The Celts

The term Celts (pronounced "kelts" or "selts") refers to any of a number  of ancient 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 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 developed, 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, as many of the people in these regions have  Celtic ancestry (see the Modern Celts article), but correctly  corresponds to the Celtic language family - in which are still spoken:  Scottish, Irish and Manx (Gaelic languages) and Welsh, Breton and  Cornish (Brythonic languages). 
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. However, as the Celts 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. 
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 thought to have been spoken at the time of the late  Urnfield or early Hallstatt cultures, in the early 1st 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 Tene 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, 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.  
Stonehenge and  the other megalithic monuments long predate the Iron Age Celtic culture,  but Genetic evidence indicates that the Celtic populations of the  Atlantic Archipelago have been relatively stable for at least 6,000  years, in which case the modern Celts would be the direct descendants of  their builders. There is no evidence that they used these sites as  areas of worship from the Iron Age on, however, and indeed most evidence  suggest that the Druidic Celtic religion(s) preferred to use groves of  Oak trees as places of worship. The connection between these monuments  and the Celts largely stems from 18th century romantics such as William Stuckeley.
The indigenous populations of Britain and Ireland today are primarily  descended from the ancient peoples that have always inhabited these  lands. As to their culture, little is known but remnants remain  primarily in the naming of certain geographical features, such as the  rivers Clyde, Tamar, Thames and Tyne.  
By the Roman period most of the inhabitants of the isles of Ireland and  Great Britain (the ancient Britons) were speaking Goidelic or Brythonic  languages, close counterparts to Gaulish 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. 
Later research indicated that the language and culture had developed  gradually and continuously, and in Ireland no 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 influences to create "Celtic" culture.  The very few continental La Tène culture style objects which had been  found in Ireland could have been imports, or the possessions of a few  rich immigrants.  
Julius Caesar had written 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 and  it was suggested that there might have been only a handful of élite  Belgae in Britain.  
In the 1970s this model was 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. 
More recently a number of genetic studies have supported this model of  culture 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 Wales, Cornwall and most parts England, 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 were imported  to Britain by cultural contact not mass invasions, either by  Indo-Europeans bringing farming or by Celts in 600 BC.  
Some recent studies have suggested that, contrary to long-standing  beliefs, the Teuton tribes 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  the Irish spread over the west of Scotland. 
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. 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. 
Roman influence lead directly to the decline of the druidic priests.  Prior to Roman conquests, the druids exercised enormous spiritual and  political power among the celtic peoples. The druidic religion was seen  as a major impediment to the "Romanization" of the newly conquered  celts. Thus began a deliberate policy on the part of the Roman  conquerors to replace the old celtic political structure with Roman  institutions. The elimination of the druidic class was instrumental to  cementing Roman authority. 
This led the birth of many Romano-celtic deities, as old celtic gods  took on new Latin names and aspects of Roman divinities, and began to be worshiped alongside the more traditional Jovian pantheon. 
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.  This brought the early medieval renaissance of Celtic art between 400  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 Celtic 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 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, or whether the Teuton  migration consisted merely of the social elite and that the genocide was  cultural rather than physical due to such relatively few numbers of  Anglo-Saxons mixing with the far larger native population, enabled to do  so due to the civil strife in Britain after the Roman withdrawal and  the unity of the incoming invaders. Some recent DNA studies have  suggested that the population of England maintains a predominately  ancient British element, equal in most parts to Cornwall and Wales. The  general indigenous population of Yorkshire, East Anglia and the Orkney  and Shetland Islands are those populations with the least traces of  ancient British continuation. Ironically, it may be Viking genetic  influence and not Anglo-Saxon which has had a more profound impact on  British bloodlines. 
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 - on those animal skins of theirs   with a pair of lovers," implying with a woman and a boy. 
Celtic Societies 
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.  
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 worshiped 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 Tene 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. 
Druids 
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 mathematics discourse. 
There are many questions arising as to what calendrical practice was used by the Celtic people. Regarding this issue there are three primary schools of thought. These three theories all attempt to offer us a better understanding of the Celtic calendar. To use the term 'Celtic calendar' is somewhat inaccurate, as it were the Druids who were primarily concerned with calendar-keeping.  
One of the most commonly accepted beliefs holds that the year was divided into thirteen months with an extra day or so the end of the year used to adjust the calendar. This theory states that the months correspond to the vowels of the Ogham or Celtic Tree Alphabet. For every of the months there was a designated tree. From this a 'tree calendar' wheel emerged 
Most archaeologist and historians accept another calendar. This calender is represented by the surviving fragments of a great bronze plate, the Coligny Calendar, which originally measured 5 feet by 3-1/2 feet. This plate, found in eastern France, was engraved in the Gaulish language (similar to Welsh) in Roman-style letters and numerals. It depicts a system of time keeping by lunar months, showing 62 consecutive months with 2 extra months inserted to match the solar timetable. They appear to have worked with a 19-year time cycle that equaled 235 lunar months and had an error of only half a day.  
The third school of thought is an amalgam of both of the others. The proponents of this last theory believe that the first calendar pre-dates the Coligny discovery.  
It is from ancient writers such as Caesar that we learn that the Celts were to have counted by nights and not days and in reckoning birthdays and new moon and new year their unit of reckoning is the night followed by the day.  
Ancient Celtic philosophy believed that existence arose from the interplay between darkness and light, night and day, cold and warmth, death and life, and that the passage of years was the alternation of dark periods (winter, beginning November 1) and light periods (summer, starting May 1).  
The Druidic view was that the earth was in darkness at its beginning, that night preceded day and winter preceded summer a view in striking accord with the story of creation in Genesis and even with the Big Bang theory. Thus, Nov. 1 was New Year's Day for the Celts, their year being divided into four major cycles. The onset of each cycle was observed with suitable rituals that included feasting and sacrifice. It was called The Festival of Samhain - linked with Halloween.

