The two inch metal charm, dating from the second century AD, depicts a
faceless individual, holding a ‘torc’ or neck ring, and is thought to
represent ‘Cernunnos’, the Celtic god of nature, life and the
underworld.
It was found by archaeologists in farmland at the National Trust’s Wimpole Estate in a field which is to be turned into a car park.
Click here to read more.
An eclectic mix of book and music reviews, ramblings and other flotsam and jetsom encountered on an expedition to find a place in the pre-Christian religious traditions, and practices of the British Isles.
Showing posts with label Àrc-Eolas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Àrc-Eolas. Show all posts
23 July 2016
21 July 2016
Exploring Celtic Civilizations | An Online Celtic Studies Coursebook
Exploring Celtic Civilizations | An On-line Celtic Studies Course-Book
Exploring Celtic Civilizations is an on-line course book suitable for undergraduates introducing the field of Celtic Studies: the various kinds of evidence available about Celtic-speaking communities through over two millennia and the methods available for understanding them. This digital course book thus presents texts as well as other sorts of evidence, such as aspects of material culture (e.g., archaeological artefacts), through on-line exhibits and data visualizations.
20 July 2016
In Search of the Irish Dreamtime: Archaeology and Early Irish Literature by JP Mallory review
"In Search of the Irish Dreamtime: Archaeology and Early Irish Literature" a review by JP Mallory.
JP Mallory describes this book as a companion to his The Origins of the Irish,
from 2013, in which he sketched the emergence in the early medieval
period of a people who were recognisably Irish. In that book he briefly
examined the legendary history of Ireland as written down in
early-medieval times by clerical scholars who prized the vernacular
traditions of poetry, myth and legend and gave them an honoured place
side by side with the Latin learning of the church.
He returns to that subject in this latest valuable study written in his characteristic accessible and witty style.
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