Druidism in history

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Re: Druidism in history
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Post # 5
Hutton's book is wonderful. I would also highly recommend A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE DRUIDS by Peter Beresford Ellis.
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Re: Druidism in history
By: / Novice
Post # 6
I would just like to point out that there were things left for us to gather information , however it is minute. There are scriptures of ogham in Ireland on stone tablets that are stuck in the ground. Oral tradion did carry on for bards sung songs of lore and mythology relating to the beliefs of the Irish and welsh druids. There are altered versions of myths by the Christian monks in 10-13 century monks , such as the Arthurian saga. And lastly actual folklore and oral lore in small villages.
Now I'm not well versed I'm Scottish, English or Gaulish mythology nor their priestly class.
I guess for us as archeologists and historians there is very little on them as we know of today - anything could be found and un earthed to solve the mstery.I again I guess it counts about what you think is classed as evidence and historical.
I can't stress enough that acknowledge that there is very little knowledge of them in comparison to other priestly orders.
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Re: Druidism in history
By: Moderator / Adept
Post # 7

As far as ogham goes, the only surviving ogham inscriptions in Ireland are either boundary markers or stones raised to commemorate some famous person. Ogham didn't come into being until after the Roman alphabet reached the British Isles, the druids never used it for writing. By the time ogham came into being the druids were gone.

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Re: Druidism in history
By: / Novice
Post # 8
I'd imagine that the commemorative stones would hold some religious value?
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Re: Druidism in history
By: Moderator / Adept
Post # 9
Do you think all stones have some religious,or magical, value?
There are thousands of statues of famous people, many of them carved in stone; they have no such meaning. In my nearest town there is a statue of the comedian Ernie Wise. It is stone, and has no religious meaning whatsoever!
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Re: Druidism in history
By: / Novice
Post # 10
No I don't but for the Celts who wrote very little , next to nothing down for them to inscribe something on stone must, mean what ever is inscribed must be of some great value to them. Comparing them to other cultures , which is the best we can do , religion was very important and often it was the thing that headed progress and development.
And I'm not an exactly an animist but I hold some values along that line, so I would find stone carvings sacred for the sense it is of the earth and that a spirit of the earth may reside there. Like all natural things.
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Re: Druidism in history
By: / Novice
Post # 11
I would argue that, whilst certainly not all, there are a great many sacred stones to the Celtic faith. The Lia Fail is perhaps one of the oldest monuments in Ireland attesting to the Celtic faith which is ultimately little more that a large rock. Additionally stones were often used both in henge construction and decorative carvings and although such structures may or may not be linked to the Druids they are almost certainly linked to the Celts.

However I would caution against using ogham as a religious sign as we actually have little evidence of that at all. As Lark said the only surviving ogham stones that we've uncovered so far are those donating ownership and graves. Although In Lebor Ogaim indicates that they were used in a religious setting the book was not written for many many years after the decline of ogham and it's likely the book was guessing at some uses rather than listing them. Ultimately even if used religiously ogham didn't arrive until a few hundred years after records on the druids end so even if used in a religious Celtic setting they're unlikely to be involved with druidry even if related to Celtic Paganism.

As for what we do know the answer is sadly very little, we know a bit about Celtic paganism, although largely from roman, christian and proto-christian accounts which have a degree of unreliability about them due to the fact that the scribing culture inherently dissogreed with the one they were writing on. The other form of perhaps more reliable accounts reaches us in the form of archaeological evidence however this is sadly so thin that it's open to a great many interpretations and again it's difficult to tell if the remains we have today were related to the druids or is simply a Celtic artifact from around the same era.
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Re: Druidism in history
By:
Post # 12
Well, They did leave behind arcitecture though, thats at least something we have that still exists
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Re: Druidism in history
By: Moderator / Adept
Post # 13
Architecture? I thought this thread was about Druids, not Celts!
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Re: Druidism in history
By:
Post # 14
What exactly being a druid back then meant, you will probably never be able to find out because there are no concrete text or stones or anything else that tells anything definitive. The most concrete thing I can think of would be Stonehenge which was actually just one of two structures of the old beliefs. Stonehenge is thought to be a place for the ancestors and the people of the region would pay their respects there. Of course that is only one theory, and even though it is the most concrete one that I know of, it is still not established fact.

Druids of today revere nature based on the viewpoints held by people of today on what druids were in history. If you want to learn more, I suggest reading the books listed by the other posters and doing some research. I know National Geographic has a pretty interesting documentary on Stonehenge that seems to tie into Druidism a bit, so maybe you could look that up too.
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