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The Celts

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In Celtic religious society, the Druids ranked highest, followed by the Bards, ... This is one reason they might have so readily accepted Christianity. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Celts


1
The Celts
  • The Last Ancient Pagan Peoples

2
Who Were the Celts?
  • The Celts were a semi-nomadic people of
    Indo-European descent.
  • One reason we dont have a lot of record of them
    is because they were constantly fighting amongst
    themselves.
  • The first Celts were thought to have lived in
    Austria and Germany.
  • Digs have unearthed graves there dating to about
    700 BCE
  • The Celts dont move to Britain and Ireland until
    about 350 BCE
  • The Celts were a loose nation of tribes lead by
    warlord kings.

3
Celtic Beliefs
  • There are no Celtic churches. Rather, these
    people believed that their gods were living in
    the natural world around them.
  • In Celtic religious society, the Druids ranked
    highest, followed by the Bards, who kept oral
    tradition.
  • The symbol of the Druid is the serpent or snake,
    which symbolized wisdom.
  • When St. Patrick comes to Ireland, he does not
    rid the land of snakes he rids it of the
    Druids.
  • There is no holy book associated with the Celts.
    They were non-literate, and therefore what we
    know of them is through oral tradition.

4
Celtic History
  • Celtic traditions were not written down until the
    11th and 12th centuries.
  • This means a Christian monk would have
    transcribed the tales, not an actual Celtic
    Druid. They would all be dead by now.
  • Stonehenge is NOT a Druidic creation! It
    actually pre-dates the Celtic arrival to the
    British Isles by about 2,000 years. The Druids
    then took over the site for themselves!

5
Death and Dying
  • Evidence in Celtic graves suggest a belief in the
    afterlife. Corpses were often buried with food
    and weapons.
  • The Druids practiced human sacrifice. They would
    strangle the victim, then sever the jugular.
    After draining the blood from the victim, they
    would attempt to divine the future by staring
    into a bowl of blood.
  • This is one reason they might have so readily
    accepted Christianity. The sacrifice of Jesus
    closely relates to their own belief systems.
  • Sometimes, the Celts would bury the dead with
    golden coins meant to represent the sun to
    provide the dead with light in the afterlife.

6
Holidays
  • Many current holiday traditions stem from ancient
    Celtic traditions.
  • The use of the colors red and green stem from the
    Celtic use of the holly plant, which remains red
    and green all year, even when winter is at its
    darkest.
  • The symbols of chicks and bunnies at Easter come
    from the fertility symbols the Celts used during
    their Beltane (May Day) celebrations.

7
Halloween
  • Halloween is actually the Celtic New Year, known
    as Samhain.
  • During this time of year, the veil between the
    living and the dead thins, and its believed
    spirits roam the earth.
  • Halloween costumes were meant to confuse the
    spirits so they would not recognize the living
    from the dead.
  • The Christians created All Souls Day in response
    to this custom.

8
The Gods and Goddesses
  • Because so little survived regarding Celtic lore,
    it is difficult to piece together who was in
    their pantheon.
  • There is a god named Cernunnos, who has the
    hooves of a goat and the horns of a stag. He is
    known as the Horned One and eventually becomes
    equated with the Christian devil.
  • There is an unnamed goddess who is shown in three
    parts a young maiden, a mother and an old woman,
    supposedly representing the three phases of life

9
Brigid
  • Irish goddess of fertility and war
  • Presides over fire, blacksmiths, poetry and
    wisdom
  • Became confused with St. Brigid (450-523 CE) who
    put out her eyes to prevent an arranged marriage
  • Both Brigid and St. Brigid are said to be keepers
    of a healing fire which purifies the spirit

10
Works Cited
  • Davis, Kenneth C. Dont Know Much About
    Mythology. New York Harper, 2006.
  • Gill, Elaine and David Everett. Celtic
    Pilgrimages Sites, Seasons and Saints. London
    Blanford, 1997.
  • MacCana, Proinsias. Celtic Mythology. New York
    Hamlyn Publishing, 1970.
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