Celt
This article is about the European people. For the tool, see celt (tool).The term
Celt, normally pronounced // (see
below), refers to a member of any of a number of peoples in Europe using the
Celtic languages, which form a branch of
Indo-European languages, as well as others whose language is unknown but where associated cultural traits such as
Celtic art are found in
archaeological evidence. Historical theories were developed that these factors were indicative of a common origin, but later theories of culture spreading to differing indigenous peoples have recently been supported by some genetic studies.
Though the spread of the
Roman empire led to continental Celts adopting
Roman culture, the development of
Celtic Christianity in
Ireland and
Britain brought an early
medieval renaissance of Celtic art between
400 and
1200.
Antiquarian interest from the
17th century led to the term
Celt being extended, and rising
nationalism brought Celtic revivals from the
19th century in areas where the use of Celtic languages had continued.
Today,
"Celtic" is often used to describe the languages and respective cultures of
Ireland,
Scotland,
Wales,
Cornwall, the
Isle of Man and the
French region of
Brittany (see the
Modern Celts article), but corresponds more accurately to the
Celtic language family - of which six languages are spoken today (Manx and Cornish being recent revivals):
Irish,
Scottish Gaelic and
Manx (
Goidelic languages) and
Welsh,
Breton and
Cornish (
Brythonic languages).
Only in the last two decades of the twentieth century did multidisciplinary studies come to bear upon the history of the Celts. Disciplines such as ancient history, palaeolinguistics, archaeology, history of art, anthropology, population genetics, history of religion, ethnology, mythology and folklore studies should all be taken into consideration and their findings compared one with another, without falling into the fallacies of what John Collis (2003) has termed the "continuous circular argument" (Lorrio and Zapatero).
The first literary reference to the Celtic people, as
keltoi is by the
Greek historian Hecataeus in
517 BC. He locates the
Keltoi tribe in Rhenania (West/Southwest Germany). According to
Greek mythology,
Celtus was the son of
Heracles and
Keltine, the daughter of
Bretannus. Celtus became the primogenitor of Celts
["Celtine, daughter of Bretannus, fell in love with Heracles 1 and hid away his kine (the cattle of Geryon) refusing to give them back to him unless he would first content her. From Celtus 1 the Celtic race derived their name." ]. In Latin
Celta came in turn from
Herodotus' word for the Gauls,
Keltoi. The Romans used
Celtae to refer to continental Gauls, but apparently not to
Insular Celts, which were divided into
Goidhels and
Britons, and possibly other peoples.
The term in English
The English word is modern, attested from
1707 in the writings of
Edward Lhuyd whose work, along with that of other late
17th century scholars, brought academic attention to the languages and history of the original inhabitants of Great Britain.
[(Lhuyd, p. 290) Lhuyd, E. "Archaeologia Britannica; An account of the languages, histories, and customs of the original inhabitants of Great Britain." (reprint ed.) Irish University Press, 1971. ISBN 0716500310]In the
18th century the interest in "
primitivism" which led to the idea of the "
noble savage" brought a wave of enthusiasm for all things "Celtic". The antiquarian
William Stukeley pictured a race of "Ancient Britons" putting up the "Temples of the Ancient Celts" such as
Stonehenge before he decided in 1733 to recast the Celts in his book as
Druids. The
Ossian fables written by
James Macpherson and portrayed as ancient
Scottish Gaelic language poems added to this romantic enthusiasm. The "Irish revival" came after the
Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829 as a conscious attempt to demonstrate an Irish national identity, and with its counterpart in other countries subsequently became the "Celtic revival".
[*Lloyd and Jenifer Laing. Art of the Celts, Thames and Hudson, London 1992 ISBN 0-500-20256-7]Nowadays "Celt" and "Celtic" are usually pronounced and (see
IPA) when referring to the ethnic group and its languages. The pronunciation is occasionally used in this context, but is mainly restricted to the names of certain sports teams (eg. the
NBA team,
Boston Celtics, and the
SPL side,
Celtic F.C., in
Glasgow).
["The pronunciation of the word remains ambiguous, however, a conflict between its Greek root, keltoi, and its path through French, where celtique is pronounced with a soft c: 'sell-TEEK'. Although many dictionaries, including the OED, prefer the soft c pronunciation, most students of Celtic culture prefer the hard c: 'KELL-tik', in acknowledgement of its Greek origin." MacKillop, J. "Dictionary of Celtic Mythology." New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0198691572]Modern uses
In a historical context, the terms "Celt" and "Celtic" can be used in several senses: they can denote peoples speaking Celtic languages; the peoples of
prehistoric and early historic Europe who shared common cultural traits which are thought to have originated in the
Hallstatt and
La Tène cultures; or the peoples known to the Greeks as Keltoi, to the Romans as Celtae and to either by cognate terms such as Gallae or Galatae. The extent to which each of these meanings refers to the same group of people is a matter of considerable debate.