The Celts measured the Solar year on a wheel, circle or spiral, all of which symbolize creation and the constant movement of the universe  growth and development.  
To the ancients, the heavens appeared to wheel overhead, turning on an  axis which points to the north polar stars. At the crown of the axis, a  circle of stars revolved about a fixed point, the Celestial Pole, which  was believed to be the location of Heaven.  
At the base of the axis was the Omphalos,   the circular altar of the Goddess' temple. The universe of stars turning  on this axis formed a spiral path, or stairway, on which souls ascended  to Heaven.  
This Sunwise, clockwise, or deiseal (Gaelic), motion of the spirals  represented the Summer Sun. The continuous spirals with seemingly no  beginning or end signified that as one cycle ended another began   eternal life. The spiral's never-ending, always expanding, motion also  symbolized the ever- increasing nature of information and knowledge.  Many of these symbols often also appeared in triplicate, a sign of the  divine.  
In addition, the seasons of the year were thought to be part of this  cycle. In Gaelic, the names of the four seasons date back to  pre-Christian times:  
- 1. Earrach for "Spring"  2. Samhradh for "Summer"  
3. Foghara for "Harvest" for Autumn 
4. Geamhradh for "Winter" 
The social structure of Iron Age Celtic society was highly developed. It  was a tribal society that was bonded together by a complex system of  laws and social customs. The established body of Law was known as  'Fenechas', the law of the Feine (Freemen), or more commonly, the Brehon  Laws. This body served the People for centuries. 
The most common body of Brehon Laws was codified in 438, by the order of  Laighaire, a High King of Ireland. The proceedings by which this work  was done by three Kings, three Brehona (Recitors of the Law), and three  Christian missionaries. By this act Pagan Filí and Christian monks came  together and worked out a set of laws that was workable for people of  both religions. The body of that law has been transmitted to us in the  volumes known as the Senchus Mor. 
The body of Law known as Brehon Law, as contained in the Senchus Mor is a  body of national law. However, national law was secondary to local law.  Whether local or national it was the Brehons who acted as the recitors  of the Law.  
There has been some confusion about who acted as the judge. It was the  nobility who acted as such. As stated the Brehons were the recitors of  the Law. After the Brehon had recited the Law, only then could the King  or Queen render a decision. This is why lore is replete with examples of  the Kings or Queens Druid, actually the Ard-Fili, having the right to  speak before the King.  
If the Brehon, who was a member of the intellectual/skilled caste,  recited the law incorrectly they were expected to forfeit their fee and  pay damage costs. The Brehon laws were responsible for regulating how  people interacted. Hospitality, etiquette and other things were set out  in ways that left little room for doubt. The codes of behavior  established in the Law was such that all members of a family had to adhere to it.  
Codes of behavior and levels of responsibility were laid down in the  laws for each social group. The more responsibility a social group had,  the more restrictions were placed on them. Status was determined by the  ownership of cattle and a few other things. There was no concept of land  ownership in early Celtic society. This stands in sharp contrast to the  Roman and Anglo patterns. 
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 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. 
Other Gods
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), Llew (in non-Gallic Britain), 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 worshiped 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 worshiped 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 cleanly 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.  
Souls 
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, center 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 Tene 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 valor. 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. 
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. 
Celtic Mythology
Celtic mythology is the mythology of Celtic polytheism, the apparent  religion of the Iron Age Celts. Like other Iron Age Europeans, the early  Celts maintained a polytheistic mythology and religious structure.  Among Celtic peoples in close contact with Rome, such as the Gauls and  Celtiberians, their mythology did not survive the Roman empire, their  subsequent conversion to Christianity, and the loss of their Celtic  languages. 
Ironically it is through contemporary Roman and Christian sources that  what we do know of their beliefs has come down to us. In contrast, those  Celtic peoples who maintained either their political or linguistic  identities (such as the Gaels and Brythonic tribes of the British Isles)  did transmit at least vestigial remnants of the mythologies of their  Iron Age forebears, which were often recorded in written form during the  Middle Ages. 
Because of the scarcity of surviving materials bearing written Gaulish,  it is surmised that the pagan Celts were not widely literate -  although  a written form of Gaulish using the Greek, Latin and North Italic  alphabets were used (as evidenced by votive items bearing inscriptions  in Gaulish and the Coligny Calendar). Caesar attests to the literacy of  the Gauls, but also wrote that their priests, the druids, were forbidden  to use writing to record certain verses of religious significance  (Caesar, De Bello Gallico 6.14) while also noting that the Helvetii had a  written census (Caesar, De Bello Gallico 1.29). 
