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Celtic Paganism

A Wisdom Archive on Celtic Paganism

Celtic Paganism

A selection of articles related to Celtic Paganism

We recommend this article: Celtic Paganism - 1, and also this: Celtic Paganism - 2.
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Index of Articles
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Celtic Paganism
Celtic paganism, Celtic polytheism - Cosmology and eschatology, Celtic polytheism - Cults within Celtic polytheism, Celtic polytheism - Deities, Celtic polytheism - Extent of Celtic polytheism, Celtic polytheism - Festivals, Celtic polytheism - Literature, Celtic polytheism - Religious castes, Celtic polytheism - Research, Celtic polytheism - Syncretism with other forms of polytheism, Celtic polytheism - The effect of Christianity, Celtic polytheism - Worship, Celtic polytheism - Bards and filid, Celtic polytheism - Beltane, Celtic polytheism - Cult of youthful masculinity, Celtic polytheism - Cult of Lugus-Mercurius, Celtic polytheism - Cult of Sucellos, Celtic polytheism - Cult of exaltedness, Celtic polytheism - Cult of horse power and horsemanship, Celtic polytheism - Cult of impressiveness, Celtic polytheism - Cult of maternity, Celtic polytheism - Cult of radiance or healing, Celtic polytheism - Cult of terrestrial bounty, Celtic polytheism - Cult of the bullish vitality, Celtic polytheism - Cult of the power of boggy terrain, Celtic polytheism - Cult of the stag’s vitality, Celtic polytheism - Cult of the trinitarian war-goddess, Celtic polytheism - Cult of thermal spring-water, Celtic polytheism - Cults of agricultural gods, Celtic polytheism - Cults of craftsmanship, Celtic polytheism - Cults of cyclicality in nature, Celtic polytheism - Cults of femininity & majesty, Celtic polytheism - Cults of fluvial water, Celtic polytheism - Cults of maritime forces, Celtic polytheism - Cults of tribalism, lordly power and thunderous force, Celtic polytheism - Druids, Celtic polytheism - Samhain, Celtic mythology, Celtic languages, Irish mythology, Welsh mythology, Gundestrup cauldron, horned helmet, Proto-Indo-European religion, Germanic paganism, paganism, polytheism, spiritualism, animism

ARTICLES RELATED TO Celtic Paganism

Celtic Paganism: Why Wicca is Not Celtic Paganism

Why Wicca is Not Celtic Paganism

There are many out there who believe that Wicca and its related forms of NeoPagism are a type of Celtic Paganism (and vice versa),  but this is simply not true. The following article is meant to be a comparison of Wicca and Celtic Paganism in order to demonstrate this, and to educate the public about Celtic Paganism. While Wicca certainly contains elements of Celtic mythology, folk magic and religious belief, its basic tenets and beliefs are radically different from those of Celtic Pagans.

 

Read more here: » Wicca and Celtic Paganism: Why Wicca is Not Celtic Paganism

Celtic Paganism: Encyclopedia - Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism
Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism (CR) is a Neopagan religious movement. It is an effort to reconstruct, in a modern context, an ancient Celtic religious framework. Neopagan reconstructionists have been around since the 1970s but little of it has been specifically Celtic. Many of the people who went on to establish CR were involved in Neopagan groups in the seventies and eighties. Often these groups contained many Celtic elements that eventually found their way into core CR practice. This period, and these groups, are often ref ...

Including:

Read more here: » Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism: Encyclopedia - Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism

Celtic Paganism: Pagan Denominations Dictionary on CELTIC TRADITIONALIST

CELTIC TRADITIONALIST: A reconstruction of  the beliefs and practices of the original Celtic people. Unlike Druidry, this tradition focuses more on the beliefs of the average Celtic man or woman.