In a modern context, the term "Celt" or "Celtic" can be used to denote peoples speaking Celtic languages and descendents of such peoples. There are six modern nations typically defined as 'Celtic Nations'. To be defined as a Celtic nation, that nation must possess a Celtic language, although this need not be the language of the majority: this is in fact no longer the case in any of the six. The six nations usually considered Celtic are
Ireland,
Wales,
Scotland,
Cornwall, the
Isle of Man, and
Brittany.
Galicia is also often considered a Celtic nation as a Celtic language still survives in people and places names, while
Asturias is sometimes considered to be a modern Celtic nation based on the survival of Celtic traditions similar to the traditions of other Celtic nations; however, no Celtic language has survived in either.
England likewise retains some Celtic influences yet hasn't retained a Celtic language (even Cornwall became fully English-speaking during the 18th century) and is thus not categorised as a Celtic nation.
Cornish aside, the last attested Celtic language native to England was
Cumbric, spoken in Cumbria and southern Scotland and which may have survived until the
13th century, but was most likely dead by the
eleventh. As in the case of Cornish, there have been recent attempts to revive it, although the evidence upon which this is based is slight in the extreme. Another area of Europe associated with the Celts is
France, which traces its roots to the
Gauls. In Scotland, the
Gaelic language traces at least some of its roots to
migration and settlement by the Irish
Dál Riata/
Scotti. The settlement of Germanic immigrants in the lowlands — among other things &mdash reduced the spread of the Gaelic language which was supplanting Brythonic in Scotland; this has meant that Scots-Gaelic-speaking communities survive chiefly in the country's northern and western fringes in the area that comprised the Scot kingdom of Dál Riata.
"Celts" in Britain
The use of the word 'Celtic' as a valid
umbrella term for the pre-Roman peoples of
Britain has been challenged by many writers â€" including
Simon James, formerly of the
British Museum. His book
The Atlantic Celts - Ancient People Or Modern Invention? makes the point that the
Romans never used the term 'Celtic' in reference to the peoples of the
Atlantic archipelago, i.e. the
British Isles and
Ireland, and points out that the modern term "Celt" was coined as a useful umbrella term in the early
18th century to distinguish the non-English inhabitants of the
archipelago when
England united with
Scotland in
1707 to create the
Kingdom of Great Britain and the later union of
Great Britain and
Ireland as the
United Kingdom in 1800.
Nationalists in
Scotland,
Ireland and
Wales looked for a way to differentiate themselves from England and assert their right to independence. James then argues that, despite the obvious linguistic connections,
archaeology does not suggest a united Celtic culture and that the term is misleading, no more (or less) meaningful than 'Western European' would be today.
Miranda Green, author of
Celtic Goddesses, describes archaeologists as finding "a certain homogeneity" in the traditions in the area of Celtic habitation including Britain and Ireland â€" She sees the inhabitants of the British Isles and Ireland as having become thoroughly Celticized by the time of the Roman arrival, mainly through spread of culture rather than a movement of people.
In his book
Iron Age Britain,
Barry Cunliffe concludes that "...there is no evidence in the British Isles to suggest that a population group of any size migrated from the continent in the first millennium BC...". Modern archaeological thought tends to disparage the idea of large population movements without facts to back them up, a caution which appears to be vindicated by some genetic studies. In other words, Celtic culture in the Atlantic Archipelago and continental Europe could have emerged through the peaceful convergence of local tribal cultures bound together by networks of
trade and
kinship — not by war and conquest. This type of peaceful
convergence and
cooperation is actually relatively common among tribal peoples; other well known examples of the phenomenon include the
Six Nations of the
Iroquois League and the
Nuer of
East Africa. He argues that the ancient Celts are thus best depicted as a loose and highly diverse collection of indigenous tribal societies bound together by trade, a common
druidic religion, and similar political institutions — but each having its own local language and traditions.
Michael Morse in the conclusion of his book
How the Celts came to Britain concedes that the concepts of a broad Celtic linguistic area and recognizably Celtic art have their uses, but argues that the term implies a greater unity than existed. Despite such problems he suggests that the term Celt is probably too deep-rooted to be replaced and — what is more important — it has the definition that we choose to give it. The problem is that the wider public reads into the term quite
anachronistic concepts of ethnic unity that no one on either side in the academic debate holds.
Population genetics
With the information gathered recently by population
geneticists, it is becoming increasingly clear that the old idea of large-scale replacement by newer invaders is sometimes a misleading concept. The Celtic ethnicity debate took off at a particularly early stage in population genetic studies which is a science still in its very early stages of development. Taking this into account along with the fact that these limited studies are dealing only with particular sections of DNA (eg.