Rome introduced a more widespread habit of public inscriptions, and  broke the power of the druids in the areas it conquered; in fact, most  inscriptions to deities discovered in Gaul (modern France), Britain and  other formerly (or presently) Celtic-speaking areas post-date the Roman  conquest. 
And although early Gaels in Ireland and parts of modern Wales used the  Ogham script to record short inscriptions (largely personal names), more  sophisticated literacy was not introduced to Celtic areas not conquered  by Rome until the advent of Christianity; indeed, many Gaelic myths  were first recorded by Christian monks, albeit without most of their  original religious meanings. 
The classic entry about the Celtic gods of Gaul is the section in Julius  Caesar's Commentarii de bello Gallico (5251 BC; The Gallic War). In  this he names the five principal gods worshipped in Gaul (according to  the practice of his time, he gives the names of the closest equivalent  Roman gods) and describes their roles. Mercury was the most venerated of  all the deities and numerous representations of him were to be  discovered. Mercury was seen as the originator of all the arts (and is  often taken to refer to Lugus for this reason), the supporter of  adventurers and of traders, and the mightiest power concerning trade and  profit. Next the Gauls revered Apollo, Mars, Jupiter, and Minerva.  Among these divinities the Celts are described as holding roughly equal  views as did other populations: Apollo dispels sickness, Minerva  encourages skills, Jupiter is in charge of the skies, and Mars  influences warfare. In addition to these five, he mentions that the  Gauls traced their ancestry to Dis Pater. 
As typical of himself as a Roman of the day, though, Caesar does not  write of these gods by their Celtic names but by the names of the Roman  gods with which he equated them, a process that significantly confuses  the chore of identifying these Gaulish gods with their native names in  the insular mythologies. He also portrays a tidy schema which equates  deity and role in a manner that is quite unfamiliar to the colloquial  literature handed down. Still, despite the restrictions, his short list  is a helpful and fundamentally precise observation. In balancing his  description with the oral tradition, or even with the Gaulish  iconography, one is apt to recollect the distinct milieus and roles of  these gods.  
Caesar's remarks and the iconography allude to rather dissimilar phases  in the history of Gaulish religion. The iconography of Roman times is  part of a setting of great social and political developments, and the  religion it depicts may actually have been less obviously ordered than  that upheld by the druids (the priestly order) in the era of Gaulish  autonomy from Rome. Conversely, the want of order is often more  ostensible than factual. It has, for example, been noticed that out of  the several hundred names including a Celtic aspect testified in Gaul  the greater part crop up only once.  
This has led some scholars to conclude that the Celtic deities and the  related cults were local and tribal as opposed to Pan-Celtic. Proponents  of this opinion quote Lucan's reference to a divinity called Teutates,  which they translate as 'tribal spirit' (*teuta is believed to have  meant 'tribe' in Proto-Celtic). The apparent array of divine names may,  nonetheless, be justified differently: many may be mere labels applied  to key gods worshiped in extensive Pan-Celtic cults. The concept of the  Celtic pantheon as a large number of local deities is gainsaid by the  numerous well-testified gods whose cults seem to have been followed  across the Celtic world. 
Though the Celtic world at its greatest extent covered much of western  and central Europe, it was not politically unified nor was there any  substantial central source of cultural influence or homogeneity; as a  result, there was a great deal of variation in local practices of Celtic  religion (although certain motifs - for example, the god Lugh - appear  to have diffused throughout the Celtic world). Inscriptions to more than  three hundred deities, often equated with their Roman counterparts,  have survived, but most appear to have been genii locorum, local or  tribal gods, and few were widely worshiped. 
The nature and functions of these ancient gods can be deduced from their  names, the location of their inscriptions, their iconography, the Roman  gods they are equated with, and similar figures from later bodies of  Celtic mythology. 
The oldest body of myths is found in early medieval manuscripts from  Ireland. These were written by Christians, so the formerly divine nature  of the characters is obscured. The basic myth appears to be a war  between two apparently divine races, the Tuatha Dé Danann and the  Fomorians, which forms the basis for the text Cath Maige Tuireadh (the  Battle of Mag Tuireadh), as well as portions of the great  pseudohistorical construct Lebor Gabála Erenn (the Book of Invasions).  The Tuatha De represent the functions of human society such as kingship,  crafts and war, while the Fomorians represent chaos and wild nature. 
The gods of Britain, also obscured by centuries of Christianity, have  come down to us in manuscripts from Wales. Here the two main groups of  former gods are the children of Dôn and the Children of Llyr, although  any distinction of function between the two groups is not apparent. 
 
