Название: CELTIC MYTHOLOGY (Illustrated Edition)
Автор: T. W. Rolleston
Издательство: Bookwire
Жанр: Документальная литература
isbn: 4064066399948
isbn:
Many of these local cults were pre-Celtic, but we need not therefore suppose that the Celts, or the Aryans as a whole, had no such cults.900 The Aryans everywhere adopted local cults, but this they would not have done if, as is supposed, they had themselves outgrown them. The cults were local, but the Celts had similar local cults, and easily accepted those of the people they conquered. We cannot explain the persistence of such primitive cults as lie behind the great Celtic festivals, both in classical times and over the whole area of Europe among the peasantry, by referring them solely to a pre-Aryan folk. They were as much Aryan as pre-Aryan. They belong to those unchanging strata of religion which have so largely supplied the soil in which its later and more spiritual growths have flourished. And among these they still emerge, unchanged and unchanging, like the gaunt outcrops of some ancient rock formation amid rich vegetation and fragrant flowers.
837. Pliny, xvi. 45; Cæsar, vi. 18. See my article "Calendar (Celtic)" in Hastings' Encyclopædia of Rel. and Ethics, iii. 78 f., for a full discussion of the problems involved.
838. O'Donovan, Book of Rights, Intro. lii f.
839. O'Donovan, li.; Bertrand, 105; Keating, 300.
840. Samhain may mean "summer-end," from sam, "summer," and fuin, "sunset" or "end," but Dr. Stokes (US 293) makes samani- mean "assembly," i.e. the gathering of the people to keep the feast.
841. Keating, 125, 300.
842. See MacBain, CM ix. 328.
843. Brand, i. 390; Ramsay, Scotland and Scotsmen in the Eighteenth Century, ii. 437; Stat. Account, xi. 621.
844. Hazlitt, 297-298, 340; Campbell, Witchcraft, 285 f.
845. Curtin, 72.
846. Fitzgerald, RC vi. 254.
847. See Chambers, Mediæval Stage, App. N, for the evidence from canons and councils regarding these.
848. Tille, Yule and Christmas, 96.
849. Chambers, Popular Rhymes, 166.
850. Hutchinson, View of Northumberland, ii. 45; Thomas, Rev. de l'Hist. des Rel. xxxviii. 335 f.
851. Patrol. Lot. xxxix. 2001.
852. IT i. 205; RC v. 331; Leahy, i. 57.
853. See p. 169, supra.
854. The writer has himself seen such bonfires in the Highlands. See also Hazlitt, 298; Pennant, Tour, ii. 47; Rh^ys, HL 515, CFL i. 225-226. In Egyptian mythology, Typhon assailed Horus in the form of a black swine.
855. Keating, 300.
856. Joyce, SH ii. 556; RC x. 214, 225, xxiv. 172; O'Grady, ii. 374; CM ix. 209.
857. See Mannhardt, Mythol. Forschung. 333 f.; Frazer, Adonis, passim; Thomas, Rev. de l'Hist. des Rel. xxxviii. 325 f.
858. Hazlitt, 35; Chambers, Mediæval Stage, i. 261.
859. Chambers, Book of Days, ii. 492; Hazlitt, 131.
860. Hazlitt, 97; Davies, Extracts from Munic. Records of York, 270.
861. See p. 237, supra; LL 16, 213.
862. Chambers, Med. Stage, i. 250 f.
863. Cormac, s.v. "Belltaine," "Bel"; Arch. Rev. i. 232.
864. D'Arbois, ii. 136.
865. Stokes, US 125, 164. See his earlier derivation, dividing the word into belt, connected with Lithuan. baltas, "white," and aine, the termination in sechtmaine, "week" (TIG xxxv.).
866. Need-fire (Gael. Teinne-eiginn, "necessity fire") was used to kindle fire in time of cattle plague. See Grimm, Teut. Myth. 608 f.; Martin, 113; Jamieson's Dictionary, s.v. "neidfyre."
867. Cormac, s.v.; Martin, 105, says that the Druids extinguished all fires until their dues were paid. This may have been a tradition in the Hebrides.