MtDNA,
Y chromosome; no studies can currently be carried out regarding
X chromosome inheritance), the results can not be considered conclusive in any way.
In his book
Neanderthal, archaeologist Douglas Palmer refers to genetic research conducted across Europe, then states the original modern genetic group in Europe arrived between 9,000 and 5,000 years ago with the spread of
farming, displacing the earlier
hunter gatherer populations. Such displacement occurred by population explosion, since farming is capable of supporting up to 60 times greater population than the hunter-gatherer lifestyle in the same area:
"None of Europe's subsequent historic upheavals - even catastrophic wars and famines - has seriously dented the old pattern set by the influx of farmers. The Goths, Huns and Romans have come and gone without any significant impact on the ancient gene map of Europe".
The
Y-chromosomes of populations of the so called Celtic countries have been found in one study to primarily belong to
haplogroup R1B, which makes them descendants partially of the first people to migrate into north-western Europe after the last major
ice age. According to the most recently published studies of European haplogroups, around half of the current male population of that portion of
Eurasia is a descendant of the R1B haplogroup.
 |
The green area suggests a possible extent of (proto-)Celtic influence around 1000 BC. The orange area shows the region of birth of the La Tène style. The red area indicates an idea of the possible region of Celtic influence around 400 BC. |
The Celtic language family is a branch of the larger
Indo-European family, which leads some scholars to a hypothesis that the original speakers of the Celtic proto-language may have arisen in the
Pontic-
Caspian steppes (see
Kurgan). However, as speakers of Celtic languages enter history from around
600 BC, they are already split into several languages groups, and spread over much of Central Europe, the
Iberian peninsula,
Ireland and
Britain, and studies now suggest that some of the Celtic peoples - including the ancestors of all the modern Celtic nations - had a largely
pre-Celtic genetic ancestry, shared with the
Basque people and possibly going back to the Palaeolithic
["In April last year, research for a BBC programme on the Vikings revealed strong genetic links between the Welsh and Irish Celts and the Basques of northern Spain and south France.It suggested a possible link between the Celts and Basques, dating back tens of thousands of years." English and Welsh are races apart].
Some scholars think that the
Urnfield culture represents an origin for the Celts as a distinct cultural branch of the Indo-European family. This culture was preeminent in central
Europe during the late
Bronze Age, from ca.
1200 BC until
700 BC, itself following the
Unetice and
Tumulus cultures. The Urnfield period saw a dramatic increase in population in the region, probably due to innovations in technology and agricultural practices. The spread of
iron-working led to the development of the
Hallstatt culture directly from the Urnfield (c.
700 to
500 BC).
Proto-Celtic, the latest common ancestor of all known Celtic languages, is considered by this school of thought to have been spoken at the time of the late Urnfield or early Hallstatt cultures, in the early
first millennium BC.
The spread of the Celtic languages to Britain and to Iberia would have occurred during the first half of the 1st millennium, the earliest
chariot burials in Britain dating to ca.
500 BC. Over the centuries they developed into the separate
Celtiberian,
Goidelic and
Brythonic languages. Whether Goidelic and Brythonic are descended from a common Insular-Celtic language, or if they reflect two separate waves of migration is disputed. The La Tène culture, in any case, can be associated with the
Gauls, but it is entirely too late for a candidate for the Proto-Celtic culture.
The Hallstatt culture was succeeded by the
La Tène culture, and during the final stages of the
Iron Age gradually transformed into the explicitly Celtic culture of early historical times. The La Tène culture was distributed around the upper reaches of
the Danube,
Switzerland,
Austria, southern and central
Germany, northern regions of
Italy, eastern
France,
Bohemia and
Moravia, and parts of
Hungary.The technologies, decorative practices and metal-working styles of the La Tène were to be very influential on the continental Celts. The La Tène style was highly derivative from the Greek, Etruscan and Scythian decorative styles with whom the La Tène settlers frequently traded.
Additional forays into
Greece and central
Italy during the historical period did not result in settlement, though the same movement that brought Celtic invaders to Greece pushed on through to Anatolia, where they settled as the
Galatians.
As there is no archaeological evidence for large scale invasions in some of the other areas, one current school of thought holds that Celtic language and culture spread to those areas by contact rather than invasion. However, the Celtic invasions of Italy, Greece, and western Anatolia are well documented in Greek and Latin history. Examine the Map of Celtic Lands
for more information.