 
Dagda's Harp
The supreme god of the Celtic pantheon appears to have been the Dagda.  The name means the 'Good God', not good in a moral sense, but good at  everything, or all-powerful. The Dagda is a father-figure, a protector  of the tribe and the basic Celtic god of whom other male Celtic deities  were variants. Celtic gods were largely unspecialised entities, and  perhaps we should see them as a clan rather than as a formal pantheon.  In a sense, all the Celtic gods and goddesses were like the Greek  Apollo, who could never be described as the god of any one thing. 
Because the particular character of Dagda is a figure of burlesque  lampoonery in Irish mythology, some authors conclude that he was trusted  to be benevolent enough (or ineffectual) to tolerate a joke at his  expense.The supreme god of the Celtic pantheon appears to have been the  Dagda. T 
he name means the 'Good God', not good in a moral sense, but good at  everything, or all-powerful. The Dagda is a father-figure, a protector  of the tribe and the basic Celtic god of whom other male Celtic deities  were variants. Celtic gods were largely unspecialised entities, and  perhaps we should see them as a clan rather than as a formal pantheon. 
Irish tales depict the Dagda as a figure of power, armed with a club and  associated with a cauldron. In Dorset there is a famous outline of an  ithyphallic giant known as the Cerne Abbas Giant with a club cut into  the chalky soil. While this was probably produced in Roman times, it has  long been thought that it represents the Dagda. This has been called  into question by recent studies which show that there may have been a  representation of what looks like a large drapery hanging from the  horizontal arm of the figure, leading to suspicion that this figure  actually represents Hercules(Herakles), with the skin of the Nemean Lion  over his arm and carrying the club he used to kill it. In Gaul, it is  speculated that the Dagda is associated with Sucellos, the striker,  equipped with a hammer and cup. 
The Morrígan In the Irish branch of Celtic mythology, the Dagda's consort was known  by various names. The most common of these was the Morrígan. Her name is  pronounced in modern Irish as "More Ree-an"; in old Irish the 'g' was  pronounced as a soft 'gh', like gamma in Greek. The name translates to  'Great Queen'. Sometimes she is referred to in the plural as Morrígna,  but she was also known variously as Nemhain (Panic), Macha, Anann, and  Badhbh Catha (Scald-crow of Battles), among other names.  
She was said to change into a crow or raven, also a horse, as well as  she being an earth goddess, also soverignty, and a tutelary goddess - or  goddess of the tribe. Macha has solar attributes, with her white horse,  as a sun goddess. So, in essence, Morrigan is the "Queen of the  Heavens" as well as Queen of the earth - so her powers extend to air and  earth. Her battle aspect was discredited due to Victorian fallacy, as  she is given the battle role for her reign over the battlefield giving  the army of her favor aide, as well as military protection, and acting  as the goddess of Soverignty, and not a battle goddess as so many  Neopagans usually classify her. As well as her connections to the  cauldron of rebirth, Daghda protects it, and it is said that those who  partake of it never leave unsatisfied. 
Belenus was a more regional deity, who was worshipped mostly in  Northern Italy and the Gaulish Mediterranean coast. He was primarily a  god of agriculture. A great festival called Beltane was associated with  him. Lugh/Lug
The widespread diffusion of the god Lug (seemingly related to the  mythological figure Lúgh in Irish) in Celtic religion is apparent from  the number of place names in which his name appears, occurring across  the Celtic world from Ireland to Gaul. The most famous of these are the  cities of Lugdunum (the modern French city of Lyon) and Lugdunum  Batavorum (the modern city of Leiden). Lug is described in the Celtic  myths as a latecomer to the list of deities, and is usually described as  having the appearance of a young man. His weapons were the  throwing-spear and sling, and in Ireland a festival called the Lughnasa  (Modern Irish lúnasa) was held in his honor. 
Other Gods The Celts also worshipped a number of deities of which we know little  more than their names. Among these are the goddess Brigit (or Brigid),  the Dagda's daughter; nature goddesses like Tailtiu and Macha; and  Epona, the horse goddess. Male gods included Cu Roi and Goibniu, the  immortal brewer of beer.  
Cernunnos (the Horned One) is evidently of great antiquity, but we know  little about him. It is probably he who appears on the famous embossed  silver bowl found in Gundestrup, Denmark which dates from the 1st or 2nd  century BC. The Roman writer Lucan (1st century AD) mentions the gods  Taranis, Teutates and Esus, but there is little Celtic evidence that  these were important deities. 
Some of these gods and goddesses may have been variants of each other;  Epona the Gallo-Roman horse goddess, for instance, may well have  developed into the goddesses Rhiannon, in Wales, and Macha, who was  mostly worshiped in Ulster. Polytheistic peoples rarely care to keep  their pantheons in the neat and tidy order in which scholars would like  to find them. 
Temples Often it is said that the Celtic peoples built no temples, and  worshiped only outside in groves of trees. Archaeology has long shown  this is untrue, with various temple structures throughout the Celtic  world being known. With the Roman conquest of parts of the Celtic world a  distinct type of Celto-Roman temple called a fanum also was developed.  This was distinguished from a Classical temple by having an ambulatory  on all four sides of the central cella. 
Celtic Worship The early Celts considered some trees to be sacred. The importance of  trees in Celtic religion is shown by the fact that the very name of the  Eburonian tribe contains a reference to the yew tree, and that names  like Mac Cuilinn (son of holly) and Mac Ibar (son of yew) appear in  Irish myths. 
Roman writers stated that the Celts practiced human sacrifice on a  fairly large scale and there is peripheral support for this in Irish  sources; however, most of this information is secondhand or hearsay.  There are only very few recorded archaeological discoveries which  substantiate the sacrificial process and thus most contemporary  historians tend to regard human sacrifice as rare within Celtic  cultures. 
There was also a warrior cult that centered on the severed heads of  their enemies. The Celts provided their dead with weapons and other  accoutrements, which indicates that they believed in an afterlife.  Before burial, they also severed the dead person's head and shattered  the skull, perhaps to prevent the ghost from wandering. 
Names for Celts
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. 
English Gaul(s), French Gaulois(es), Spanish Galo(s), Latin Gallus or  Galli, German Gallier 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 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" and the suffixed form *Walhisk-). The  Volcae were one of the Celtic peoples that barred, for two centuries,  the southward expansion of the German tribes in 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 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 Germans, of ultimately Celtic origin. 
Language
The Six Celtic LanguagesThere was a unifying language spoken by the Celts, called not surprisingly, old Celtic. Philogists have shown the descendant 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 sometime 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 tounge 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. 
Today there are no remaining independent Celtic countries; however, the Celtic language (Gaelic) has survived in the form of Scots, Irish, Welsh, Breton, and Manx Gaelic. Irish and Manx Gaelic are the closest to the original language, retaining the Q sound in such words as cen (head), whereas the Breton and Welsh pen (also head) uses a P sound. 
Writing - Ogham

