryw 'seer; wren'.[10] Based on all available forms, the hypothetical proto-Celtic word may be reconstructed as *dru-wid-s (pl. *druwides) meaning "oak-knower". The two elements go back to the Proto-Indo-European roots *deru-[13] and *weid- "to see".[14] The sense of "oak-knower" or "oak-seer" is supported by Pliny the Elder,[10] who in his Natural History considered the word to contain the Greek noun drýs (δρύς), "oak-tree"[15] and the Greek suffix -idēs (-ιδης).[16] The Welsh word for oak is/was derw.[17][18] Both Old Irish druí and Middle Welsh dryw could refer to the wren,[10] possibly connected with an association of that bird with augury in Irish and Welsh tradition (see also Wren Day).[10][19]

Practices and doctrines edit

Sources by ancient and medieval writers provide an idea of the religious duties and social roles involved in being a druid.

Societal role and training edit

 
Imaginative illustration of 'An Arch Druid in His Judicial Habit', from The Costume of the Original Inhabitants of the British Islands by S.R. Meyrick and C.H. Smith (1815), the gold gorget collar copying Irish Bronze Age examples[20]

The Greco-Roman and the vernacular Irish sources agree that the druids played an important part in pagan Celtic society. In his description, Julius Caesar wrote that they were one of the two most important social groups in the region (alongside the equites, or nobles) and were responsible for organizing worship and sacrifices, divination, and judicial procedure in Gallic, British, and Irish societies.[21][failed verification] He wrote that they were exempt from military service and from paying taxes, and had the power to excommunicate people from religious festivals, making them social outcasts.[21] Two other classical writers, Diodorus Siculus and Strabo, wrote about the role of druids in Gallic society, stating that the druids were held in such respect that if they intervened between two armies they could stop the battle.[22]

Diodorus writes of the Druids that they were "philosophers" and "men learned in religious affairs" who are honored.[23] Strabo mentions that their domain was both natural philosophy and moral philosophy.[24] While Ammianus Marcellinus lists them as investigators of "obscure and profound subjects".[25]

Pomponius Mela was the first author to say that the druids' instruction was secret and took place in caves and forests.[26] Cicero said that he knew a Gaulish druid who "claimed to have that knowledge of nature which the Greeks call physiologia, and he used to make predictions, sometimes by means of augury and sometimes by means of conjecture".[27]

Druidic lore consisted of a large number of verses learned by heart, and Caesar remarked that it could take up to twenty years to complete the course of study. What was taught to druid novices anywhere is conjecture: of the druids' oral literature, not one certifiably ancient verse is known to have survived, even in translation. All instruction was communicated orally, but for ordinary purposes, Caesar reports,[28] the Gauls had a written language in which they used Greek letters. In this he probably draws on earlier writers; by the time of Caesar, Gaulish inscriptions had moved from Greek script to Latin script.

Caesar believed that this practice of oral transmission of knowledge and opposition to recording their ideas had dual motivations: wanting to keep druidic knowledge from becoming common, and improving the druids' faculties of memory.[29]

Sacrifice edit

 
An 18th century illustration of a wicker man, the form of execution that Caesar wrote the druids used for human sacrifice. From the "Duncan Caesar", Tonson, Draper, and Dodsley edition of the Commentaries of Caesar translated by William Duncan published in 1753.

Greek and Roman writers frequently made reference to the druids as practitioners of human sacrifice.[30] Caesar says those who had been found guilty of theft or other criminal offences were considered preferable for use as sacrificial victims, but when criminals were in short supply, innocents would be acceptable. A form of sacrifice recorded by Caesar was the burning alive of victims in a large wooden effigy, now often known as a wicker man. A differing account came from the 10th-century Commenta Bernensia, which stated that sacrifices to the deities Teutates, Esus and Taranis were by drowning, hanging and burning, respectively (see threefold death).

Diodorus Siculus asserts that a sacrifice acceptable to the Celtic gods had to be attended by a druid, for they were the intermediaries between the people and the divinities. He remarked upon the importance of prophets in druidic ritual:

These men predict the future by observing the flight and calls of birds and by the sacrifice of holy animals: all orders of society are in their power ... and in very important matters they prepare a human victim, plunging a dagger into his chest; by observing the way his limbs convulse as he falls and the gushing of his blood, they are able to read the future.

Archaeological evidence from western Europe has been widely used to support the view that Iron Age Celts practiced human sacrifice. Mass graves found in a ritual context dating from this period have been unearthed in Gaul, at both Gournay-sur-Aronde and Ribemont-sur-Ancre in the region of the Belgae chiefdom. The excavator of these sites, Jean-Louis Brunaux, interpreted them as areas of human sacrifice in devotion to a war god,[31][32] although this view was criticized by another archaeologist, Martin Brown, who believed that the corpses might be those of honoured warriors buried in the sanctuary rather than sacrifices.[33] Some historians have questioned whether the Greco-Roman writers were accurate in their claims. J. Rives remarked that it was "ambiguous" whether druids ever performed such sacrifices, for the Romans and Greeks were known to project what they saw as barbarian traits onto foreign peoples including not only druids but Jews and Christians as well, thereby confirming their own "cultural superiority" in their own minds.[34]

Nora Chadwick, an expert in medieval Welsh and Irish literature who believed the druids to be great philosophers, has also supported the idea that they had not been involved in human sacrifice, and that such accusations were imperialist Roman propaganda.[35]

Philosophy edit

Alexander Cornelius Polyhistor referred to the druids as philosophers and called their doctrine of the immortality of the soul and reincarnation or metempsychosis, "Pythagorean":

The Pythagorean doctrine prevails among the Gauls' teaching that the souls of men are immortal, and that after a fixed number of years they will enter into another body

Caesar made similar observations:

With regard to their actual course of studies, the main object of all education is, in their opinion, to imbue their scholars with a firm belief in the indestructibility of the human soul, which, according to their belief, merely passes at death from one tenement to another; for by such doctrine alone, they say, which robs death of all its terrors, can the highest form of human courage be developed. Subsidiary to the teachings of this main principle, they hold various lectures and discussions on the stars and their movement, on the extent and geographical distribution of the earth, on the different branches of natural philosophy, and on many problems connected with religion.

— Julius Caesar, De Bello Gallico, VI, 14

Diodorus Siculus, writing in 36 BCE, described how the druids followed "the Pythagorean doctrine", that human souls "are immortal and after a prescribed number of years they commence a new life in a new body".[36] In 1928, folklorist Donald A. Mackenzie speculated that Buddhist missionaries had been sent by the Indian king Ashoka.[37] Caesar noted the druidic doctrine that the original ancestor of the tribe was the god he referred to as Dispater, "Father Dis".

Diogenes Laertius in the 3rd century AD wrote that "Druids make their pronouncements by means of riddles and dark sayings, teaching that the gods must be worshipped, and no evil done, and manly behavior maintained".[38]

Druids in mythology edit

Druids play a prominent role in Irish folklore, generally serving lords and kings as high ranking priest-counselors with the gift of prophecy and other assorted mystical abilities – the best example of these possibly being Cathbad. The chief druid in the court of King Conchobar mac Nessa of Ulster, Cathbad features in several tales, most of which detail his ability to foretell the future. In the tale of Deirdre of the Sorrows – the foremost tragic heroine of the Ulster Cycle – the druid prophesied before the court of Conchobar that Deirdre would grow up to be very beautiful, and that kings and lords would go to war over her, much blood would be shed because of her, and Ulster's three greatest warriors would be forced into exile for her sake. This prophecy, ignored by the king, came true.[39]

The greatest of these mythological druids was Amergin Glúingel,[40] a bard and judge for the Milesians featured in the Mythological Cycle. The Milesians were seeking to overrun the Tuatha Dé Danann and win the land of Ireland but, as they approached, the druids of the Tuatha Dé Danann raised a magical storm to bar their ships from making landfall. Thus Amergin called upon the spirit of Ireland itself, chanting a powerful incantation that has come to be known as The Song of Amergin[41] and, eventually (after successfully making landfall), aiding and dividing the land between his royal brothers in the conquest of Ireland,[42][43][44] earning the title Chief Ollam of Ireland.

Other such mythological druids were Tadg mac Nuadat of the Fenian Cycle, and Mug Ruith, a powerful blind druid of Munster.

