Transcript The Celts
The Celts
Who were they?
The term refers to any number of ancient
tribes in Europe using the Celtic
languages
Origins and geographical
distribution
Some historians believe that they
originate from the Caspian steppes
The first records date back to 600BC
By that time they had spread over much
of Central Europe, the Iberian peninsula,
Ireland and Britain
Geographical Distribution
the core Hallstatt
territory, expansion
before 500 BC(yellow)
maximum Celtic
expansion by the 3rd
century BC (blue),
the boundaries of the six
commonly-recognized
'Celtic nations', which
remained Celtic speaking
throughout the Middle
Ages (green).
areas that remain Celticspeaking today (dark
green)
Celtic languages in Britain
Pictish (Scotland)
Brythonic (England)
Scotti (Ireland)
Cornish (South-England)
Other Celtic languages
Belgae (Belgium)
Gaulish (France)
Proto-Basque (Spain)
Galatian (Greece)
Etc.
The Celts before the
Romans
Social hierarchy:
kings
warrior aristocracy
druids, poets, jurists
everyone else
Organization of society
Around wars
Kings were elected – the best warriors
became the high and low kings
Women were also participating in all
spheres – they could become queens
They were hunters and raiders – all the
goods were shared
Celtic arts
They were literate, but preferred the oral tradition
Highly skilled in visual arts (on clay, metal, wood)
Faith
Druidism, after the Roman conquest
`Celtic Christianity`
Druidism:
- Immortality of the soul
- When somebody dies the soul passes to
a newborn child
- They believed that they descended from
a supreme being
Druids
-
Classes: prophets, bards and priests
Assisted by sorcerers (female priests)
Druids had the power:
of mastering astrology
of magic
to control animals and plants
of healing
Sacred rituals
Rituals carried out in oak forests
Sacred plants: oak trees and mistletoes
Used altars (stone monuments)
Stone temples (Stonehenge)
Providing sacrifices (human heads,
plants, animals) to animistic gods (gods
of the wood, elements, rivers, etc.)
After the Roman conquest
Julius Caesar conquered Gallia, and
parts of Britain; Claudius went deeper
into the inlands of Britain; Hadrian's limes
established the northern border against
the Pictish and Scottish invasions
3rd to 5th century AD
Roman influence
Christianity
Roads, aqueducts
Urbanization
Taxation, commerce
Anglo-Saxon invasion
From 6th century onwards
Lots of Celts fled to Ireland
Some melted
Remained only in Wales (Cymru, Cardiff
= Caerdydd) and Scotland (Gaelic: Alba)
Language slowly disappeared
Celtic influence on Modern
England
Christianity
Beliefs/Customs: Wiccas, Halloween,
May Day
Language (qw- queen, kn- knight, knife
-gh burgh, loch, lake-kh)