The ancient Celts had a form of writing called ogham (pronounced  OH-yam). It was the writing of Druids and Bards. Ogham is also called  'Tree Alphabet' because each letter corresponds to a tree and an  associated meaning. The letters were, in fact, engraved onto sticks as  well as larger standing stones.   
In keeping with Druidic concepts, each of the Ogham's twenty letters  bears the name  of a tree. A-Ailim (Elm), B-Bithe (Birch), C-Coll  (Hazel), for example. The Celts had an oral tradition so it was not used  to write stories or history as these were memorized.  
The Ogham alphabet contains twenty letters and is read from the bottom  up. The letters are constructed using a combination of lines placed  adjacent to or crossing a midline. An individual letter may contain from one to five vertical or angled strokes. Vowels were  sometimes described as a combination of dots. The midline was, most  often, the edge of the object on which the inscription was carved.  
Ogham was named after the Celtic god of literature, Ogma. It was used on the edges of burial stones and boundary markers. They usually held the name of a person. Examples exist to this day.  
It was also used on rods or strips of wood that were fastened together  at one end. These wands were opened and closed to present stories or  poems. Since these wands were made of wood, none survive today. Only the  messages on stone survived.  

The wooden sticks with the Ogham marking were used for divination  similar to the way Runes were  used by Norse peoples. Only the Druids and Bards understood the system  and could have great influences on their people when they demonstrated  its power.   
There are 369 verified examples of Ogham writing surviving today. These  exist in the form of                            standing stones  concentrated in Ireland, but scattered across Scotland, the Isle of Man,  South                            Wales, Devonshire, and as far afield  as Silchester (the ancient Roman city of Calleva Attrebatum).  
Similiar markings have been found on standing stones in Spain and  Portugal. The markings in Spain are believed to be much older than the  ones in Ireland, perhaps dating from 800 BC. It is from this area of the Iberian Peninsula that the Celts who colonized the British  Isles may have come.  
Ogam can still be seen inscribed on hundreds of large and small stones,  on the walls of some caves, but also on bone, ivory, bronze and silver  objects.  
The Ogam script was especially well adapted for use on sticks. Sticks  are part of the Basque word for "alphabet": agaka, agglutinated from  aga-aka, aga (stick or pole) and akats (notch).  
The meaning of the word agaka therefore isn't so much "alphabet"  as "writing", a stick with Ogam notches conveying a message. The name  Ogam likely comes from oga-ama, ogasun (property, wealth) ama  (Priestess, mother) property of the Priestess, which indicates that the  script was originally designed for use by the clergy of the  pre-Christian religion.  
Ogam was adopted and further developed by the first monks in Ireland.  Our earliest information indicates that they were not sure as to where  Ogam came from. According to the "Auraicept" the origin of Irish and  Ogam must be sought in the Near East: "In Dacia it was invented, though  others say it was in the Plain of Shinar" (line 1105-06). A "made in  Ireland" version is recorded in "In Lebor Ogaim" in which the inventor  is "Ogma mac Elathan who is said to have been skilled in speech and  poetry and to have created the system as proof of his intellectual  ability and with the intention that it should be the preserve of the  learned, to the exclusion of rustics and fools" ( McManus 8.4). 
The script was used by the monks as a monument script between 450 and  800 A.D. and they used it for literary purposes between 650 and 900 A.D.  Every time the script was inscribed in stone it must have been used  thousands of times on sticks, for which medium the script was obviously  designed. Over 500 Ogam inscriptions are known from Ireland (collected  by R.A.S. Macalister), some 40 from Scotland ( A. Jackson) and a growing  number from the east coast of North America.  
The fact that not a single one has been successfully translated is not  so much the fault of the monks who wrote the texts, as of our linguists,  all of whom assumed that the language of the script was Gaelic.  However, this assumption appears to be without foundation, because the  syntax of the Gaelic language in no way lends itself to be written in  traditional Ogam.   
The Serpent's Stone