Female druids edit

 
The Druidess, oil on canvas, by French painter Alexandre Cabanel (1823–1890)

Irish mythology edit

Irish mythology has a number of female druids, often sharing similar prominent cultural and religious roles with their male counterparts. The Irish have several words for female druids, such as bandruí ("woman-druid"), found in tales such as Táin Bó Cúailnge;[45] Bodhmall, featured in the Fenian Cycle, and one of Fionn mac Cumhaill's childhood caretakers;[46] and Tlachtga,[47] daughter of the druid Mug Ruith who, according to Irish tradition, is associated with the Hill of Ward, site of prominent festivals held in Tlachtga's honour during the Middle Ages.[48]

Biróg, another bandruí of the Tuatha Dé Danann, plays a key role in an Irish folktale where the Fomorian warrior Balor attempts to thwart a prophecy foretelling that he would be killed by his own grandson by imprisoning his only daughter Eithne in the tower of Tory Island, away from any contact with men.[49][50] Bé Chuille – daughter of the woodland goddess Flidais and sometimes described as a sorceress rather than a bandruí – features in a tale from the Metrical Dindshenchas where she joins three other of the Tuatha Dé to defeat the evil Greek witch Carman.[48][51] Other bandrúi include Relbeo, a Nemedian druid who appears in The Book of Invasions, where she is described as the daughter of the King of Greece and mother of Fergus Lethderg[48] and Alma One-Tooth.[52] Dornoll was a bandrúi in Scotland, who normally trained heroes in warfare, particularly Laegaire and Conall; she was the daughter of Domnall Mildemail.[48]

The Gallizenae edit

 
Location of Île de Sein in the Atlantic Ocean

According to classical authors, the Gallizenae (or Gallisenae) were virgin priestesses of the Île de Sein off Pointe du Raz, Finistère, western Brittany.[53] Their existence was first mentioned by the Greek geographer Artemidorus Ephesius and later by the Greek historian Strabo, who wrote that their island was forbidden to men, but the women came to the mainland to meet their husbands. Which deities they honored is unknown.[54] According to Pomponius Mela, the Gallizenae acted as both councilors and practitioners of the healing arts:

Sena, in the Britannic Sea, opposite the coast of the Osismi, is famous for its oracle of a Gaulish god, whose priestesses, living in the holiness of perpetual virginity, are said to be nine in number. They call them Gallizenae, and they believe them to be endowed with extraordinary gifts to rouse the sea and the wind by their incantations, to turn themselves into whatsoever animal form they may choose, to cure diseases which among others are incurable, to know what is to come and to foretell it. They are, however, devoted to the service of voyagers only who have set out on no other errand than to consult them.[55][56][57]

Druidesses in Gaul edit

According to the Historia Augusta, Alexander Severus received a prophecy about his death from a Gallic druidess (druiada).[58] The work also has Aurelian questioning druidesses about the fate of his descendants, to which they answered in favor of Claudius II.[59] Flavius Vopiscus is also quoted as recalling a prophecy received by Diocletian from a druidess of the Tungri.[60]

Sources on druid beliefs and practices edit

Greek and Roman records edit

 
Druids Inciting the Britons to oppose the landing of the Romans – from Cassell's History of England, Vol. I – anonymous author and artists

The earliest surviving literary evidence of druids emerges from the classical world of Greece and Rome. Archaeologist Stuart Piggott compared the attitude of the Classical authors toward the druids as being similar to the relationship that had existed in the 15th and 18th centuries between Europeans and the societies that they were just encountering in other parts of the world, such as the Americas and the South Sea Islands. He highlighted the attitude of "primitivism" in both Early Modern Europeans and Classical authors, owing to their perception that these newly encountered societies had less technological development and were backward in socio-political development.[61]

Historian Nora Chadwick, in a categorization subsequently adopted by Piggott, divided the Classical accounts of the druids into two groups, distinguished by their approach to the subject as well as their chronological contexts. She calls the first of these groups the "Posidonian" tradition after one of its primary exponents, Posidonious, and notes that it takes a largely critical attitude towards the Iron Age societies of Western Europe that emphasizes their "barbaric" qualities. The second of these two groups is termed the "Alexandrian" group, being centred on the scholastic traditions of Alexandria, Egypt; she notes that it took a more sympathetic and idealized attitude toward these foreign peoples.[62] Piggott drew parallels between this categorisation and the ideas of "hard primitivism" and "soft primitivism" identified by historians of ideas A. O. Lovejoy and Franz Boas.[63]

One school of thought has suggested that all of these accounts are inherently unreliable, and might be entirely fictional. They have suggested that the idea of the druid might have been a fiction created by Classical writers to reinforce the idea of the barbaric "other" who existed beyond the civilized Greco-Roman world, thereby legitimizing the expansion of the Roman Empire into these areas.[64]

The earliest record of the druids comes from two Greek texts of c. 300 BCE: a history of philosophy written by Sotion of Alexandria, and a study of magic widely attributed to Aristotle. Both texts are now lost, but are quoted in the 2nd century CE work Vitae by Diogenes Laërtius.[65]

Some say that the study of philosophy originated with the barbarians. In that among the Persians there existed the Magi, and among the Babylonians or Assyrians the Chaldaei, among the Indians the Gymnosophistae, and among the Celts and Gauls men who were called druids and semnothei, as Aristotle relates in his book on magic, and Sotion in the twenty-third book of his Succession of Philosophers.

— Diogenes Laërtius, Vitae, Introduction, Section 1[66]

Subsequent Greek and Roman texts from the 3rd century BCE refer to "barbarian philosophers",[67] possibly in reference to the Gaulish druids.

Julius Caesar edit

 
Julius Caesar, the Roman general and later dictator, who wrote the most important source for the Druids in Britain

The earliest extant text that describes druids in detail is Julius Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico, book VI, written in the 50s or 40s BCE. A general who was intent on conquering Gaul and Britain, Caesar described the druids as being concerned with "divine worship, the due performance of sacrifices, private or public, and the interpretation of ritual questions". He said they played an important part in Gaulish society, being one of the two respected classes along with the equites (in Rome the name for members of a privileged class above the common people, but also "horsemen") and that they performed the function of judges.

Caesar wrote that the druids recognized the authority of a single leader, who would rule until his death, when a successor would be chosen by vote or through conflict. He remarked that they met annually at a sacred place in the region occupied by the Carnute tribe in Gaul, while they viewed Britain as the centre of druidic study; and that they were not found among the German tribes to the east of the Rhine. According to Caesar, many young men were trained to be druids, during which time they had to learn all the associated lore by heart. He also said that their main teaching was "the souls do not perish, but after death pass from one to another". They were concerned with "the stars and their movements, the size of the cosmos and the earth, the world of nature, and the power and might of the immortal gods", indicating they were involved with not only such common aspects of religion as theology and cosmology, but also astronomy. Caesar held that they were "administrators" during rituals of human sacrifice, for which criminals were usually used, and that the method was by burning in a wicker man.[21]

Though he had first-hand experience of Gaulish people, and therefore likely druids, Caesar's account has been widely criticized by modern historians as inaccurate. One issue raised by such historians as Fustel de Coulanges[68] was that while Caesar described the druids as a significant power within Gaulish society, he did not mention them even once in his accounts of his Gaulish conquests. Nor did Aulus Hirtius, who continued Caesar's account of the Gallic Wars after Caesar's death. Hutton believed that Caesar had manipulated the idea of the druids so they would appear both civilized (being learned and pious) and barbaric (performing human sacrifice) to Roman readers, thereby representing both "a society worth including in the Roman Empire" and one that required civilizing with Roman rule and values, thus justifying his wars of conquest.[69] Sean Dunham suggested that Caesar had simply taken the Roman religious functions of senators and applied them to the druids.[70][71] Daphne Nash believed it "not unlikely" that he "greatly exaggerates" both the centralized system of druidic leadership and its connection to Britain.[72]

Other historians have accepted that Caesar's account might be more accurate. Norman J. DeWitt surmised that Caesar's description of the role of druids in Gaulish society may report an idealized tradition, based on the society of the 2nd century BC, before the pan-Gallic confederation led by the Arverni was smashed in 121 BC, followed by the invasions of Teutones and Cimbri, rather than on the demoralized and disunited Gaul of his own time.[73] John Creighton has speculated that in Britain, the druidic social influence was already in decline by the mid-1st century BCE, in conflict with emergent new power structures embodied in paramount chieftains.[74] Other scholars see the Roman conquest itself as the main reason for the decline of the druid orders.[75] Archaeologist Miranda Aldhouse-Green (2010) asserted that Caesar offered both "our richest textual source" regarding the druids, and "one of the most reliable". She defended the accuracy of his accounts by highlighting that while he may have embellished some of his accounts to justify Roman imperial conquest, it was "inherently unlikely" that he constructed a fictional class system for Gaul and Britain, particularly considering that he was accompanied by a number of other Roman senators who would have also been sending reports on the conquest to Rome, and who would have challenged his inclusion of serious falsifications.[64]

Cicero, Diodorus Siculus, Strabo and Tacitus edit

 
Roman soldiers killing druids and burning their groves on Anglesey, as described by Tacitus

Other classical writers also commented on the druids and their practices. Caesar's contemporary, Cicero, noted that he had met a Gallic druid, Divitiacus, of the Aedui tribe. Divitiacus supposedly knew much about the natural world and performed divination through augury.[2] Whether Diviaticus was genuinely a druid can however be disputed, for Caesar also knew this figure, and wrote about him, calling him by the more Gaulish-sounding (and thereby presumably the more authentic) Diviciacus, but never referred to him as a druid and indeed presented him as a political and military leader.[76]

Another classical writer to take up describing the druids not too long after was Diodorus Siculus, who published this description in his Bibliotheca historicae in 36 BCE. Alongside the druids, or as he called them, drouidas, whom he viewed as philosophers and theologians, he remarked how there were poets and singers in Celtic society whom he called bardous, or bards.[36] Such an idea was expanded on by Strabo, writing in the 20s CE, who declared that amongst the Gauls, there were three types of honoured figures:[77]

  • the poets and singers known as bardoi,
  • the diviners and specialists in the natural world known as o'vateis, and
  • those who studied "moral philosophy", the druidai.

Roman writer Tacitus, himself a senator and historian, described how when the Roman army, led by Suetonius Paulinus, attacked the island of Mona (Anglesey; Welsh: Ynys Môn), the legionaries were awestruck on landing, by the appearance of a band of druids, who, with hands uplifted to the sky, poured forth terrible imprecations on the heads of the invaders. He says these "terrified our soldiers who had never seen such a thing before". The courage of the Romans, however, soon overcame such fears, according to the Roman historian; the Britons were put to flight, and the sacred groves of Mona were cut down.[78] Tacitus is also the only primary source that gives accounts of druids in Britain, but maintains a hostile point of view, seeing them as ignorant savages.[79]

Irish and Welsh records edit

In the Middle Ages, after Ireland and Wales were Christianized, druids appear in a number of written sources, mainly tales and stories such as Táin Bó Cúailnge, and in the hagiographies of various saints. These were all written by Christian monks.