The indigenous populations of Britain and Ireland today may be primarily descended from the ancient peoples that have long inhabited these lands, before the coming of Celtic and later Germanic peoples, language and culture. As to the original culture and language, little is known but remnants may remain in the naming of some geographical features, such as the rivers
Clyde,
Tamar and
Thames whose etymology is unclear but may certainly derive from a pre-Celtic
substrate. By the Roman period, however, most of the inhabitants of the isles of
Ireland and
Great Britain (the
ancient Britons) were speaking
Goidelic or
Brythonic languages, close counterparts to Gallic languages spoken on the European mainland. Historians explained this as the result of successive
invasions from the European continent by diverse Celtic-speaking peoples over the course of several centuries. In
1946 the Celtic scholar
T. F. O'Rahilly published his extremely influential model of the
early history of Ireland which postulated four separate waves of Celtic invaders. What languages were spoken by the peoples
Ireland and
Britain before the arrival of the Celts is unknown.
|
Celtic dagger found in Britain. |
Later research indicated that culture had developed gradually and continuously. In Ireland little archaeological evidence was found for large intrusive groups of Celtic immigrants, suggesting to historians such as
Colin Renfrew that the native late Bronze Age inhabitants gradually absorbed European Celtic influences and language. The very few continental
La Tène culture style objects which had been found in Ireland could have been imports, the possessions of a few rich immigrants, or the result of selectively absorbing cultural influences from outside elites, further supporting this theory of cultural exchange rather than migration.
Julius Caesar wrote of people in Britain who came from Belgium (the
Belgae), but archaeological evidence which was interpreted in the
1930s as confirming this was contradicted by later interpretations. The archaelogical evidence is of substantial cultural continuity through the first millenium BCE, although with a significant overlay of selectively-adopted elements of La Tène culture. There is numismatic and other evidence of continental-style states appearing in southern England close to the end of the period possibly reflecting in part immigration by élites from various Gallic states such as those of the Belgae. However, this immigration would be far too late to account for the origins of Insular Celtic languages. In the
1970s the continuity model was taken to an extreme, popularised by
Colin Burgess in his book
The Age of Stonehenge which theorised that Celtic culture in Great Britain "emerged" rather than resulted from invasion and that the Celts were not invading aliens, but the descendants of the people of Stonehenge. The existence of Celtic language elsewhere in Europe, however, and the dating of the Proto-Celtic culture and language to the Bronze age, makes the most extreme claims of continuity impossible.
More recently a number of
genetic studies have also supported this model of culture and language being absorbed by native populations. The study by Cristian Capelli, David Goldstein and others at
University College, London showed that genes associated with Gaelic names in
Ireland and
Scotland are also common in certain parts of
Wales and are similar to the genes of the
Basque people, who speak a non-
Indo-European language. This similarity supported earlier findings in suggesting a largely pre-Celtic genetic ancestry, possibly going back to the
Paleolithic. They suggest that 'Celtic' culture and the Celtic language may have been imported to Britain by cultural contact, not mass invasions around
600 BC.
Some recent studies have suggested that, contrary to long-standing beliefs, the Germanic tribes (
Angles,
Saxons) did not wipe out the Romano-British of England but rather, over the course of six centuries, conquered the native
Brythonic people of what is now England and
south east Scotland and imposed their culture and language upon them, in a manner similar to how Irish possibly spread over the west of Scotland. Still others maintain that the picture is mixed and that in some places the indigenous population was indeed wiped out while in others it was assimilated. According to this school of thought the populations of Yorkshire, East Anglia, Northumberland and the Orkney and Shetland Islands are those populations with the least traces of ancient (Celtic) British continuation
["By analyzing 1772 Y chromosomes from 25 predominantly small urban locations, we found that different parts of the British Isles have sharply different paternal histories; the degree of population replacement and genetic continuity shows systematic variation across the sampled areas." A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles (pdf)].
For obvious reasons the question of whether or not England originated with a
Genocide against the indigenous, culturally Celtic, population is highly controversial and has clear political overtones - particularly with the contemporary emergence of strong
Nationalist movements in
Scotland,
Wales, and
Cornwall and the ongoing conflict in
Northern Ireland.
Main article: Celtiberians
.Traditional scholarship surrounding the Celts virtually ignored the
Iberian Peninsula, since material culture relatable to the
Hallstatt and
La Tène cultures that have defined Iron Age Celts was rare in Iberia, and did not provide a cultural scenario that could easily be linked to that of Central Europe. There were two main archaeological and cultural groups. On the one hand were the
Hispano-Celtic or
Iberian-Proto-Celtic group along the Iberian Atlantic shores, made up of the
Lusitanian tribes (in
Portugal and the Celtic region that Strabo called
Celtica in the southwest including the
Algarve), the
Vettones,
Vacceani and
Germani tribes (of central west
Spain), and the
Artabric,
Asturian and
Cantabrian tribes of the
Castrejo culture of north and northwest
Spain); On the other hand, the
Celtiberian group of central Spain and the upper Ebro valley, which present special, local features. The origins of the Celtiberians might provide a key to unlocking the Celticization process in the rest of the Peninsula.
