Celtic Mythology & The Religion of the Ancient Celts. John Arnott MacCulloch

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Celtic Mythology & The Religion of the Ancient Celts - John Arnott MacCulloch


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      John Arnott MacCulloch

      Celtic Mythology & The Religion of the Ancient Celts

      Study of Celtic Folklore, Legends & Dogma

      e-artnow, 2020

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN 4064066399542

      Table of Contents

       The Religion of the Ancient Celts

       Celtic Mythology

      The Religion of the Ancient Celts

       Table of Contents

       PREFACE

       LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE NOTES THROUGHOUT THIS WORK

       CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.

       CHAPTER II. THE CELTIC PEOPLE.

       CHAPTER III. THE GODS OF GAUL AND THE CONTINENTAL CELTS.

       CHAPTER IV. THE IRISH MYTHOLOGICAL CYCLE.

       CHAPTER V. THE TUATHA DÉ DANANN

       CHAPTER VI. THE GODS OF THE BRYTHONS

       CHAPTER VII. THE CÚCHULAINN CYCLE.

       CHAPTER VIII. THE FIONN SAGA.

       CHAPTER IX. GODS AND MEN.

       CHAPTER X. THE CULT OF THE DEAD.

       CHAPTER XI. PRIMITIVE NATURE WORSHIP.

       CHAPTER XII. RIVER AND WELL WORSHIP.

       CHAPTER XIII. TREE AND PLANT WORSHIP.

       CHAPTER XIV. ANIMAL WORSHIP.

       CHAPTER XV. COSMOGONY.

       CHAPTER XVI. SACRIFICE, PRAYER, AND DIVINATION.

       CHAPTER XVII. TABU.

       CHAPTER XVIII. FESTIVALS.

       CHAPTER XIX. ACCESSORIES OF CULT.

       CHAPTER XX. THE DRUIDS.

       CHAPTER XXI. MAGIC.

       CHAPTER XXII. THE STATE OF THE DEAD.

       CHAPTER XXIII. REBIRTH AND TRANSMIGRATION.

       CHAPTER XXIV. ELYSIUM.

       FOOTNOTES

      PREFACE

       Table of Contents

      The scientific study of ancient Celtic religion is a thing of recent growth. As a result of the paucity of materials for such a study, earlier writers indulged in the wildest speculative flights and connected the religion with the distant East, or saw in it the remains of a monotheistic faith or a series of esoteric doctrines veiled under polytheistic cults. With the works of MM. Gaidoz, Bertrand, and D'Arbois de Jubainville in France, as well as by the publication of Irish texts by such scholars as Drs. Windisch and Stokes, a new era may be said to have dawned, and a flood of light was poured upon the scanty remains of Celtic religion. In this country the place of honour among students of that religion belongs to Sir John Rh^ys, whose Hibbert Lectures On the Origin and Growth of Religion as illustrated by Celtic Heathendom (1886) was an epoch-making work. Every student of the subject since that time feels the immense debt which he owes to the indefatigable researches and the brilliant suggestions of Sir John Rh^ys, and I would be ungrateful if I did not record my indebtedness to him. In his Hibbert Lectures, and in his later masterly work on The Arthurian Legend, however, he took the standpoint of the "mythological" school, and tended to see in the old stories myths of the sun and dawn and the darkness, and in the divinities sun-gods and dawn-goddesses and a host of dark personages of supernatural character. The present writer, studying the subject rather from an anthropological point of view and in the light of modern folk survivals, has found himself in disagreement with Sir John Rh^ys on more than one occasion. But he is convinced that Sir John would be the last person to resent this, and that, in spite of his mythological interpretations, his Hibbert Lectures must remain as a source of inspiration to all Celtic students. More recently the studies of M. Salomon Reinach and of M. Dottin, and the valuable little book on Celtic Religion, by Professor Anwyl, have broken fresh ground.1

      In this book I have made use of all the available sources, and have endeavoured to study the subject from the comparative point of view and in the light of the anthropological method. I have also interpreted the earlier cults by means of recent folk-survivals over the Celtic area wherever it has seemed legitimate to do so. The results are summarised in the introductory chapter of the work, and students of religion, and especially of Celtic religion, must judge how far they form a true interpretation of the earlier faith of our Celtic forefathers, much of which resembles primitive religion and folk-belief everywhere.

      Unfortunately no Celt left an account of his own religion, and we are left to our own interpretations, more or less valid, of the existing materials, and to the light shed on them by the comparative study of religions. As this book was written during a long residence in the Isle of Skye, where the old language of the people still survives, and where the genius loci speaks everywhere of things remote and strange, it may have been easier to attempt to realise the ancient religion there than in a busier or more prosaic place. Yet at every point I have felt how much would have been gained could an old Celt or Druid have revisited his former haunts, and permitted me to question him on a hundred


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