Irish literature and law codes edit

In Irish-language literature, druids – draoithe, plural of draoi – are sorcerers with supernatural powers, who are respected in society, particularly for their ability to do divination. Dictionary of the Irish Language defines druí (which has numerous variant forms, including draoi) as 'magician, wizard or diviner'.[80] In the literature the druids cast spells and turn people into animals or stones, or curse peoples' crops to be blighted.[81]

When druids are portrayed in early Irish sagas and saints' lives set in pre-Christian Ireland, they are usually given high social status. The evidence of the law-texts, which were first written down in the 7th and 8th centuries, suggests that with the coming of Christianity the role of the druid in Irish society was rapidly reduced to that of a sorcerer who could be consulted to cast spells or do healing magic and that his standing declined accordingly.[82] According to the early legal tract Bretha Crólige, the sick-maintenance due to a druid, satirist and brigand (díberg) is no more than that due to a bóaire (an ordinary freeman). Another law-text, Uraicecht Becc ('small primer'), gives the druid a place among the dóer-nemed or professional classes which depend for their status on a patron, along with wrights, blacksmiths and entertainers, as opposed to the fili, who alone enjoyed free nemed-status.[83]

Welsh literature edit

While druids featured prominently in many medieval Irish sources, they were far rarer in their Welsh counterparts. Unlike the Irish texts, the Welsh term commonly seen as referring to the druids, dryw, was used to refer purely to prophets and not to sorcerers or pagan priests. Historian Ronald Hutton noted that there were two explanations for the use of the term in Wales: the first was that it was a survival from the pre-Christian era, when dryw had been ancient priests; the second was that the Welsh had borrowed the term from the Irish, as had the English (who used the terms dry and drycraeft to refer to magicians and magic respectively, most probably influenced by the Irish terms).[84]

Archaeology edit

 
 
A pair of 1st century BCE(?) "spoons" from England. It is speculated that they were used for divination. Eleven such pairs have been found.[85] Miranda Green believes a liquid was put in the spoon with a hole, and allowed to drip into the other below, and the drip pattern interpreted.[86]

As the historian Jane Webster stated, "individual druids ... are unlikely to be identified archaeologically".[87] A. P. Fitzpatrick, in examining what he believed to be astral symbolism on Late Iron Age swords has expressed difficulties in relating any material culture, even the Coligny calendar, with druidic culture.[88]

Nonetheless, some archaeologists have attempted to link certain discoveries with written accounts of the druids. The archaeologist Anne Ross linked what she believed to be evidence of human sacrifice in Celtic pagan society—such as the Lindow Man bog body—to the Greco-Roman accounts of human sacrifice being officiated over by the druids.[89][90] Miranda Aldhouse-Green, professor of archaeology at Cardiff University, has noted that Suetonius's army would have passed very near the site whilst traveling to deal with Boudicca and postulates that the sacrifice may have been connected.[91] A 1996 discovery of a skeleton buried with advanced medical and possibly divinatory equipment has, however, been nicknamed the "Druid of Colchester".

 
Headdress of the "Deal Warrior", possibly worn by druids, 200–150 BCE, British Museum[92]

An excavated burial in Deal, Kent discovered the "Deal Warrior" – a man buried around 200–150 BCE with a sword and shield, and wearing an almost unique head-band, too thin to be part of a leather helmet. The crown is bronze with a broad band around the head and a thin strip crossing the top of the head. Since traces of hair were left on the metal it must have been worn without any padding beneath. The form of the headdress resembles depictions of Romano-British priests from several centuries later, leading to speculation among archaeologists that the man might have been a religious official – a druid.[93]

History of reception edit

Prohibition and decline under Roman rule edit

In the Gallic Wars of 58–51 BC, the Roman army, led by Julius Caesar, conquered the many tribal chiefdoms of Gaul, and annexed it as a part of the Roman Republic. According to accounts produced in the following centuries, the new rulers of Roman Gaul subsequently introduced measures to wipe out the druids from that country. According to Pliny the Elder, writing in the 70s CE, it was the emperor Tiberius (ruled 14–37 CE), who introduced laws banning not only druid practices, and other native soothsayers and healers, a move which Pliny applauded, believing it would end human sacrifice in Gaul.[94] A somewhat different account of Roman legal attacks on the druids was made by Suetonius, writing in the 2nd century CE, when he stated that Rome's first emperor, Augustus (ruled 27 BCE–14 CE), had decreed that no-one could be both a druid and a Roman citizen, and that this was followed by a law passed by the later Emperor Claudius (ruled 41–54 CE) which "thoroughly suppressed" the druids by banning their religious practices.[95]

Possible late survival of Insular druid orders edit

The best evidence of a druidic tradition in the British Isles is the independent cognate of the Celtic *druwid- in Insular Celtic: The Old Irish druídecht survives in the meaning of 'magic', and the Welsh dryw in the meaning of 'seer'.

While the druids as a priestly caste were extinct with the Christianization of Wales, complete by the 7th century at the latest, the offices of bard and of "seer" (Welsh: dryw) persisted in medieval Wales into the 13th century.

Classics professor Phillip Freeman discusses a later reference to 'dryades', which he translates as 'druidesses', writing, "The fourth century A.D. collection of imperial biographies known as the Historia Augusta contains three short passages involving Gaulish women called 'dryades' ('druidesses'). He points out that "In all of these, the women may not be direct heirs of the druids who were supposedly extinguished by the Romans – but in any case they do show that the druidic function of prophecy continued among the natives in Roman Gaul."[96] Additionally, female druids are mentioned in later Irish mythology, including the legend of Fionn mac Cumhaill, who, according to the 12th century The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn, is raised by the woman druid Bodhmall and her companion, another wise-woman.[47][46]

Christian historiography and hagiography edit

The story of Vortigern, as reported by Nennius, gives one of the very few glimpses of possible druidic survival in Britain after the Roman arrival. He wrote that after being excommunicated by Germanus of Auxerre, the British leader Vortigern invited twelve druids to help him.

In the lives of saints and martyrs, the druids are represented as magicians and diviners. In Adamnan's vita of Columba, two of them act as tutors to the daughters of Lóegaire mac Néill, the High King of Ireland, at the coming of Saint Patrick. They are represented as endeavouring to prevent the progress of Patrick and Saint Columba by raising clouds and mist. Before the battle of Culdremne (561 CE) a druid made an airbe drtiad ("fence of protection"?) round one of the armies, but what is precisely meant by the phrase is unclear. The Irish druids seem to have had a peculiar tonsure. The word druí is always used to render the Latin magus, and in one passage St Columba speaks of Christ as his druid. Similarly, a life of Saint Beuno states that when he died he had a vision of "all the saints and druids".

Sulpicius Severus' vita of Martin of Tours relates how Martin encountered a peasant funeral, carrying the body in a winding sheet, which Martin mistook for some druidic rites of sacrifice, "because it was the custom of the Gallic rustics in their wretched folly to carry about through the fields the images of demons veiled with a white covering". So Martin halted the procession by raising his pectoral cross: "Upon this, the miserable creatures might have been seen at first to become stiff like rocks. Next, as they endeavoured, with every possible effort, to move forward, but were not able to take a step farther, they began to whirl themselves about in the most ridiculous fashion, until, not able any longer to sustain the weight, they set down the dead body." Then discovering his error, Martin raised his hand again to let them proceed: "Thus", the hagiographer points out, "he both compelled them to stand when he pleased, and permitted them to depart when he thought good."[97]

Romanticism and later revivals edit

 
Croome Court, Worcestershire: Druid statue

From the 18th century, England and Wales saw a revival of interest in the druids. John Aubrey (1626–1697) had been the first modern writer to (incorrectly) connect Stonehenge and other megalithic monuments with the druids; since Aubrey's views were confined to his notebooks, the first wide audience for this idea were readers of William Stukeley (1687–1765).[98] It is incorrectly believed that John Toland (1670–1722) founded the Ancient Druid Order; however, the research of historian Ronald Hutton has revealed that the ADO was founded by George Watson MacGregor Reid in 1909.[99] The order never used (and still does not use) the title "Archdruid" for any member, but falsely credited William Blake as having been its "Chosen Chief" from 1799–1827, without corroboration in Blake's numerous writings or among modern Blake scholars. Blake's bardic mysticism derives instead from the pseudo-Ossianic epics of Macpherson; his friend Frederick Tatham's depiction of Blake's imagination, "clothing itself in the dark stole of moral sanctity"— in the precincts of Westminster Abbey— "it dwelt amid the druid terrors", is generic rather than specifically neo-druidic.[100] John Toland was fascinated by Aubrey's Stonehenge theories, and wrote his own book about the monument without crediting Aubrey. The roles of bards in 10th century Wales had been established by Hywel Dda and it was during the 18th century that the idea arose that druids had been their predecessors.[101]

The 19th century idea, gained from uncritical reading of the Gallic Wars, that under cultural-military pressure from Rome the druids formed the core of 1st century BCE resistance among the Gauls, was examined and dismissed before World War II,[102] though it remains current in folk history.

Druids began to figure widely in popular culture with the first advent of Romanticism. Chateaubriand's novel Les Martyrs (1809) narrated the doomed love of a druid priestess and a Roman soldier; though Chateaubriand's theme was the triumph of Christianity over pagan druids, the setting was to continue to bear fruit. Opera provides a barometer of well-informed popular European culture in the early 19th century: In 1817 Giovanni Pacini brought druids to the stage in Trieste with an opera to a libretto by Felice Romani about a druid priestess, La Sacerdotessa d'Irminsul ("The Priestess of Irminsul"). Vincenzo Bellini's druidic opera, Norma was a fiasco at La Scala, when it premiered the day after Christmas, 1831; but in 1833 it was a hit in London. For its libretto, Felice Romani reused some of the pseudo-druidical background of La Sacerdotessa to provide colour to a standard theatrical conflict of love and duty. The story was similar to that of Medea, as it had recently been recast for a popular Parisian play by Alexandre Soumet: the chaste goddess (casta diva) addressed in Norma's hit aria is the moon goddess, worshipped in the "grove of the Irmin statue".