At the dawn of history in Europe, the Celts in present-day
France were known as Gauls. Their descendants were described by
Julius Caesar in his
Gallic Wars. There was also an early Celtic presence in northern
Italy. Other Celtic tribes invaded Italy, establishing there a city they called Mediolanum (modern
Milan) and sacking
Rome itself in
390 BC following the
Battle of the Allia.
The Celts settled much further south of the Po River than many maps show. Remnants in the town of Doccia, in the province of Emilia-Romagna, showcase Celtic houses in very good condition dating from about the 4th century BC.
A century later the defeat of the combined
Samnite, Celtic and
Etruscan alliance by the Romans in the
Third Samnite War sounded the end of the Celtic domination in Europe, but it was not until
192 BC that the Roman armies conquered the last remaining independent Celtic kingdoms in Italy.
Under Caesar the Romans conquered Celtic Gaul, and from
Claudius onward the Roman empire absorbed parts of the Celtic
British Isles. Roman local government of these regions closely mirrored pre-Roman '
tribal' boundaries, and archaeological finds suggest native involvement in local government.
Latin was the official language of these regions after the conquests.
The native peoples under Roman rule became Romanized and keen to adopt Roman ways.
Celtic art had already incorporated classical influences, and surviving Gallo-Roman pieces interpret classical subjects or keep faith with old traditions despite a Roman overlay.
Romanization
The Roman occupation of
Gaul, and to a lesser extent of
Britain, led to Roman-Celtic syncretism, see
Roman Gaul,
Roman Britain. In the case of Gaul, this eventually resulted in complete Romanization and the extinction of the
Gaulish language, see
Gallo-Roman culture.
Celtic Christianity
While the regions under Roman rule adopted Christianity along with the rest of the Roman empire, unconquered areas of
Scotland and
Ireland moved from
Celtic polytheism to
Celtic Christianity which was a major source of missionary work in other parts of Britain and central Europe, see
Hiberno-Scottish mission. This brought the early
medieval renaissance of
Celtic art between
390 and
1200, developing many of the styles now thought of as typically Celtic, and found through much of Ireland and Britain, including the north-east and far north of Scotland,
Orkney and
Shetland Islands. This was brought to an end by
Roman Catholic and
Norman influence, though the
Celtic languages and some minor influences of the art continued.
Celts were pushed westwards by successive waves of
Germanic invaders, perhaps themselves at times pressured by
Huns and
Scythians or simply population pressures in their homeland of
Scandinavia and Northern Germany. With the
fall of the Roman Empire the Celts of
Gaul, Iberia and
Britannia were "conquered" by tribes speaking
Germanic languages.
Elsewhere, the Celtic populations were assimilated by others, leaving behind them only a legend and a number of place names such as
Bohemia, after the Boii tribe which once lived there, or the Kingdom of
Belgium, after the Belgae, a mixed Celtic-Germanic tribe of Northern Gaul and south-eastern England. Their mythology has been absorbed into the folklore of half a dozen other countries. For instance, the famous Medieval English Arthurian tale of
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is almost certainly partially derived from the medieval Irish text
Fled Bricrend (The Feast of Bricriu).
Argument rages in the academic world as to whether or not the Celts in England were mostly wiped out/pushed west as the lack of evidence for influence of the Celts on
Anglo-Saxon society suggests. Many historians now argue that the Teuton migration was smaller than previously believed or may have consisted merely of a social elite and that the genocide was cultural rather than physical due to such relatively few numbers of Anglo-Saxons mixing with the larger native population. A recent DNA study on Y-chromosome inheritance has suggested that the population of England maintains a predominantly ancient British element. The general indigenous population of Yorkshire, East Anglia and the Orkney and Shetland Islands are those populations with the least traces of ancient British paternal continuation
["By analyzing 1772 Y chromosomes from 25 predominantly small urban locations,we found that different parts of the British Isles have sharply different paternal histories; the degree of population replacement and genetic continuity shows systematic variation across the sampled areas." A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles (pdf)]. Ironically, it may be Viking genetic influence and not Anglo-Saxon which has had a more profound impact on paternal British bloodlines, or it could very well have been a combination of both groups.
The pre-Christian Celts had a well-organized social structure, based on class and kinship, with the religion we call
Celtic polytheism. Elected Kings led the tribes, and society was divided into three groups: a warrior aristocracy; an intellectual class including druids, poets, and jurists; and everyone else. Women participated both in warfare and in kingship, and all the offices of high and low kings were filled by election under the system of
tanistry, both factors which would confuse Norman writers expecting the feudal principle of
primogeniture where the succession goes to the first born son. Little is known of family structure, but
Athenaeus in his
Deipnosophists, 13.603, claims that "the Celts, in spite of the fact that their women are very beautiful, prefer boys as sexual partners. There are some of them who will regularly go to bed â€" on those animal skins of theirs â€" with a pair of lovers", implying a woman
and a boy.
