Celtic Lore
The Celts were a group of peoples that occupied lands stretching from the
British Isles to Galatia. The Celts had many dealings with other cultures
that bordered the lands occupied by these peoples, and even though there is
no written record of the Celts stemming from their own documents, we can
piece together a fair picture of them from archaeological evidence as well
as historical accounts from other cultures.
The first historical recorded encounter of a people displaying the cultural
traits associated with the Celts comes from northern Italy around 400 BC,
when a previously unknown group of barbarians came down from the Alps and
displaced the Etruscans from the fertile Po valley, a displacement that
helped to push the Etruscans from history's limelight. The next encounter
with the Celts came with the still young Roman Empire, directly to the south
of the Po. The Romans in fact had sent three envoys to the beige Etruscans
to study this new force. We know from Livy's The Early History of Rome that
this first encounter with Rome was quite civilized:
[The Celts told the Roman envoys that] this was indeed the first time they
had heard of them, but they assumed the Romans must be a courageous people
because it was to them that the [Etruscans] had turned to in their hour of
need. And since the Romans had tried to help with an embassy and not with
arms, they themselves would not reject the offer of peace, provided the
[Etruscans] ceded part of their superfluous agricultural land; that was what
they, the Celts, wanted.... If it were not given, they would launch an
attack before the Romans eyes, so that the Romans could report back how
superior the Gauls were in battle to all others....The Romans then asked
whether it was right to demand land from its owners on pain of war, indeed
what were the Celts going in Etruria in the first place? The latter
defiantly retorted that their right lay in their arms: To the brave belong
all things.
The Roman envoys then preceded to break their good faith and helped the
Etruscans in their fight; in fact, one of the envoys, Quintas Fabius killed
one of the Celtic tribal leaders. The Celts then sent their own envoys to
Rome in protest and demand the Romans hand over all members of the Fabian
family, to which all three of the original Roman envoys belonged, be given
over to the Celts, a move completely in line with current Roman protocol.
This of course presented problems for the Roman senate, since the Fabian
family was quite powerful in Rome. Indeed, Livy says that:
The party structure would allow no resolution to be made against such
nobleman as justice would have required. The Senate...therefore passed
examination of the Celts request to the popular assembly, in which power and
influence naturally counted for more. So it happened that those who ought to
have been punished were instead appointed for the coming year military
tribunes with consular powers (the highest that could be granted).
The Celts saw this as a mortal insult and a host marched south to Rome. The
Celts tore through the countryside and several battalions of Roman soldiers
to lay seige to the Capitol of the Roman Empire. Seven months of seige led
to negotiations whereby the Celts promised to leave their seige for a
tribute of one thousand pounds of gold, which the historian Pliny tells was
very difficult for the entire city to muster. When the gold was being
weighed, the Romans claimed the Celts were cheating with faulty weights. It
was then that the Celts leader, Brennus, threw his sword into the balance
and and uttered the words vae victis "woe to the Defeated". Rome never
withstood another more humiliating defeat and the Celts made an initial step
of magnificent proportions into history.
Other Roman historians tell us more of the Celts. Diodorus notes that:
Their aspect is terrifying...They are very tall in stature, with rippling
muscles under clear white skin. Their hair is blond, but not naturally so:
they bleach it, to this day, artificially, washing it in lime and combing it
back from their foreheads. They look like wood-demons, their hair thick and
shaggy like a horse's mane. Some of them are clean shaven, but others -
especially those of high rank, shave their cheeks but leave a moustache that
covers the whole mouth and, when they eat and drink, acts like a sieve,
trapping particles of food...The way they dress is astonishing: they wear
brightly coloured and embroidered shirts, with trousers called bracae and
cloaks fastened at the shoulder with a brooch, heavy in winter, light in
summer. These cloaks are striped or checkered in design, with the separate
checks close together and in various colours.
[The Celts] wear bronze helmets with figures picked out on them, even horns,
which made them look even taller than they already are...while others cover
themselves with breast-armour made out of chains. But most content
themselves with the weapons nature gave them: they go naked into
battle...Weird, discordant horns were sounded, [they shouted in chorus with
their] deep and harsh voices, they beat their swords rhythmically against
their shields.
Diodorus also describes how the Celts cut off their enemies heads and nailed
them over the doors of their huts, as Diodorus states:
In exactly the same way as hunters do with their skulls of the animals they
have slain...they preserved the heads of their most high-ranking victims in
cedar oil, keeping them carefully in wooden boxes.
