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Celt History
Celts,
a people who dominated much of western and central Europe in the 1st
millennium BC, giving their language, customs, and religion to the other
peoples of that area. The earliest archaeological evidence associated
with the Celts places them in what is now France and western Germany in
the late Bronze Age, around 1200 BC. In the early Iron Age, they are
associated with the Hallstatt culture (8th century to 6th century BC,
named for an archaeological site in what is now Ober,sterreich (Upper
Austria). They probably began to settle in the British Isles during this
period. Between the 5th and 1st centuries BC, their influence extended
from what is now Spain to the shores of the Black Sea. This later Iron
Age phase is called La T'ne, after a site in Switzerland.
The word Celt is derived from Keltoi, the name given to these people by
Herodotus and other Greek writers. To the Romans, the Continental Celts
were known as Galli, or Gauls; those in the British Isles were called
Britanni. In the 4th century BC , the Celts invaded the Greco-Roman
world, conquering northern Italy, Macedonia, and Thessaly. They
plundered Rome in 390, sacked Delphi in 279, and penetrated Asia Minor,
where they were known as Galatians. The Cisalpine Gauls of northern
Italy were conquered by the Romans in the 2nd century BC; Transalpine
Gaul (modern France and the Rhineland) was subdued by Julius Caesar in
the 1st century BC, and most of Britain came under Roman rule in the 1st
century AD.
In the same period, the Celts of central Europe were dominated by the
Germanic peoples. In medieval and modern times the Celtic tradition and
languages survived in Brittany (in western France), Wales, the Scottish
Highlands, and Ireland.
Way
of Life:
The various Celtic tribes were bound together by common speech, customs,
and religion, rather than by any well-defined central governments. The
absence of political unity contributed substantially to the extinction
of their way of life, making them vulnerable to their enemies. Their
economy was pastoral and agricultural, and they had no real urban life.
Each tribe was headed by a king and was divided by class into Druids
(priests), warrior nobles, and commoners. The nobles fought on foot with
swords and spears and were fond of feasting and drinking. Celtic
mythology, which included earth gods, various woodland spirits, and sun
deities, was particularly rich in elfin demons and tutelaries, beings
that still pervade the lore of peoples of Celtic ancestry.
Celtic
Christianity:
The Christian faith was well established in Celtic Britain by the 4th
century AD, but in the 5th century the Saxons and other Germanic peoples
invaded the country, driving most of the Celtic Christians into Wales
and Cornwall. At the same time, Saint Patrick and other British
missionaries founded a new church in Ireland, which then became the
center of Celtic Christianity. The Irish church developed a distinctive
organization in which bishops were subordinate to the abbots of
monasteries . The Irish monks, devoted to learning as well as religion,
did much to preserve a knowledge of ancient Roman literature in early
medieval Europe. Between the late 6th and the early 8th centuries, Irish
missionaries were active in Christianizing the Germanic peoples that had
conquered the Western Roman Empire, and they founded numerous
monasteries in present-day France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy.
Celtic Christianity in Ireland was weakened by the Viking invasions of
the 9th and 10th centuries, and by the 12th century its characteristic
institutions, which were incompatible with those of the dominant Roman
church, had largely disappeared from Europe.
Celtic
Art is considered the first great contribution to European art made by
non-Mediterranean peoples. Its roots go back to the artisans of the
Urnfield culture and the Hallstatt culture (8th-6th century BC at the
beginning of the Iron Age. It flowered in the period of the La T'ne
culture. Although Celtic art was influenced by ancient Persian, Greek,
Etruscan, and Roman art and by that of the nomads of the Eurasian
steppes, it developed distinctive characteristics. These are evident in
its major artifacts, weapons, vessels, and jewelry in bronze, gold, and
occasionally silver. Many of these objects were made for chieftains in
southern Germany and France and were recovered from their tombs.
The Celtic style is marked by a preference for stylized plant motifs,
usually of Greek origin, and fantastic animals, derived from the
Scythians and other steppe peoples; the human figure plays a secondary
role. Other favorite motifs are elliptical curves and opposing curves,
spirals, and chevrons, also derived from steppe art. These elements were
combined in dynamic yet balanced, intricate geometrical patterns carried
out in relief, engraving, or red, yellow, blue, and green champlev,
enamel on shields, swords, sheaths, helmets, bowls, and jewelry. They
also appeared on painted pottery cinerary urns, food vessels, incense
bowls, and drinking cups. Examples of Celtic art include torcs, or neck
rings, with the two open ends ornamented with animal heads; the silver
repouss, Gundestorp cauldron (circa 100 BC, a bronze lozenge-shaped
shield with circular medallions and small enamel circles (1st century
BC); and a bronze mirror with enameled decoration (1st century BC).
Also surviving are roughly carved stone monuments and wooden objects.
During the period of Roman domination of Western Europe in and after the
1st century BC, the art of Celtic peoples on the Continent gradually
lost its distinctive style. The Celts of Ireland continued to work with
traditional motifs, but, as Christianity took hold, they combined them
with Christian motifs and employed their skills in the service of the
church. Their carved stone crosses; intricate metal chalices, bells, and
reliquaries; and magnificently illuminated liturgical books may more
properly be considered Irish art.
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