Age-structured homosexuality was common in pre-Christian European cultures and accepted as normal by the Romans and the Greeks. It would be wrong to blindly accept this as truth; as the Greeks had a very limited view on Celtic society. Unfortunately, the Celts didn't write for themselves and we have only this to go by.
Celtic societies were organised around warfare, but this seems to have been more of a sport focussed on raids and hunting rather than organised territorial conquest, drawing obvious comparisons to warfare among
Native Americans prior to European contact. This was the age of
hillforts and
duns, but there was apparently no
urbanization.
There is strong archeological evidence to suggest that the pre-Roman Celtic nations were tied into a network of overland trade routes that spanned
Eurasia from Ireland to China. Celtic traders were also in contact with the Phoenicians: gold works made in Pre-Roman Ireland have been unearthed in archeological digs in Palestine, and trade routes between the Celtic nations and Palestine date back to at least 1600 BC.
Local trade was largely in the form of barter, but as with most tribal societies they probably had a reciprocal economy in which goods and other services are not exchanged, but are given on the basis of mutual relationships and the obligations of kinship. Though they had a written language, the
Ogham script, it was only used for ceremonial purposes and they produced little in the way of literary output. Instead, Celtic peoples preferred the oral Bardic tradition. The oldest recorded rhyming poetry in the world is of Irish origin and is a transcription of a much older epic poem, leading some scholars to claim that the Celts invented
Rhyme. They were highly skilled in visual arts and
Celtic art produced a great deal of intricate and beautiful metalwork, examples of which have been preserved by their distinctive burial rites.
In some regards the Atlantic Celts were conservative, for example they still used
chariots in combat long after they had been reduced to ceremonial roles by the Greeks and Romans, though when faced with the Romans in Britain, their chariot tactics defeated the invasion attempted by
Julius Caesar.
Although Celtic gods varied from region to region and tribe to tribe, the Celtic religion had some patterns. For example like Mediterranean cultures most early Celts worshipped in sacred groves. This was once postulated to have occurred because of Celts trading with Mediterranean cultures; however, evidence from Hallstatt era finds show that the earliest Celts practiced this before such trade took place. More reasonably, it is a byproduct of most primitive religion to worship in such a way. However,
La Tène Celts also built temples of varying size and shape, though they still usually maintained sacred trees, or votive pools. Worship was, in this way, deferred to temples, when they were available. Numerous temples were converted by the Romans, and with little difficulty; the design was rather similar to Roman temples, as they were both highly influenced by the Greeks, architecturally speaking.
Their druid positions vary; a druid is not always a priest. Druids are any members of a Celtic society who had what we would view today as a college education. The most educated druids were usually doctors, priests, and heralds, as these occupations required the most memorization and skill for their practices. Priests from this class were in charge of a great deal of religious festivals, as well as organizing the calendar; a daunting task as the Celtic calendar is incredibly accurate, but required manual correction about every 40 years, meaning lengthy mathematic discourse.
Druids also carried out sacrifices of crops, animals, and during specific festivals, humans. In a Celtic society, people were not executed for crimes, except during these festivals. Such executions varied, depending on what god the execution was dedicated to. Among the most famous is the human sacrifices practiced in the course of Essus worship. Essus was, more or less, a benevolent law god to many Celts, particularly Gauls. However, Essus worship also intoned a sense of merciless behavior toward repeated criminals, rapists, traitors, and other societal dregs. The offender, if found guilty, would be taken to the temple of Essus, where an oak would be growing through an opening in the temple roof. His stomach would be cut open, and he would be hung from an oak branch.
The Celts' gods were often named after natural things. For example the source of rivers would often have their own goddesses, though rarely many gods. Another theme with Celt gods were triple deities; not only goddesses, but numerous gods. For example the Mothers of Britain, or Cromm Cruach's slovenly, deific, and humanistic forms. The main deities of Celtic religion, contrary to much misconception, were usually male. The world in some remaining myths is often depicted as having been forged by a god with a hammer, such as Dagda or Sucellos, who then poured all life from a magic cauldron or cup; a source of pre-Christian 'Holy Grail' myths in Celtic societies.
While deities varied, several constant deities or demigods existed over a wide area. A great example is Lugos, a heroic sun god from Gaul and the southern, Gallic parts of Britain. He is also known as Lugh (in Ireland), Lleu (in Wales), and Lug (among Celtiberians, who were not culturally true Celts). Early depictions of him exist as early as the Hallstatt era, suggesting him as one of the longest existing gods of Celtic religion. Similar is the horse and fertility goddess, Epona, who was also worshipped by the Romans when they came to rule Gaul. She also seems to have existed from the early era. Finally, there is Sucellos, who is argued by some to have been the 'creator of the universe' in some Celtic religions. He is party to Dagda of Ireland, and was worshipped over an enormous area, including by non-Celtic peoples such as the Lusitani. He was the patron god of the Ordovices tribe of Britain, and was built up by the Arverni and their allies to replace the druidic god Cernunnos, as the Gallic druids were allies of their enemies in the rule for Gaul; the Aedui.