 
Edward Williams, known for his bardic name, "Iolo Morganwg"

A central figure in 19th century Romanticist, Neo-druid revival, is Welshman Edward Williams, better known as Iolo Morganwg. His writings, published posthumously as The Iolo Manuscripts (1849) and Barddas (1862), are not considered credible by contemporary scholars. Williams said that he had collected ancient knowledge in a "Gorsedd of Bards of the Isles of Britain" he had organized. While bits and pieces of the Barddas still turn up in some "Neo-Druidic" works, the documents are not considered relevant to ancient practice by most scholars.

Another Welshman, William Price (4 March 1800 – 23 January 1893), a physician known for his support of Welsh nationalism, Chartism, and his involvement with the Neo-Druidic religious movement, has been recognized as a significant figure of 19th century Wales. He was arrested for cremating his deceased son, a practice he believed to be a druid ritual, but won his case; this in turn led to the Cremation Act 1902.[103][104][105]

In 1927 T. D. Kendrick sought to dispel the pseudo-historical aura that had accrued to druids,[106] asserting, "a prodigious amount of rubbish has been written about Druidism";[107] Neo-druidism has nevertheless continued to shape public perceptions of the historical druids.

Some strands of contemporary Neo-Druidism are a continuation of the 18th century revival and thus are built largely around writings produced in the 18th century and after by second-hand sources and theorists. Some are monotheistic. Others, such as the largest druid group in the world, the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids, draw on a wide range of sources for their teachings. Members of such Neo-Druid groups may be Neopagan, occultist, Christian or non-specifically spiritual.

Modern scholarship edit

 
Druidic Ceremony for the Autumn Equinox on top of Primrose Hill in London, England

In the 20th century, as new forms of textual criticism and archaeological methods were developed, allowing for greater accuracy in understanding the past, various historians and archaeologists published books on the subject of the druids and came to their own conclusions. Archaeologist Stuart Piggott, author of The Druids (1968), accepted the Greco-Roman accounts and considered the druids to be a barbaric and savage priesthood who performed human sacrifices.[108] This view was largely supported by another archaeologist, Anne Ross, author of Pagan Celtic Britain (1967) and The Life and Death of a Druid Prince (1989), though she believed that they were essentially tribal priests, having more in common with the shamans of tribal societies than with the classical philosophers.[109] Ross' views were largely accepted by two other prominent archaeologists to write on the subject: Miranda Aldhouse-Green,[110] author of The Gods of the Celts (1986), Exploring the World of the Druids (1997) and Caesar's Druids: Story of an Ancient Priesthood (2010); and Barry Cunliffe, author of Iron Age Communities in Britain (1991) and The Ancient Celts (1997).[111]

See also edit

References edit

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  98. ^ The modern career of this imagined connection of druids and Stonehenge was traced and dispelled in T. D. Kendrick, The Druids: A Study in Keltic Prehistory (London: Methuen) 1927.
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  102. ^ DeWitt, Norman J. (1938). "The Druids and Romanization". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 69: 319–332. doi:10.2307/283182. JSTOR 283182. Few historians now believe that the Druids, as a corporation, constituted an effective anti-Roman element during the period of Caesar's conquests and in the period of early Roman Gaul ... His inspection of the seemingly contradictory literary sources reinforced the stated conclusion.
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Bibliography edit

Classical sources

Bibliography—other sources

External links edit

  • World History Encyclopedia - Druid
  • Quiggin, Edmund Crosby (1911). "Druidism" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). pp. 597–598.

