Quotation:
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"Druidry is not a religion.
It's a philosophy and you can worship a God or a Goddess, it's up to you. You can be a Christian or a Moslem or anything else
and still be a Druid. "But while a Christian will say God made that tree, a Druid will say the energy of a creative force
is in that tree." Kieron, a North-East UK Druid. |
History:
Modern Druidism is one of the Neopagan family of religions, which includes Wicca and recreations of Egyptian, Greek, Norse, Roman and
other ancient Pagan religions. Some present-day Druids attempt to reconstruct of the beliefs and practices of ancient Druidism.
Others modern-day followers of Druidism work directly with the spirits of place, of the gods and of their ancestors to create
a new Druidism.
Within ancient Druidism, there were
three specialties. "A general categorisation of the three different grades accords the arts to the bards, the skills of prophecy
and divination to the Ovates and philosophical, teaching, counselling and judicial tasks to the Druid." 1
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The
Bards were "the keepers of tradition, of the memory of the tribe - they were the custodians of the sacredness of the Word."
In Ireland, they trained for 12 years learning grammar, hundreds of stories, poems, philosophy, the Ogham tree-alphabet. |
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The
Ovates worked with the processes of death and regeneration. They were the native healers of the Celts. They specialized in
divination, conversing with the ancestors, and prophesizing the future. |
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The
Druids and Druidesses formed the professional class in Celtic society. They performed the functions of modern day priests,
teachers, ambassadors, astronomers, genealogists, philosophers, musicians, theologians, scientists, poets and judges. They
underwent lengthy training: some sources say 20 years. Druids led all public rituals, which were normally held within fenced
groves of sacred trees. In their role as priests, "they acted not as mediators between God and man, but as directors of ritual,
as shamans guiding and containing the rites." Most leaders mentioned in the surviving records were male. It is not known whether
female Druids were considered equal to their male counterparts, or whether they were restricted to special responsibilities.
References to women exercising religious power might have been deleted from the record by Christian monks during the Celtic
Christian era. |
Since ancient Druidism was an oral
tradition, they did not have a set of scriptures as do Christianity and other "religions of the book. 2 "Some Druidic
"teachings survived in the Bardic colleges in Wales, Ireland and Scotland which remained active until the 17th century, in
medieval manuscripts, and in oral tradition, folk lore and ritual." 3
Druidism and other Neopagan religions
are currently experiencing a rapid growth. Many people are attempting to rediscover their roots, their ancestral heritage.
For many people in North America, their ancestors can be traced back to Celtic/Druidic countries.
Most modern Druids connect the origin
of their religion to the ancient Celtic people. However, historical data is scarce. The Druids may well have been active in
Britain and perhaps in northern Europe before the advent of the Celts.
Many academics believe that the ancestors
of the Celts were the Proto-Indo European culture who lived near the Black Sea circa 4000 BCE. Some migrated in a South-Westerly
direction to create the cultures of Thrace and Greece; others moved North-West to form the Baltic, Celtic, Germanic and Slavic
cultures. Evidence of a Proto-Celtic Unetice or Urnfield culture has been found in what is now Slovakia circa 1000 BCE. This
evolved into a group of loosely linked tribes which formed the Celtic culture circa 800 BCE. By 450 BCE they had expanded
into Spain; by 400 BCE they were in Northern Italy, and by 270 BCE, they had migrated into Galatia (central Turkey). By 200
BCE, they had occupied the British Isles, Brittany, much of modern France, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland,
North West Spain, and their isolated Galatia settlement in Turkey.
Although the Celts had a written language,
it was rarely used. Their religious and philosophical beliefs were preserved in an oral tradition. Little of their early history
remains. Most of our information comes from Greek and Roman writers, who may well have been heavily biased (the Celts invaded
Rome in 390 BCE and Greece in 279 BCE). Other data comes from the codification (and modification) of Celtic myth cycles by
Christian monks. The latter included the Ulster Cycle, the Fenian Cycle, the Cycle of Kings, the Invasion Races Cycle from
Ireland, and The Mabinogion from Wales. Unfortunately, much Celtic history and religion has been lost or distorted by an overlay
of Christianity.
The Christian Church adsorbed
much of Celtic religion: many Pagan Gods and Goddesses became Christian saints; sacred springs and wells were preserved and
associated with saints; many Pagan temple sites became the location of cathedrals. By the 7th Century CE, Druidism itself
was destroyed or continued deeply underground throughout most of the formerly Celtic lands. There is some evidence that Pagan
religions did survive in isolated areas of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania into the 20th Century.
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