Other religious practices also existed; Celts seem to have universally removed body hair. Some postulate this as religious, but was more realistically part of the Celtic propensity for cleanliness. Body hair kept dirt close to the body, and Celts were an extremely clean people, so this was unacceptable. However, Celts also took heads from dead enemies. This was definitely a religious practice in origin. However, even post-Christian Gaels continued this practice into the middle ages; some Irish even took to scalping the heads that they took, so they could braid the scalp through rings on their weapons. The religious connotations by that point were slim, but it does imply that taking heads had incredible cultural importance to have persisted so long after the religious background had been removed. To our understanding, Celts believed the soul resided in the head, and that capturing a head meant that one captured the soul of an opponent, and that when a Celt died, the dead whom he had collected would serve him as slaves for eternity.
"Amongst the Celts the human head was venerated above all else, since the head was to the Celt the soul, centre of the emotions as well as of life itself, a symbol of divinity and of the powers of the other-world." - Paul Jacobsthal,
Early Celtic Art.
The Celtic cult of the severed head is documented not only in the many sculptured representations of severed heads in
La Tène carvings, but in the surviving Celtic mythology, which is full of stories of the severed heads of heroes and the saints who carry their decapitated heads, right down to
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight who picks up his own severed head after Gawain has struck it off, just as
St. Denis carried his head to the top of
Montmartre. Separated from the mundane body, although still alive, the animated head acquires the ability to see into the mythic realm.
Diodorus Siculus, in his 1st century
History had this to say about Celtic head-hunting:"They cut off the heads of enemies slain in battle and attach them to the necks of their horses. The blood-stained spoils they hand over to their attendants and carry off as booty, while striking up a paean and singing a song of victory; and they nail up these first fruits upon their houses, just as do those who lay low wild animals in certain kinds of hunting. They embalm in cedar oil the heads of the most distinguished enemies, and preserve them carefully in a chest, and display them with pride to strangers, saying that for this head one of their ancestors, or his father, or the man himself, refused the offer of a large sum of money. They say that some of them boast that they refused the weight of the head in gold; thus displaying what is only a barbarous kind of magnanimity, for it is not a sign of nobility to refrain from selling the proofs of one's valour. It is rather true that it is bestial to continue one's hostility against a slain fellow man."
The Celts also believed that if they attached the head of their enemy to a pole or a fence near their house, the head would start crying when the enemy was near. Also if the enemy who's head was taken was important enough they would put it in a church and pray to it believing it had magic powers.
The Celtic headhunters venerated the image of the severed head as a continuing source of spiritual power. If the head is the seat of the soul, possessing the severed head of an enemy, honorably reaped in battle, added prestige to any warrior's reputation. According to tradition the buried head of a god or hero named
Bran the Blessed protected
Britain from invasion across the
English Channel.
The origin of the various names used since classical times for the people known today as the Celts is obscure and has been controversial. It appears that none of the terms recorded were ever used by Celtic speakers of themselves. In particular, there is no record of the term "Celt" being used in connection with the inhabitants of Ireland and Britain prior to the 19th century.
The name "Gauls"
English
Gaul(s) and Latin
Gallus or
Galli might be from an originally Celtic ethnic or tribal name (perhaps borrowed into Latin during the early
400s BC, Celtic expansions into Italy). Its root may be the Common Celtic
*galno, meaning "power" or "strength". Greek
Galatai (see
Galatia in Anatolia) seems to be based on the same root, borrowed directly from the same hypothetical Celtic source which gave us
Galli (the suffix -atai is simply an ethnic name indicator).
The English form
Gaul comes from the French
Gaulle and
Gaullois, which is the traditional rendering of Latin
Gallia and
Gallus, -icus respectively. However, the diphthong
au points to a different origin, namely a Romance adaptation of the Germanic
Walha-. See
Gaul#Name.
The word "Welsh"
The word Welsh is a Germanic word, yet it may ultimately have a Celtic source. It may be the result of an early borrowing (in the
4th century BC) of the Celtic tribal name
Volcae into early Germanic (becoming the
Proto-Germanic *Walh-, "foreigner of the Roman lands" and the suffixed form *Walhisk-). The Volcae were one of the Celtic peoples that for two centuries barred the southward expansion of the Germanic tribes in what is now central Germany on the line of the
Hartz mountains and into
Saxony and
Silesia.