The Serpent's Stone is a symbol of an ancient wisdom and fidelity;  touchstone of universal truths. The complexity of earthly life sometimes  obscures a simple truth. The four serpent heads emerge from the  labyrinth of Creation to point the way through self-examination. The  brilliant colours convey a sense of drama and intrigue. As a meditative  glyph, it endorses the need for self-examination. Thus when truth  becomes entangled in a moral dilemma, evoke the secret wisdom of the  Serpent's Stone.  
The basic economy of the Celts was mixed farming, and, except in times  of unrest, single farmsteads were usual. Owing to the wide variations in  terrain and climate, cattle raising was more important than cereal  cultivation in some regions.  
Trade Routes 
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, and in the Atlantic islands their chariot tactics defeated the invasion attempted by Julius Caesar. 
 
 Textiles in ancient times were fairly advanced.  Weaving is a very basic technology and was quite advanced as early as                                       5,000 BCE, and brightly colored dyes were readily available. If we met our                                       Celtic ancestors, they would probably look as gaudy to us as they did to the                                       Romans, since they were very fond of bright colors and ornamentation.  
There aren't a lot of textile remains found for Celtic clothing from prehistoric                                       times through the 16th century; we mostly have to rely on manuscripts and                                       descriptions of what was worn at various times. However, I will make some                                       educated guesses based on textile construction techniques from the few                                       Celtic finds available, as well as evidence from the bog finds in Denmark,                                       which could arguably be either Celtic or Teutonic.  
Obviously, fashions varied                                       from place to place and time to time, so Celtic clothing wasn't universally the                                       same in all places over the thousand or so years I'm spanning; however,                                       similar techniques of constructing and decorating clothing were used  
Art

Celtic Mandala - Celtic Tree of Life
There are many modern 'politically correct' problems surrounding exactly what is Celtic and what is not.  