druid, other, uses, disambiguation, druid, member, high, ranking, priestly, class, ancient, celtic, cultures, were, religious, leaders, well, legal, authorities, adjudicators, lorekeepers, medical, professionals, political, advisors, left, written, accounts, w. For other uses see Druid disambiguation A druid was a member of the high ranking priestly class in ancient Celtic cultures Druids were religious leaders as well as legal authorities adjudicators lorekeepers medical professionals and political advisors Druids left no written accounts While they were reported to have been literate they are believed to have been prevented by doctrine from recording their knowledge in written form Their beliefs and practices are attested in some detail by their contemporaries from other cultures such as the Romans and the Greeks Two Druids 19th century engraving based on a 1719 illustration by Bernard de Montfaucon who said that he was reproducing a bas relief found at Autun Burgundy 1 The earliest known references to the druids date to the 4th century BC The oldest detailed description comes from Julius Caesar s Commentarii de Bello Gallico 50s BCE They were described by other Roman writers such as Cicero 2 Tacitus 3 and Pliny the Elder 4 Following the Roman invasion of Gaul the druid orders were suppressed by the Roman government under the 1st century CE emperors Tiberius and Claudius and had disappeared from the written record by the 2nd century In about 750 AD the word druid appears in a poem by Blathmac who wrote about Jesus saying that he was better than a prophet more knowledgeable than every druid a king who was a bishop and a complete sage 5 The druids appear in some of the medieval tales from Christianized Ireland like Tain Bo Cuailnge where they are largely portrayed as sorcerers who opposed the coming of Christianity 6 In the wake of the Celtic revival during the 18th and 19th centuries fraternal and neopagan groups were founded based on ideas about the ancient druids a movement known as Neo Druidism Many popular notions about druids based on misconceptions of 18th century scholars have been largely superseded by more recent study 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Practices and doctrines 2 1 Societal role and training 2 2 Sacrifice 2 3 Philosophy 3 Druids in mythology 4 Female druids 4 1 Irish mythology 4 2 The Gallizenae 4 3 Druidesses in Gaul 5 Sources on druid beliefs and practices 5 1 Greek and Roman records 5 1 1 Julius Caesar 5 1 2 Cicero Diodorus Siculus Strabo and Tacitus 5 2 Irish and Welsh records 5 2 1 Irish literature and law codes 5 2 2 Welsh literature 6 Archaeology 7 History of reception 7 1 Prohibition and decline under Roman rule 7 2 Possible late survival of Insular druid orders 7 3 Christian historiography and hagiography 7 4 Romanticism and later revivals 7 5 Modern scholarship 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology editThe English word druid derives from Latin druides plural which was considered by ancient Roman writers to come from the native Gaulish word for these figures 8 9 10 Other Roman texts employ the form druidae while the same term was used by Greek ethnographers as dryidhs druides 11 12 Although no extant Romano Celtic inscription is known to contain the form 8 the word is cognate with the later insular Celtic words Old Irish drui druid sorcerer Old Cornish druw Middle Welsh dryw seer wren 10 Based on all available forms the hypothetical proto Celtic word may be reconstructed as dru wid s pl druwides meaning oak knower The two elements go back to the Proto Indo European roots deru 13 and weid to see 14 The sense of oak knower or oak seer is supported by Pliny the Elder 10 who in his Natural History considered the word to contain the Greek noun drys drys oak tree 15 and the Greek suffix ides idhs 16 The Welsh word for oak is was derw 17 18 Both Old Irish drui and Middle Welsh dryw could refer to the wren 10 possibly connected with an association of that bird with augury in Irish and Welsh tradition see also Wren Day 10 19 Practices and doctrines editSources by ancient and medieval writers provide an idea of the religious duties and social roles involved in being a druid Societal role and training edit nbsp Imaginative illustration of An Arch Druid in His Judicial Habit from The Costume of the Original Inhabitants of the British Islands by S R Meyrick and C H Smith 1815 the gold gorget collar copying Irish Bronze Age examples 20 The Greco Roman and the vernacular Irish sources agree that the druids played an important part in pagan Celtic society In his description Julius Caesar wrote that they were one of the two most important social groups in the region alongside the equites or nobles and were responsible for organizing worship and sacrifices divination and judicial procedure in Gallic British and Irish societies 21 failed verification He wrote that they were exempt from military service and from paying taxes and had the power to excommunicate people from religious festivals making them social outcasts 21 Two other classical writers Diodorus Siculus and Strabo wrote about the role of druids in Gallic society stating that the druids were held in such respect that if they intervened between two armies they could stop the battle 22 Diodorus writes of the Druids that they were philosophers and men learned in religious affairs who are honored 23 Strabo mentions that their domain was both natural philosophy and moral philosophy 24 While Ammianus Marcellinus lists them as investigators of obscure and profound subjects 25 Pomponius Mela was the first author to say that the druids instruction was secret and took place in caves and forests 26 Cicero said that he knew a Gaulish druid who claimed to have that knowledge of nature which the Greeks call physiologia and he used to make predictions sometimes by means of augury and sometimes by means of conjecture 27 Druidic lore consisted of a large number of verses learned by heart and Caesar remarked that it could take up to twenty years to complete the course of study What was taught to druid novices anywhere is conjecture of the druids oral literature not one certifiably ancient verse is known to have survived even in translation All instruction was communicated orally but for ordinary purposes Caesar reports 28 the Gauls had a written language in which they used Greek letters In this he probably draws on earlier writers by the time of Caesar Gaulish inscriptions had moved from Greek script to Latin script Caesar believed that this practice of oral transmission of knowledge and opposition to recording their ideas had dual motivations wanting to keep druidic knowledge from becoming common and improving the druids faculties of memory 29 Sacrifice edit Further information Celts and human sacrifice Threefold death and Ritual of oak and mistletoe nbsp An 18th century illustration of a wicker man the form of execution that Caesar wrote the druids used for human sacrifice From the Duncan Caesar Tonson Draper and Dodsley edition of the Commentaries of Caesar translated by William Duncan published in 1753 Greek and Roman writers frequently made reference to the druids as practitioners of human sacrifice 30 Caesar says those who had been found guilty of theft or other criminal offences were considered preferable for use as sacrificial victims but when criminals were in short supply innocents would be acceptable A form of sacrifice recorded by Caesar was the burning alive of victims in a large wooden effigy now often known as a wicker man A differing account came from the 10th century Commenta Bernensia which stated that sacrifices to the deities Teutates Esus and Taranis were by drowning hanging and burning respectively see threefold death Diodorus Siculus asserts that a sacrifice acceptable to the Celtic gods had to be attended by a druid for they were the intermediaries between the people and the divinities He remarked upon the importance of prophets in druidic ritual These men predict the future by observing the flight and calls of birds and by the sacrifice of holy animals all orders of society are in their power and in very important matters they prepare a human victim plunging a dagger into his chest by observing the way his limbs convulse as he falls and the gushing of his blood they are able to read the future Archaeological evidence from western Europe has been widely used to support the view that Iron Age Celts practiced human sacrifice Mass graves found in a ritual context dating from this period have been unearthed in Gaul at both Gournay sur Aronde and Ribemont sur Ancre in the region of the Belgae chiefdom The excavator of these sites Jean Louis Brunaux interpreted them as areas of human sacrifice in devotion to a war god 31 32 although this view was criticized by another archaeologist Martin Brown who believed that the corpses might be those of honoured warriors buried in the sanctuary rather than sacrifices 33 Some historians have questioned whether the Greco Roman writers were accurate in their claims J Rives remarked that it was ambiguous whether druids ever performed such sacrifices for the Romans and Greeks were known to project what they saw as barbarian traits onto foreign peoples including not only druids but Jews and Christians as well thereby confirming their own cultural superiority in their own minds 34 Nora Chadwick an expert in medieval Welsh and Irish literature who believed the druids to be great philosophers has also supported the idea that they had not been involved in human sacrifice and that such accusations were imperialist Roman propaganda 35 Philosophy edit Alexander Cornelius Polyhistor referred to the druids as philosophers and called their doctrine of the immortality of the soul and reincarnation or metempsychosis Pythagorean The Pythagorean doctrine prevails among the Gauls teaching that the souls of men are immortal and that after a fixed number of years they will enter into another body Caesar made similar observations With regard to their actual course of studies the main object of all education is in their opinion to imbue their scholars with a firm belief in the indestructibility of the human soul which according to their belief merely passes at death from one tenement to another for by such doctrine alone they say which robs death of all its terrors can the highest form of human courage be developed Subsidiary to the teachings of this main principle they hold various lectures and discussions on the stars and their movement on the extent and geographical distribution of the earth on the different branches of natural philosophy and on many problems connected with religion Julius Caesar De Bello Gallico VI 14 Diodorus Siculus writing in 36 BCE described how the druids followed the Pythagorean doctrine that human souls are immortal and after a prescribed number of years they commence a new life in a new body 36 In 1928 folklorist Donald A Mackenzie speculated that Buddhist missionaries had been sent by the Indian king Ashoka 37 Caesar noted the druidic doctrine that the original ancestor of the tribe was the god he referred to as Dispater Father Dis Diogenes Laertius in the 3rd century AD wrote that Druids make their pronouncements by means of riddles and dark sayings teaching that the gods must be worshipped and no evil done and manly behavior maintained 38 Druids in mythology editDruids play a prominent role in Irish folklore generally serving lords and kings as high ranking priest counselors with the gift of prophecy and other assorted mystical abilities the best example of these possibly being Cathbad The chief druid in the court of King Conchobar mac Nessa of Ulster Cathbad features in several tales most of which detail his ability to foretell the future In the tale of Deirdre of the Sorrows the foremost tragic heroine of the Ulster Cycle the druid prophesied before the court of Conchobar that Deirdre would grow up to be very beautiful and that kings and lords would go to war over her much blood would be shed because of her and Ulster s three greatest warriors would be forced into exile for her sake This prophecy ignored by the king came true 39 The greatest of these mythological druids was Amergin Gluingel 40 a bard and judge for the Milesians featured in the Mythological Cycle The Milesians were seeking to overrun the Tuatha De Danann and win the land of Ireland but as they approached the druids of the Tuatha De Danann raised a magical storm to bar their ships from making landfall Thus Amergin called upon the spirit of Ireland itself chanting a powerful incantation that has come to be known as The Song of Amergin 41 and eventually after successfully making landfall aiding and dividing the land between his royal brothers in the conquest of Ireland 42 43 44 earning the title Chief Ollam of Ireland Other such mythological druids were Tadg mac Nuadat of the Fenian Cycle and Mug Ruith a powerful