- Diodorus Siculus, History.
What is a Celt and who are the Glasgow Celtics?
The people who made up the various tribes of concern were called Galli by
the Romans and Galatai or Keltoi by the Greeks, terms meaning barbarian. It
is from the greek Keltoi that Celt is derived. Since no soft c exists in
greek, Celt and Celtic and all permutations should be pronounced with a hard
k sound.
It is interesting to note that when the British Empire was distinguishing
itself as better and separate from the rest of humanity, it was decided that
British Latin should have different pronunciation from other spoken Latin.
Therefore, one of these distinguishing pronunciational differences was to
make many of the previously hard k sounds move to a soft s sound, hence the
Glasgow and Boston Celtics. It is the view of many today that this soft c
pronunciation should be reserved for sports teams since there is obviously
nothing to link them with the original noble savagery and furor associated
with the Celts.
The Six Celtic Languages
There was a unifying language spoken by the Celts, called not surprisingly,
old Celtic. Philogists have shown the descendence of Celtic from the
original Ur-language and from the Indo-European language tradition. In fact,
the form of old Celtic was the closest cousin to Italic, the precursor of
Latin.
The original wave of Celtic immigrants to the British Isles are called the
q-Celts and spoke Goidelic. It is not known exactly when this immigration
occurred but it may be placed some time in the window of 2000 to 1200 BC.
The label q-Celtic stems from the differences between this early Celtic
tongue and Italic. Some of the differences between Italic and Celtic
included that lack of a p in Celtic and an a in place of an the Italic o.
At a later date, a second wave of immigrants took to the British Isles, a
wave of Celts referred to as the p-Celts speaking Brythonic. Goidelic led to
the formation of the three Gaelic languages spoken in Ireland, Man and later
Scotland. Brythonic gave rise to two British Isles languages, Welsh and
Cornish, as well as surviving on the Continent in the form of Breton, spoken
in Brittany.
The label q-Celtic stems from the differences between this early Celtic
tongue and the latter formed p-Celtic. The differences between the two
Celtic branches are simple in theoretical form. Take for example the word
ekvos in Indo-European, meaning horse. In q-Celtic this was rendered as
equos while in p-Celtic it became epos, the q sound being replaced with a p
sound. Another example is the Latin qui who. In q-Celtic this rendered as
cia while in p-Celtic it rendered as pwy. It should also be noted that there
are still words common to the two Celtic subgroups.
As an aside, take note that when the Irish expansion into Pictish Britain
occurred (see below), several colonies were established in present day
Wales. The local inhabitants called the Irish arrivals gwyddel savages from
which comes geÌdil and goidel and thus the Goidelic tongue.
The Irish and the Scots Are From the Same Tribe
Ireland used to be divided up into five parts, the five fifths. There was a
northern fifth, Ulster, a western fifth, Connaught, a southern fifth,
Munster, an eastern fifth, Leinster and a middle fifth, Mide.
The Ulster Cycle is a set of stories which are grounded in the five fifths.
Indeed, they are primarily concerned with C™ Chulainn, the Ulster hero and
his king, Conor Mac Nessa in their wars against the king and queen of
Connaught, Ailill and Maeve. These figures play a prominent role in the what
may be the greatest story of the Ulster Cycle, the T·in BÛ C™ailnge, The
Cattle Raid of Cooley.
Sometime after 300 AD, Ulster became steadily less important in status among
the five farthings and the ruling family of Mide, the UÌ NÈill Sons of Niall
started to take over large parts of Connaught and most of Ulster. A similar
move was made in Muster by the ruling family of Munster, the Eoganachta
family. Thus was Ireland divided almost entirely into two halves.
The people of Ulster were pushed to a small coastal strip bordering the
Irish Sea. The kingdom changed it's name to D·l Riata. Yet eventually D·l
Riata fell under the rule and influence of the UÌ NÈill. This family, not
content with the boundry presented by the sea, launched colonies across the
Irish Sea into then Pictish Britain. Thus was Scotland founded, for it was
these UÌ NÈill that the Romans called Scotti, not the original Picts.
Indeed, it was this Irish Expansion which led to Christianity in Scotland in
563 AD. St. Columba, the patron saint of Scotland, was a member of a
powerful family in D·l Riata and in order to keep his ties in Ireland he
settled on an island that was close to both Scotland and Ireland, Iona. Of
course, even more bizarre is the fact that St. Patrick, the man responsible
for bringing Christianity to Ireland in the first place, was from Wales.
The Legend of
Stonehenge.
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