The most common error is to talk of Celtic knotwork,  that complicated and elaborate interlacing of lines, curves and  geometric shapes which seems to be appearing everywhere nowadays.  
This style of design and decoration was in fact brought to Britain in  the 6th century AD by Saxon Christian monks and was used exclusively to  illuminate the handwritten Christian Gospels. The Saxon people used some  of the art for personal decoration. Any of the knotwork that has animal  shapes incorporated shows influence from the Vikings. It is indeed a  very attractive and distinctive style of decoration - but it is not  Celtic.  
In Pre-Celtic Britain, there are many ancient places that were  elaborately and painstakingly decorated and carved with many different  styles of spiral, zig-zag, diamond, line and curve but nowhere do these  separate symbols and designs overlap or interlace and nowhere is there to be found an example of knotwork. It  should also be noted that these elaborate designs and symbols are not  Celtic either. They were carved into the rocks by an unknown race of  megalith builders thousands of years before the Celtic culture arrived.  
It is also a common practice for modern day Celtic groups to employ various symbols, such as the Crescent and V-Rod, the Switch, the Two Worlds etc, as part of their Celtic regalia and ritual but, once again, these ancient symbols are not Celtic they are Pictish. The Picts were a scandinavian people and the only places where these symbols are to be found, carved on stones etc, are in the North East of Scotland and they are, therefore, as foreign to the British tribes as the 'Celtic' knotwork is.  
Another modern addition to this confusing collection of symbolism is the ubiquitous pentagram which is unquestionably non-Celtic - Jewish, from the seals of Solomon.  
What, then, were the symbols used by the Celts? It is true that they greatly admired all art-forms and decorative styles and that they used these to a great extent on just about everything from household utensils to battle-chariots. But the symbols they used are the ones that are still all round us today :-the trees, the birds, the animals, the hills and lakes and all the other manifestations of the life-force on Earth.  
The Celts were a warlike, passionate people with a love of art. Truly, Celtic art is distinguished for its extensive curves and intricate knot work which is used to form complex decorations for weapons, jewelry and body tattooing. Along with the extensive use of body tattooing the Celts highlighted their naturally fair hair by washing it in lime-water. This fondness for art and personal decoration was merged with acts of barbarism, such as beheading their enemies and carrying the severed heads around the necks of their horses. The head was the ultimate source of spiritual power; to posses the enemies head, was to posses his spirit. Riding naked on fast moving, light chariots, shreiking and swinging large hacking swords and throwing spears was a most effective method of warfare for instilling terror into their enemies. 
Celtic art is art associated with various peoples known as Celts  speaking the Celtic languages in Europe from pre-history through to the  medieval period and beyond, as well as art of ancient peoples whose  language is unknown but where cultural and stylistic similarities lead  archaeologists to consider it probable that they were predecessors of  those known to speak Celtic languages, and Celtic revival art from the  18th century to the modern era which began as a conscious effort by  Modern Celts to express self-identification and nationalism. 
Celtic art is ornamental, avoiding straight lines and only occasionally  using symmetry, without the imitation of nature or ideal of beauty  central to the classical tradition, but as far as we can understand it  often involves complex symbolism. It includes a variety of styles and  often incorporates subtly modified elements from other cultures, an  example being the characteristic over-and-under interlacing which only  arrived in the 6th century when it was already in use by Germanic  artists. 
There are three "traditions" of Celtic art, the first being the  continental Iron age art mainly associated with La Tène culture which  draws on native, classical and (perhaps via the Mediterranean) oriental  sources. The second, Iron age art in Britain and Ireland, draws on the  continental tradition while adding distinctive regional styles. The  third, the Celtic "renaissance" of the early Middle Ages in Ireland and  to a lesser extent in parts of Britain, borrows heavily from Roman  motifs. This third tradition formed the basis for the relatively recent  Celtic revival art. 
Music
Celtic music is a broad grouping of musical genres that evolved out of  the folk musical traditions of the Celtic peoples of Western Europe. The  term Celtic music may refer to both orally-transmitted traditional  music and recorded popular music with only a superficial resemblance to  folk styles of the Celtic peoples. 
Most typically, the term Celtic music is applied to the music of Ireland  and Scotland, because both places have produced well-known distinctive  styles which actually have genuine commonality and clear mutual  influences. The music of Wales, Cornwall, Isle of Man, Brittany,  Northumbria and Galicia are also frequently considered a part of Celtic  music, the Celtic tradition being particularly strong in Brittany, where  Celtic festivals large and small take place throughout the year.  Finally, the music of ethnically Celtic peoples abroad are also  considered, especially in Canada and the United States. 
Warriors

Celtic warriors were drawn from what we would describe as the middle  and upper class. The warrior class did the actual fighting: the  free poor served as chariot drivers. The Celt was a warrior in  the heroic sense. Everything had to be larger than life. He lived  for war. His glorification of bravery often led him to  recklessness. Part of a warriors ritual was to boast of his  victories, and fighting between warriors was an important part  of life. 
Most Celts scorned the use of armor and before about 300  B.C. preferred to fight naked. Some Celtic tribes still fought  naked at the battle of Telamon in 225 B.C. The Celt was  renowned as a swords-man but he also used javelins and  spears. Two spears which were found at La Tene in Switzerland  were nearly 2.5m long.  
His only protection was his large shield  which was usually oval. The suggestion that the Celt wore heavy  bracelets in battle has to be questioned, as it is hard to  understand how they would stay on his arm whilst he wielded his  sword. Dionysius tells us that in battle the Celts whirled their  swords above their heads, slashing the air from side to side,  then struck downwards at their enemies as if chopping wood. It  was this use of the sword that so terrified their enemies. The  Celts did not fight in a rabble as is so often supposed. They  were organized in companies. This can be proved by their use  of standards. 
The Celt was a head-hunter. In battle he would cut off the head  of his fallen enemy and often hang it from his horse's neck. After  battle he would display the severed head at the entrance to his  temple.  
The severed head is a constant theme in Celtic art. At  the battle of Beneventumin 214 B.C. the Roman general  Gracchus had to order his army of freed slaves (presumably  Celts) to stop collecting heads and get on with the fighting.  After a battle the Celts would often dedicate their enemies  weapons to the gods and throw them into a river or lake.  
The  hundreds of weapons that have been dredged from the Lake of  Neuchatel at La Tene were such offerings. In fact the site at La  Tene has revealed so many Celtic artifacts that its name has  been given to the whole Celtic culture. 
The chiefs and the wealthiest Celts often did wear armor  particularly when they came into contact with the Greeks and  Romans. They often adopted items of Greek or Roman armor. A  pair of greaves were found in the chieftain's grave at Ciumesti.  Several graves have been found in Northern Italy which contain  Etruscan armour and Celtic weapons.  
Before a battle the chiefs  would ride out, in front of the army clashing their weapons on  their shields, proclaiming their great deeds and challenging the  enemy to single combat. Caesar describes the British as  dressed in skins (meaning leather) and decorated with woad, a  blue dye. Some tattooed skin from a Scythian grave of this  period suggests that the Britons were tattooed in blue.  
Online
Collis, John. The Celts - Origins, Myths & Inventions. Stroud: Tempus Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0752429132. 
Cunliffe, Barry.  The Ancient Celts. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0198150105.  