blind druid of Munster Female druids edit nbsp The Druidess oil on canvas by French painter Alexandre Cabanel 1823 1890 Irish mythology edit Irish mythology has a number of female druids often sharing similar prominent cultural and religious roles with their male counterparts The Irish have several words for female druids such as bandrui woman druid found in tales such as Tain Bo Cuailnge 45 Bodhmall featured in the Fenian Cycle and one of Fionn mac Cumhaill s childhood caretakers 46 and Tlachtga 47 daughter of the druid Mug Ruith who according to Irish tradition is associated with the Hill of Ward site of prominent festivals held in Tlachtga s honour during the Middle Ages 48 Birog another bandrui of the Tuatha De Danann plays a key role in an Irish folktale where the Fomorian warrior Balor attempts to thwart a prophecy foretelling that he would be killed by his own grandson by imprisoning his only daughter Eithne in the tower of Tory Island away from any contact with men 49 50 Be Chuille daughter of the woodland goddess Flidais and sometimes described as a sorceress rather than a bandrui features in a tale from the Metrical Dindshenchas where she joins three other of the Tuatha De to defeat the evil Greek witch Carman 48 51 Other bandrui include Relbeo a Nemedian druid who appears in The Book of Invasions where she is described as the daughter of the King of Greece and mother of Fergus Lethderg 48 and Alma One Tooth 52 Dornoll was a bandrui in Scotland who normally trained heroes in warfare particularly Laegaire and Conall she was the daughter of Domnall Mildemail 48 The Gallizenae edit nbsp Location of Ile de Sein in the Atlantic OceanAccording to classical authors the Gallizenae or Gallisenae were virgin priestesses of the Ile de Sein off Pointe du Raz Finistere western Brittany 53 Their existence was first mentioned by the Greek geographer Artemidorus Ephesius and later by the Greek historian Strabo who wrote that their island was forbidden to men but the women came to the mainland to meet their husbands Which deities they honored is unknown 54 According to Pomponius Mela the Gallizenae acted as both councilors and practitioners of the healing arts Sena in the Britannic Sea opposite the coast of the Osismi is famous for its oracle of a Gaulish god whose priestesses living in the holiness of perpetual virginity are said to be nine in number They call them Gallizenae and they believe them to be endowed with extraordinary gifts to rouse the sea and the wind by their incantations to turn themselves into whatsoever animal form they may choose to cure diseases which among others are incurable to know what is to come and to foretell it They are however devoted to the service of voyagers only who have set out on no other errand than to consult them 55 56 57 Druidesses in Gaul edit According to the Historia Augusta Alexander Severus received a prophecy about his death from a Gallic druidess druiada 58 The work also has Aurelian questioning druidesses about the fate of his descendants to which they answered in favor of Claudius II 59 Flavius Vopiscus is also quoted as recalling a prophecy received by Diocletian from a druidess of the Tungri 60 Sources on druid beliefs and practices editGreek and Roman records edit nbsp Druids Inciting the Britons to oppose the landing of the Romans from Cassell s History of England Vol I anonymous author and artistsThe earliest surviving literary evidence of druids emerges from the classical world of Greece and Rome Archaeologist Stuart Piggott compared the attitude of the Classical authors toward the druids as being similar to the relationship that had existed in the 15th and 18th centuries between Europeans and the societies that they were just encountering in other parts of the world such as the Americas and the South Sea Islands He highlighted the attitude of primitivism in both Early Modern Europeans and Classical authors owing to their perception that these newly encountered societies had less technological development and were backward in socio political development 61 Historian Nora Chadwick in a categorization subsequently adopted by Piggott divided the Classical accounts of the druids into two groups distinguished by their approach to the subject as well as their chronological contexts She calls the first of these groups the Posidonian tradition after one of its primary exponents Posidonious and notes that it takes a largely critical attitude towards the Iron Age societies of Western Europe that emphasizes their barbaric qualities The second of these two groups is termed the Alexandrian group being centred on the scholastic traditions of Alexandria Egypt she notes that it took a more sympathetic and idealized attitude toward these foreign peoples 62 Piggott drew parallels between this categorisation and the ideas of hard primitivism and soft primitivism identified by historians of ideas A O Lovejoy and Franz Boas 63 One school of thought has suggested that all of these accounts are inherently unreliable and might be entirely fictional They have suggested that the idea of the druid might have been a fiction created by Classical writers to reinforce the idea of the barbaric other who existed beyond the civilized Greco Roman world thereby legitimizing the expansion of the Roman Empire into these areas 64 The earliest record of the druids comes from two Greek texts of c 300 BCE a history of philosophy written by Sotion of Alexandria and a study of magic widely attributed to Aristotle Both texts are now lost but are quoted in the 2nd century CE work Vitae by Diogenes Laertius 65 Some say that the study of philosophy originated with the barbarians In that among the Persians there existed the Magi and among the Babylonians or Assyrians the Chaldaei among the Indians the Gymnosophistae and among the Celts and Gauls men who were called druids and semnothei as Aristotle relates in his book on magic and Sotion in the twenty third book of his Succession of Philosophers Diogenes Laertius Vitae Introduction Section 1 66 Subsequent Greek and Roman texts from the 3rd century BCE refer to barbarian philosophers 67 possibly in reference to the Gaulish druids Julius Caesar edit nbsp Julius Caesar the Roman general and later dictator who wrote the most important source for the Druids in BritainThe earliest extant text that describes druids in detail is Julius Caesar s Commentarii de Bello Gallico book VI written in the 50s or 40s BCE A general who was intent on conquering Gaul and Britain Caesar described the druids as being concerned with divine worship the due performance of sacrifices private or public and the interpretation of ritual questions He said they played an important part in Gaulish society being one of the two respected classes along with the equites in Rome the name for members of a privileged class above the common people but also horsemen and that they performed the function of judges Caesar wrote that the druids recognized the authority of a single leader who would rule until his death when a successor would be chosen by vote or through conflict He remarked that they met annually at a sacred place in the region occupied by the Carnute tribe in Gaul while they viewed Britain as the centre of druidic study and that they were not found among the German tribes to the east of the Rhine According to Caesar many young men were trained to be druids during which time they had to learn all the associated lore by heart He also said that their main teaching was the souls do not perish but after death pass from one to another They were concerned with the stars and their movements the size of the cosmos and the earth the world of nature and the power and might of the immortal gods indicating they were involved with not only such common aspects of religion as theology and cosmology but also astronomy Caesar held that they were administrators during rituals of human sacrifice for which criminals were usually used and that the method was by burning in a wicker man 21 Though he had first hand experience of Gaulish people and therefore likely druids Caesar s account has been widely criticized by modern historians as inaccurate One issue raised by such historians as Fustel de Coulanges 68 was that while Caesar described the druids as a significant power within Gaulish society he did not mention them even once in his accounts of his Gaulish conquests Nor did Aulus Hirtius who continued Caesar s account of the Gallic Wars after Caesar s death Hutton believed that Caesar had manipulated the idea of the druids so they would appear both civilized being learned and pious and barbaric performing human sacrifice to Roman readers thereby representing both a society worth including in the Roman Empire and one that required civilizing with Roman rule and values thus justifying his wars of conquest 69 Sean Dunham suggested that Caesar had simply taken the Roman religious functions of senators and applied them to the druids 70 71 Daphne Nash believed it not unlikely that he greatly exaggerates both the centralized system of druidic leadership and its connection to Britain 72 Other historians have accepted that Caesar s account might be more accurate Norman J DeWitt surmised that Caesar s description of the role of druids in Gaulish society may report an idealized tradition based on the society of the 2nd century BC before the pan Gallic confederation led by the Arverni was smashed in 121 BC followed by the invasions of Teutones and Cimbri rather than on the demoralized and disunited Gaul of his own time 73 John Creighton has speculated that in Britain the druidic social influence was already in decline by the mid 1st century BCE in conflict with emergent new power structures embodied in paramount chieftains 74 Other scholars see the Roman conquest itself as the main reason for the decline of the druid orders 75 Archaeologist Miranda Aldhouse Green 2010 asserted that Caesar offered both our richest textual source regarding the druids and one of the most reliable She defended the accuracy of his accounts by highlighting that while he may have embellished some of his accounts to justify Roman imperial conquest it was inherently unlikely that he constructed a fictional class system for Gaul and Britain particularly considering that he was accompanied by a number of other Roman senators who would have also been sending reports on the conquest to Rome and who would have challenged his inclusion of serious falsifications 64 Cicero Diodorus Siculus Strabo and Tacitus edit nbsp Roman soldiers killing druids and burning their groves on Anglesey as described by TacitusOther classical writers also commented on the druids and their practices Caesar s contemporary Cicero noted that he had met a Gallic druid Divitiacus of the Aedui tribe Divitiacus supposedly knew much about the natural world and performed divination through augury 2 Whether Diviaticus was genuinely a druid can however be disputed for Caesar also knew this figure and wrote about him calling him by the more Gaulish sounding and thereby presumably the more authentic Diviciacus but never referred to him as a druid and indeed presented him as a political and military leader 76 Another classical writer to take up describing the druids not too long after was Diodorus Siculus who published this description in his Bibliotheca historicae in 36 BCE Alongside the druids or as he called them drouidas whom he viewed as philosophers and theologians he remarked how there were poets and singers in Celtic society whom he called bardous or bards 36 Such an idea was expanded on by Strabo writing in the 20s CE who declared that amongst the Gauls there were three types of honoured figures 77 the poets and singers known as bardoi the diviners and specialists in the natural world known as o vateis and those who studied moral philosophy the druidai Roman writer Tacitus himself a senator and historian described how when the Roman army led by Suetonius Paulinus attacked the island of Mona Anglesey Welsh Ynys Mon the legionaries were awestruck on landing by the appearance of a band of druids who with hands uplifted to the sky poured forth terrible imprecations on the heads of the invaders He says these terrified our soldiers who had never seen such a thing before The courage of the Romans however soon overcame such fears according to the Roman historian the Britons were put to flight and the sacred groves of Mona were cut down 78 Tacitus is also the only primary source that gives accounts of druids in Britain but maintains a hostile point of view seeing them as ignorant savages 79 Irish and Welsh records edit In the Middle Ages after Ireland and Wales were Christianized druids appear in a number of written sources mainly tales and stories such as Tain Bo Cuailnge and in the hagiographies of various saints These were all written by Christian monks Irish literature and law codes edit In Irish language literature