In the middle ages certain districts of what is now Germany were known as "Welschland" as opposed to "Deutschland", and the word is cognate with
Vlach (see:
Etymology of Vlach) and
Walloon as well as the 'wall' in Cornwall. During the early Germanic period, the term seems to have been applied to the peasant population of the Roman Empire, most of whom were, in the areas immediately settled by the Germanic people, of ultimately Celtic origin.
The name "Celts"
English Celt(s), Latin Celtus pl. Celti (Celtae), Greek ΚÎλτης pl. ΚÎλτες seem to be based on a native Celtic ethnic name (singular *Celtos or *Celta with plurals *Celtoi or *Celta:s), of unsure etymology. The root would seem to be a Primitive Indo-European *kel- or (s)kel-, but there are several such roots of various meanings to choose from (*kel- "to be prominent", *kel- "to drive or set in motion", *kel- "to strike or cut" etc.)
*
Ancient Britain*
Celtic mythology*
Celtic language*
Celtic law*
Celtic art*
Celtic music*
Celtic knot*Celtic
High Crosses
*
Celtic Christianity*
List of Celts*
List of Celtic tribes*
List of peoples of Gaul*
List of topics related to Cornwall*
Celtic nations*
Modern Celts*
Pronunciation of Celtic*
Pan-Celticism*
Celtic League (political organisation)*
Celtic Congress*
Anglo-Celtic*
Irish,
Scottish Gaelic,
Welsh,
Cornish,
Breton,
Manx and
Cumbric languages
* Collis, John.
The Celts: Origins, Myths and Inventions. Stroud: Tempus Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0752429132. Historiography of Celtic studies.
* Cunliffe, Barry.
The Ancient Celts. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0198150105.
* Cunliffe, Barry.
Iron age Britain. London: Batsford, 2004. ISBN 0713488395
* Cunliffe, Barry..
The Celts: A Very Short Introduction. 2003
* Freeman, Philip Mitchell
The earliest classical sources on the Celts: A linguistic and historical study. Diss. Harvard University, 1994.
(link)* Haywood
Historical Atlas of the Celtic World. 2001
* James, Simon.
The Atlantic Celts - Ancient People Or Modern Invention? Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, August 1999. ISBN 0299166740.
* James, Simon & Rigby, Valerie.
Britain and the Celtic Iron Age. London: British Museum Press, 1997. ISBN 0714123064.
* Kruta, V., O. Frey, Barry Raftery and M. Szabo. eds.
The Celts. New York: Thames & Hudson, 1991. ISBN 0847821935. A translation of
Les Celtes: Histoire et Dictionnaire 2000.
* Laing, Lloyd.
The Archaeology of Late Celtic Britain and Ireland c. 400--1200 AD. London: Methuen, 1975. ISBN 0416823602
* Laing, Lloyd and Jenifer Laing.
Art of the Celts, London: Thames and Hudson, 1992 ISBN 0500202567
* MacKillop, James.
A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0192801201
* McEvedy, Colin.
The Penguin Atlas of Ancient History. New York: Penguin, 1985. ISBN 0140708324
* Mallory, J. P.
In Search of the Indo-Europeans: Language, Archaeology and Myth. London: Thames and Hudson, 1991. ISBN 0500276161.
* Powell, T. G. E.
The Celts. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1980. third ed. 1997. ISBN 0500272751.
* Raftery, Barry.
Pagan Celtic Ireland: The Enigma of the Irish Iron Age. London: Thames & Hudson, 1994. ISBN 0500279837.
* Renfrew, Colin.
Archaeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990. ISBN 0521386756.
* Rosser, ZH et al. "Y-chromosomal diversity in Europe is clinal and influenced primarily by geography, rather than by language.", Am J Hum Genet. 2000 Dec;67(6):1376-81.
* Ward-Perkins, Bryan. "Why Did The Anglo-Saxons Not Become More British?" in
English Historical Review, June 2000.
* Weale, M., et al. "Y Chromosome Evidence For Anglo-Saxon Mass Migration." in
Society For Molecular Biology And Evolution, 2002.
*
XIII. International Congress of Celtic Studies in Bonn*
Academic discussion with
Barry Cunliffe on
BBC Radio 4's
In Our Time,
February 21,
2002 (
Realplayer streaming)
*
"A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles" (pdf)*
Y Chromosome Evidence for Anglo-Saxon Mass Migration* BBC
"English and Welsh are races apart" * BBC
"Descendents of the ancient Britons in genetic survey results for Rush and Castlerea, Ireland, 2003".
*
The Long Duration of Genetic Ancestry: Multiple Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on the Atlantic Facade of Europe, October 2004*Alberto J. Lorrio and Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero, "The Celts in Iberia: An Overview" in
e-Keltoi 6 **See also other essays on Celtiberian topics in
e-Keltoi 6*
Pretanic World - Celts