Celts is a modern term used to describe any of the European peoples who  spoke, or speak, a Celtic language. The term is also used in a wider  sense to describe the modern descendants of those peoples, notably those  who participate in a Celtic culture. The historical Celts were a  diverse group of tribal societies in Iron Age Europe. Proto-Celtic  culture formed in the Early Iron Age in Central Europe (Hallstatt  period, named for the site in present-day Austria).
By the later Iron Age (La Tène period), Celts had expanded over a wide range of lands: as far west as Ireland and the Iberian Peninsula, as far east as Galatia (central Anatolia), and as far north as Scotland. The earliest direct attestation of a Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions, beginning from the 6th century BC. Continental Celtic languages are attested only in inscriptions and place-names. Insular Celtic is attested from about the fourth century AD in ogham inscriptions. Literary tradition begins with Old Irish from about the eighth century. Coherent texts of Early Irish literature, such as the Táin Bó Cúailnge, survive in 12th century recension.
By the early first millennium AD, following the expansion of the Roman Empire and the Great Migrations (Migration Period) of Germanic peoples, Celtic culture had become restricted to the British Isles (Insular Celtic), and the Continental Celtic languages ceased to be widely used by the sixth century. "Celtic Europe" today refers to the lands surrounding the Irish Sea, as well as Cornwall and Brittany on either side of the English Channel.
 
 
Legends of the Celts Part 1 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 2 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 3 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 4 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 5 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 6 of 6
By the later Iron Age (La Tène period), Celts had expanded over a wide range of lands: as far west as Ireland and the Iberian Peninsula, as far east as Galatia (central Anatolia), and as far north as Scotland. The earliest direct attestation of a Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions, beginning from the 6th century BC. Continental Celtic languages are attested only in inscriptions and place-names. Insular Celtic is attested from about the fourth century AD in ogham inscriptions. Literary tradition begins with Old Irish from about the eighth century. Coherent texts of Early Irish literature, such as the Táin Bó Cúailnge, survive in 12th century recension.
By the early first millennium AD, following the expansion of the Roman Empire and the Great Migrations (Migration Period) of Germanic peoples, Celtic culture had become restricted to the British Isles (Insular Celtic), and the Continental Celtic languages ceased to be widely used by the sixth century. "Celtic Europe" today refers to the lands surrounding the Irish Sea, as well as Cornwall and Brittany on either side of the English Channel.
 
 Legends of the Celts Part 1 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 2 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 3 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 4 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 5 of 6
Legends of the Celts - Part 6 of 6

Honoring one of the most fascinating culture that ever existed , the Celtic . A 4-parts movie about this beautiful ancient civilization, based of pictures taken from a book called " Historical Atlas of The Celtic World" by Angus Konstam.
Divided into chapters 1-4
Chapter 1- Celtic Origins-- pictures of historical evidences of the proto-Celts throughout the Neolithic, Bronze Age and early in the Hallstatt and La Tenne Ages ( swords, jewelry, sacred places..)
Chapter 2- Celtic People ittals about the various celtic tribes ( gauls, iberian celts, italian celts, galatians, etc)
Chapter 3- Early Celtic Art- the evolutions of art from the Hallstattt to La Tenne
Chapter 4- Celtic Belief-- sacred landscapes, sacred waters, gods and deities
Celtic World - Par 1 of 4
Celtic World - Par 2 of 4
Celtic World - Par 3 of 4
Celtic World - Par 4 of 4
 
 
 
5 comments:
What in all thats holy is this supposed to mean~"The indigenous populations of Britain and Ireland today are primarily descended from the ancient peoples that have always inhabited these lands." Do you mean the stone-age peoples that wandered to the end of a peninsula, settling only to be cut off from their land of origin by the sudden (1-2 years)melt & inrush of water which filled the valley between the British Isles & what is now mainland Europe 10,000 years ago.
I guess its one way of looking at how information or secrets of ancient time spread. I was trying to view the European movement.
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