druids draoithe plural of draoi are sorcerers with supernatural powers who are respected in society particularly for their ability to do divination Dictionary of the Irish Language defines drui which has numerous variant forms including draoi as magician wizard or diviner 80 In the literature the druids cast spells and turn people into animals or stones or curse peoples crops to be blighted 81 When druids are portrayed in early Irish sagas and saints lives set in pre Christian Ireland they are usually given high social status The evidence of the law texts which were first written down in the 7th and 8th centuries suggests that with the coming of Christianity the role of the druid in Irish society was rapidly reduced to that of a sorcerer who could be consulted to cast spells or do healing magic and that his standing declined accordingly 82 According to the early legal tract Bretha Crolige the sick maintenance due to a druid satirist and brigand diberg is no more than that due to a boaire an ordinary freeman Another law text Uraicecht Becc small primer gives the druid a place among the doer nemed or professional classes which depend for their status on a patron along with wrights blacksmiths and entertainers as opposed to the fili who alone enjoyed free nemed status 83 Welsh literature edit While druids featured prominently in many medieval Irish sources they were far rarer in their Welsh counterparts Unlike the Irish texts the Welsh term commonly seen as referring to the druids dryw was used to refer purely to prophets and not to sorcerers or pagan priests Historian Ronald Hutton noted that there were two explanations for the use of the term in Wales the first was that it was a survival from the pre Christian era when dryw had been ancient priests the second was that the Welsh had borrowed the term from the Irish as had the English who used the terms dry and drycraeft to refer to magicians and magic respectively most probably influenced by the Irish terms 84 Archaeology edit nbsp nbsp A pair of 1st century BCE spoons from England It is speculated that they were used for divination Eleven such pairs have been found 85 Miranda Green believes a liquid was put in the spoon with a hole and allowed to drip into the other below and the drip pattern interpreted 86 As the historian Jane Webster stated individual druids are unlikely to be identified archaeologically 87 A P Fitzpatrick in examining what he believed to be astral symbolism on Late Iron Age swords has expressed difficulties in relating any material culture even the Coligny calendar with druidic culture 88 Nonetheless some archaeologists have attempted to link certain discoveries with written accounts of the druids The archaeologist Anne Ross linked what she believed to be evidence of human sacrifice in Celtic pagan society such as the Lindow Man bog body to the Greco Roman accounts of human sacrifice being officiated over by the druids 89 90 Miranda Aldhouse Green professor of archaeology at Cardiff University has noted that Suetonius s army would have passed very near the site whilst traveling to deal with Boudicca and postulates that the sacrifice may have been connected 91 A 1996 discovery of a skeleton buried with advanced medical and possibly divinatory equipment has however been nicknamed the Druid of Colchester nbsp Headdress of the Deal Warrior possibly worn by druids 200 150 BCE British Museum 92 An excavated burial in Deal Kent discovered the Deal Warrior a man buried around 200 150 BCE with a sword and shield and wearing an almost unique head band too thin to be part of a leather helmet The crown is bronze with a broad band around the head and a thin strip crossing the top of the head Since traces of hair were left on the metal it must have been worn without any padding beneath The form of the headdress resembles depictions of Romano British priests from several centuries later leading to speculation among archaeologists that the man might have been a religious official a druid 93 History of reception editProhibition and decline under Roman rule edit In the Gallic Wars of 58 51 BC the Roman army led by Julius Caesar conquered the many tribal chiefdoms of Gaul and annexed it as a part of the Roman Republic According to accounts produced in the following centuries the new rulers of Roman Gaul subsequently introduced measures to wipe out the druids from that country According to Pliny the Elder writing in the 70s CE it was the emperor Tiberius ruled 14 37 CE who introduced laws banning not only druid practices and other native soothsayers and healers a move which Pliny applauded believing it would end human sacrifice in Gaul 94 A somewhat different account of Roman legal attacks on the druids was made by Suetonius writing in the 2nd century CE when he stated that Rome s first emperor Augustus ruled 27 BCE 14 CE had decreed that no one could be both a druid and a Roman citizen and that this was followed by a law passed by the later Emperor Claudius ruled 41 54 CE which thoroughly suppressed the druids by banning their religious practices 95 Possible late survival of Insular druid orders edit Further information Christianization of Ireland Christianization of Wales and Taliesin The best evidence of a druidic tradition in the British Isles is the independent cognate of the Celtic druwid in Insular Celtic The Old Irish druidecht survives in the meaning of magic and the Welsh dryw in the meaning of seer While the druids as a priestly caste were extinct with the Christianization of Wales complete by the 7th century at the latest the offices of bard and of seer Welsh dryw persisted in medieval Wales into the 13th century Classics professor Phillip Freeman discusses a later reference to dryades which he translates as druidesses writing The fourth century A D collection of imperial biographies known as the Historia Augusta contains three short passages involving Gaulish women called dryades druidesses He points out that In all of these the women may not be direct heirs of the druids who were supposedly extinguished by the Romans but in any case they do show that the druidic function of prophecy continued among the natives in Roman Gaul 96 Additionally female druids are mentioned in later Irish mythology including the legend of Fionn mac Cumhaill who according to the 12th century The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn is raised by the woman druid Bodhmall and her companion another wise woman 47 46 Christian historiography and hagiography edit The story of Vortigern as reported by Nennius gives one of the very few glimpses of possible druidic survival in Britain after the Roman arrival He wrote that after being excommunicated by Germanus of Auxerre the British leader Vortigern invited twelve druids to help him In the lives of saints and martyrs the druids are represented as magicians and diviners In Adamnan s vita of Columba two of them act as tutors to the daughters of Loegaire mac Neill the High King of Ireland at the coming of Saint Patrick They are represented as endeavouring to prevent the progress of Patrick and Saint Columba by raising clouds and mist Before the battle of Culdremne 561 CE a druid made an airbe drtiad fence of protection round one of the armies but what is precisely meant by the phrase is unclear The Irish druids seem to have had a peculiar tonsure The word drui is always used to render the Latin magus and in one passage St Columba speaks of Christ as his druid Similarly a life of Saint Beuno states that when he died he had a vision of all the saints and druids Sulpicius Severus vita of Martin of Tours relates how Martin encountered a peasant funeral carrying the body in a winding sheet which Martin mistook for some druidic rites of sacrifice because it was the custom of the Gallic rustics in their wretched folly to carry about through the fields the images of demons veiled with a white covering So Martin halted the procession by raising his pectoral cross Upon this the miserable creatures might have been seen at first to become stiff like rocks Next as they endeavoured with every possible effort to move forward but were not able to take a step farther they began to whirl themselves about in the most ridiculous fashion until not able any longer to sustain the weight they set down the dead body Then discovering his error Martin raised his hand again to let them proceed Thus the hagiographer points out he both compelled them to stand when he pleased and permitted them to depart when he thought good 97 Romanticism and later revivals edit Main articles Celtic revival and Neo Druidism nbsp Croome Court Worcestershire Druid statueFrom the 18th century England and Wales saw a revival of interest in the druids John Aubrey 1626 1697 had been the first modern writer to incorrectly connect Stonehenge and other megalithic monuments with the druids since Aubrey s views were confined to his notebooks the first wide audience for this idea were readers of William Stukeley 1687 1765 98 It is incorrectly believed that John Toland 1670 1722 founded the Ancient Druid Order however the research of historian Ronald Hutton has revealed that the ADO was founded by George Watson MacGregor Reid in 1909 99 The order never used and still does not use the title Archdruid for any member but falsely credited William Blake as having been its Chosen Chief from 1799 1827 without corroboration in Blake s numerous writings or among modern Blake scholars Blake s bardic mysticism derives instead from the pseudo Ossianic epics of Macpherson his friend Frederick Tatham s depiction of Blake s imagination clothing itself in the dark stole of moral sanctity in the precincts of Westminster Abbey it dwelt amid the druid terrors is generic rather than specifically neo druidic 100 John Toland was fascinated by Aubrey s Stonehenge theories and wrote his own book about the monument without crediting Aubrey The roles of bards in 10th century Wales had been established by Hywel Dda and it was during the 18th century that the idea arose that druids had been their predecessors 101 The 19th century idea gained from uncritical reading of the Gallic Wars that under cultural military pressure from Rome the druids formed the core of 1st century BCE resistance among the Gauls was examined and dismissed before World War II 102 though it remains current in folk history Druids began to figure widely in popular culture with the first advent of Romanticism Chateaubriand s novel Les Martyrs 1809 narrated the doomed love of a druid priestess and a Roman soldier though Chateaubriand s theme was the triumph of Christianity over pagan druids the setting was to continue to bear fruit Opera provides a barometer of well informed popular European culture in the early 19th century In 1817 Giovanni Pacini brought druids to the stage in Trieste with an opera to a libretto by Felice Romani about a druid priestess La Sacerdotessa d Irminsul The Priestess of Irminsul Vincenzo Bellini s druidic opera Norma was a fiasco at La Scala when it premiered the day after Christmas 1831 but in 1833 it was a hit in London For its libretto Felice Romani reused some of the pseudo druidical background of La Sacerdotessa to provide colour to a standard theatrical conflict of love and duty The story was similar to that of Medea as it had recently been recast for a popular Parisian play by Alexandre Soumet the chaste goddess casta diva addressed in Norma s hit aria is the moon goddess worshipped in the grove of the Irmin statue nbsp Edward Williams known for his bardic name Iolo Morganwg A central figure in 19th century Romanticist Neo druid revival is Welshman Edward Williams better known as Iolo Morganwg His writings published posthumously as The Iolo Manuscripts 1849 and Barddas 1862 are not considered credible by contemporary scholars Williams said that he had collected ancient knowledge in a Gorsedd of Bards of the Isles of Britain he had organized While bits and pieces of the Barddas still turn up in some Neo Druidic works the documents are not considered relevant to ancient practice by most scholars Another Welshman William Price 4 March 1800 23 January 1893 a physician known for his support of Welsh nationalism Chartism and his involvement with the Neo Druidic religious movement has been recognized as a significant figure of 19th century Wales He was arrested for cremating his deceased son a practice he believed to be a druid ritual but won his case this in turn led to the Cremation Act 1902 103 104 105 In 1927 T D Kendrick sought to dispel the pseudo historical aura that had accrued to druids 106 asserting a prodigious amount of rubbish has been written about Druidism 107 Neo druidism has nevertheless continued to shape public perceptions of the historical druids Some strands of contemporary Neo Druidism are a continuation of the 18th century revival and thus are built largely around writings produced in the 18th century and after by second hand sources and theorists Some are monotheistic Others such as the largest druid group in the world the Order of Bards Ovates and Druids draw on a wide range of sources for their teachings Members of such Neo Druid groups may be Neopagan occultist Christian or non specifically spiritual Modern scholarship edit nbsp Druidic Ceremony for the Autumn Equinox on top of Primrose Hill in London EnglandIn the 20th century as new forms of textual criticism and archaeological methods were developed allowing for greater accuracy in understanding the past various historians and archaeologists published books on the subject of the druids and came to their own conclusions Archaeologist Stuart Piggott author of The Druids 1968 accepted the Greco Roman accounts and considered the druids to be a barbaric and savage priesthood who performed human sacrifices 108 This view was largely supported by another archaeologist Anne Ross author of Pagan Celtic Britain 1967 and The Life and Death of a Druid Prince 1989 though she believed that they were essentially tribal priests having more in common with the shamans of tribal societies than with the classical philosophers 109 Ross views were largely accepted by two other prominent archaeologists to write on the subject Miranda Aldhouse Green 110 author of The Gods of the Celts 1986 Exploring the World of the Druids 1997 and Caesar s Druids Story of an Ancient Priesthood 2010 and Barry Cunliffe author of Iron Age Communities in Britain 1991 and The Ancient Celts 1997 111 See also editList of druids and neo druidsReferences edit de Montfaucon Bernard Antiquitas explanatione et schematibus illustrata vol ii part ii book V p 436 a b Cicero 44 I XVI 90 Tacitus XIV 30 Pliny c 78 XVI 249 Mac Mathuna Liam 1999 Irish Perceptions of the Cosmos PDF Celtica 23 174 187 esp 181 Hutton 2009 pp 32 37 The Druids The British Museum Archived from the original on 25 February 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2016 a b Piggott 1968 p 89 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles eds Druides A Latin Dictionary via Perseus project a b c d e Caroline aan de Wiel Druids 3 the word in Celtic Culture full citation needed Liddell Henry George Scott Robert eds Droyidhs A Greek English Lexicon via Perseus project Pokorny Julius ed Dryidhs Indogermanisches etymologisches Worterbuch via Perseus project deru The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Indo European Roots Fourth ed 2000 Archived from the original on 2008 07 26 Proto IE deru a cognate to English tree is the word for oak though the root has a wider array of meanings related to to be firm solid steadfast whence e g English true weid The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Indo European Roots Fourth ed 2000 Archived from the original on 2008 07 26 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert eds drῦs A Greek English Lexicon via Perseus project List of ancient Greek words ending in idhs Perseus project Gwerin www gwerin com What is oak in Welsh What is the Welsh word for oak Gweiadur www gweiadur com Retrieved 2023 09 19 Speight Harry 1898 Chronicles and stories of old Bingley A full account of the history antiquities natural productions scenery customs and folklore of the ancient town and parish of Bingley in the West Riding of Yorkshire University of California Libraries London Elliot Stock o Cuiv Brian 1980 Some Gaelic traditions about the wren Eigse 18 43 66 Wallace Patrick F O Floinn Raghnall eds 2002 Treasures of the National Museum of Ireland Irish Antiquities Dublin Gill amp Macmillan pp 88 89 100 101 ISBN 0 7171 2829 6 There are nine surviving gorget collars seven in the National Museum of Ireland all dating from the late Bronze Age 800 700 BCE a b c Caesar Julius De bello gallico VI 13 18 Hutton 2007 pp 44 45 Melrose Robin 2016 Religion in Britain from the Megaliths to Arthur An Archaeological and Mythological Exploration McFarland p 10 Morritt Robert D 2010 Echoes from the Greek Bronze Age An Anthology of Greek Thought in the Classical Age Cambridge Scholars Publisher p 16 Bendix Regina 1992 Diverging Paths in the Scientific Search for Authenticity Journal of Folklore Research 29 2 103 132 Pomponius Mela iii 2 18 19 o hogain Daithi 1999 The Sacred Isle Belief and Religion in Pre Christian Ireland Boydell Press p 88 Caesar Gallic Wars vi 14 3 The Gallic War Dover Publications 2012 p 103 Reports of druids performing human sacrifice are found in the works of Lucan Pharsalia i 450 458 Caesar Gallic Wars vi 16 17 3 5 Suetonius Claudius 25 Cicero Pro Font 31 Cicero De Rep 9 15 cited after Norman J DeWitt The Druids and Romanization Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 69 1938 319 332 p 321 note 4 Brunaux Jean Louis 2001 Gallic Blood Rites Archaeology 54 2 Brunaux Jean Louis 2002 Le Santuaire gaulois de Gournay sur Aronde Bulletin of the Archaeological and Historical Company of Boulounge Conchy Hainvillers 56 Hutton Ronald 2007 The Druids London Hambledon Continuum pp 133 134 Rives J 1995 Human sacrifice among pagans and Christians Journal of Roman Studies 85 85 doi 10 2307 301058 JSTOR 301058 S2CID 162727470 full citation needed Chadwick 1966 pp xviii 28 91 a b Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historicae V 21 22 Donald A Mackenzie Buddhism in pre Christian Britain 1928 21 Kendrick T D 2013 The Druids A Study in Celtic Prehistory Taylor amp Francis p 75 Heroic Romances of Ireland Vol I Sacred texts com Retrieved December 24 2011 Also spelled Amairgin Amorgen Aimhirghin Gods and Fighting Men Part I Part I Book III The Landing Lebor Gabala Erenn 65 95 Archived 2010 07 06 at the Wayback Machine Maighread C Ni Dobs Tochomlad mac Miledh a hEspain i nErind no Cath Tailten Archived 2007 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Etudes Celtiques v II Paris Librairie E Droz 1937 Geoffrey Keating Foas Feasa ar Eirinn 1 21 22 23 Drui Dictionary of the Irish Language eDIL Royal Irish Academy RIA Retrieved 11 February 2016 1c dialt feminine declension Auraic 1830 bandrui druidess female skilled in magic arts tri ferdruid tri bandruid TBC 2402 di leg tri druid insin a teora mna TBC 1767 a b Parkes Fosterage Kinship amp Legend Cambridge University Press Comparative Studies in Society and History 2004 46 pp 587 615 a b Jones Mary The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn mac Cumhaill Archived 2018 04 06 at the Wayback Machine From maryjones us Retrieved July 22 2008 a b c d MacKillop James 1998 Dictionary of Celtic Mythology London Oxford ISBN 0 19 860967 1 page numbers needed O Donovan John ed amp trans Annala Rioghachta Eireann Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters Vol 1 1856 pp 18 21 footnote S T W Rolleston Myths and Legends of the Celtic Race 1911 pp 109 112 The Metrical Dindshenchas celt ucc ie O Boyle p 150 Gallizenae oi OxfordIndex Oxford University Press MacCulloch J A 2009 The Religion of the Ancient Celts Auckland N Z Floating Press p 405 ISBN 9781775414018 via Google Books Pomponius Mela Parthey ed De Chorographia iii chap 6 p 72 Courthope William John 1897 A History of English Poetry London U K Macmillan p 116 via Google Books Rhys John 1901 Chapter V The Fenodyree and his Friends Celtic Folklore Welsh and Manx Clarendon Press Historia Augusta Vita Alex Sev 60 6 Historia Augusta Vit Aurel 44 3 Historia Augusta Vita Car Numer Carin 14 Piggott 1975 p 91 Piggott 1975 pp 91 92 Piggott 1975 p 92 a b Aldhouse Green 2010 p xv Diogenes Laertius Vitae Introduction section 1 Diogenes Laertius Lives of the Philosophers Thales translated by C D Yonge classicpersuasion org Webster Jane 1999 At the end of the world Druidic and other revitalization movements in post conquest Gaul and Britain Britannia 30 1 20 2 4 doi 10 2307 526671 JSTOR 526671 S2CID 162214983 Twenty references are presented in tabular form de Coulanges Fustel 1891 La Gaule romaine Paris p 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hutton 2009 pp 04 05 Dunham Sean B 1995 Caesar s perception of Gallic social structures In Arnold Bettina Gibson D Blair eds Celtic Chiefdom Celtic State Cambridge Cambridge University Press Maier Bernhard 2003 The Celts Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 65 66 Nash Daphne 1976 Reconstructing Posidonius s Celtic ethnography Britannia 7 126 doi 10 2307 525767 JSTOR 525767 S2CID 162816167 DeWitt 1938 p 324 ff Creighton 1995 Visions of power Imagery and symbols in Late Iron Age Britain Britannia 26 285 301 especially 296ff doi 10 2307 526880 JSTOR 526880 S2CID 154772745 Webster Jane 1999 At the end of the world Druidic and other revitalization movements in post conquest Gaul and Britain Britannia 30 1 20 doi 10 2307 526671 JSTOR 526671 S2CID 162214983 with full bibliography Hutton 2009 p 5 Strabo Geographica IV 4 4 5 Tacitus 14 30 Rutherford 1978 p 45 Drui Dictionary of the Irish Language eDIL Royal Irish Academy RIA Retrieved 11 February 2016 An Encyclopaedia of Architecture Historical Theoretical and Practical Joseph Gwilt Free Download Borrow and Streaming Internet Archive Retrieved 2020 08 27 Kelly A Guide to Early Irish Law pp 59 60 Kelly A Guide to Early Irish Law p 60 Hutton 2009 p 47 The Penbryn Spoons The Ashmolean Museum Oxford Google Arts amp Culture spoon collection database British Museum 1856 0701 1369 Webster 1999 p 6 Fitzpatrick A P 1996 Night and Day The symbolism of astral signs on Late Iron Age anthropomorphic short swords Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 62 373 398 doi 10 1017 s0079497x0000284x S2CID 193073394 Ross Anne 1986 Lindow Man and the Celtic tradition In Stead I M Bourke J B Brothwell D eds Lindow Man The Body in the Bog pp 162 169 Ross Anne Robins Don 1989 The Life and Death of a Druid Prince ISBN 9780671695361 full citation needed The Druids programmes BBC 20 September 2012 Skull and crown of the Deal Warrior British Museum Skull and crown of the Deal Warrior British Museum Highlights Pliny XXX 13 Suetonius Claudius XXV 5 Freeman Phillip October 2002 War Women amp Druids Eyewitness reports and early accounts University of Texas Press pp 49 50 ISBN 978 0 292 72545 4 Knuth E Hagiography csbsju edu The modern career of this imagined connection of druids and Stonehenge was traced and dispelled in T D Kendrick The Druids A Study in Keltic Prehistory London Methuen 1927 Parker Pearson Michael 2023 Stonehenge a brief history London Bloomsbury Academic p 136 ISBN 9781350192232 Tatham is quoted by C H Collins Baker William Blake Painter The Huntington Library Bulletin No 10 October 1936 pp 135 148 p 139 Ancient Druids of Wales National Museum of Wales Archived from the original on 2012 01 17 Retrieved 2011 09 03 DeWitt Norman J 1938 The Druids and Romanization Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 69 319 332 doi 10 2307 283182 JSTOR 283182 Few historians now believe that the Druids as a corporation constituted an effective anti Roman element during the period of Caesar s conquests and in the period of early Roman Gaul His inspection of the seemingly contradictory literary sources reinforced the stated conclusion Price William Dr Llantrisant papers Archives Network Wales May 2003 Retrieved 2006 09 27 Powell 2005 p 3 Hutton 2009 p 253 Kendrick T D 1927 The Druids A study in Keltic prehistory London U K Methuen Kendrick 1927 viii Piggott 1968 pp 92 98 Ross 1967 pp 52 56 Aldhouse Green 1997 pp 31 33 Cunliffe 2005 pp 518 520 Bibliography edit Classical sources Caesar Gallic Wars book 6 ch 13 18 Cicero De Divinatione 44 CE Pliny the Elder Naturalis Historia c 78 CE Tacitus Annales Second century CE book 14 ch 30 Bibliography other sources Aldhouse Green Miranda 1997 Exploring the World of the Druids London Thames and Hudson ISBN 9780500050835 Chadwick Nora 1966 The Druids Cardiff University of Wales Press Cunliffe Barry 2005 Iron Age Communities in Britain An account of England Scotland and Wales from the seventh century BC until the Roman Conquest Fourth Edition London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 56292 8 Hutton Ronald 1991 The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles Their Nature and Legacy Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 18946 7 Hutton Ronald 2007 The Druids London Hambledon Continuum Hutton Ronald 2009 Blood and Mistletoe The History of the Druids in Britain New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14485 7 Rutherford Ward 1978 The Druids and their Heritage London Gordon amp Cremonesi ISBN 978 0 86033 067 7 Ross Anne 1967 Pagan Celtic Britain London Routledge Piggott Stuart 1968 The Druids London Thames and Hudson External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Druid World History Encyclopedia Druid Quiggin Edmund Crosby 1911 Druidism Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed pp 597 598 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Druid amp oldid 1186074494, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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