 

(See also: CELTIC TRADITIONALIST, Pagan Organisations, Paganism, Pagan Dictionary, Wicca, )

 

For more dictionary entries, see » Celtic Paganism Dictionary

Celtic Paganism: Toward a Celtic Numerology

Toward a Celtic Numerology

What's in a word? Or a name? What special power resides in a word, connecting it so intimately to the very thing it symbolizes? Does each word or name have its own 'vibration', as is generally believed by those of us who follow the Western occult tradition? And if so, how do we begin to unravel its meaning? Just what, exactly, is in a word? Well, LETTERS are in a word. In fact, letters COMPRISE the word. Which is why Taliesyn's remark had always puzzled me. Why didn't he say he had been a 'letter among words'? That, at least, would seem to make more logical sense than saying he had been a 'word among letters', which seems backwards. Unless...  

 

Read more here: » Paganism: Toward a Celtic Numerology

Celtic Paganism: A Celebration of MAY DAY

A Celebration of MAY DAY

There are four great festivals of the Pagan Celtic year and the modern Witch's calendar as well. The two greatest of these are Halloween (the beginning of winter) and May Day (the beginning of summer). Being opposite each other on the wheel of the year, they separate the year into halves. Halloween (also called Samhain) is the Celtic New Year and is generally considered the more important of the two, though May Day runs a close second. Indeed, in some areas -- notably Wales -- it is considered the great holiday.

 

Read more here: » May Day: A Celebration of MAY DAY

Celtic Paganism: Creating Sacred Space In Your Home

Creating Sacred Space In Your Home

Many modern Celtic pagans today are faced with a difficult question: how can I bring my religion into my home? Whether we live in a dormitory, an apartment, a duplex or a mansion, most of us like to have our homes reflect our personalities and the things we are interested in, and that includes our spiritual practices, but many of us don't have back yards in which to practice and set up more permanent shrines, or 24/7 access to our favorite places in nature. For some, just setting up an altar somewhere in the home is either undesirable, unachievable or just not enough.

 

Read more here: » SacredSpace: Creating Sacred Space In Your Home

Celtic Paganism: RE-THINKING THE WATCHTOWERS or 13 Reasons Air Should Be In The North

The first time I noticed conflicting ritual elements was when I was invited as a guest to attend another Coven's esbat celebration. When the time came to 'invoke the Watchtowers' (a ritual salutation to the four directions), I was amazed to learn that this group associated the element of Earth with the North. My own Coven equated North with Air. How odd, I thought. Where'd they get that? The High Priestess told me it had been copied out of a number of published sources. Further, she said she had never seen it listed any other way. I raced home and began tearing books from my own library shelves. And sure enough! Practically every book I consulted gave the following assoications as standard: North = Earth, East = Air, South = Fire, West = Water.

 

Then where the heck did I get the idea that Air belonged in the North?

 

Read more here: » Paganism: RE-THINKING THE WATCHTOWERS or 13 Reasons Air Should Be In The North

Celtic Paganism: All Hallow's Eve

Samhain. All Hallows. All Hallow's Eve. Hallow E'en. Halloween. The most magical night of the year. Exactly opposite Beltane on the wheel of the year, Halloween is Beltane's dark twin. A night of glowing jack-o-lanterns, bobbing for apples, tricks or treats, and dressing in costume. A night of ghost stories and seances, tarot card readings and scrying with mirrors. A night of power, when the veil that separates our world from the Otherworld is at its thinnest. A "spirit night," as they say in Wales.

 

Read more here: » Halloween: All Hallow's Eve

Celtic Paganism: Paganism Pornography

Paganism & Pornography

At times my political views seem to lead me into contradictions. Last month saw me writing a furious letter to Penthouse magazine concerning their misinformed story on Witchcraft. Within two weeks I was writing to the head of the QuickTrip Corporation protesting the removal of Penthouse from their stores. You'd think I would have been happy at a blow struck against a magazine that maligned my religion. Not so. At stake is the free expression of ideas. Misinformation and censorship are both threats to that freedom. Of the two, I judge censorship to be the greater threat. As long as publishing continues unimpeded, retraction of misinformation is possible. When publishing is censored, even that becomes impossible.

 

Read more here: » Paganism: Paganism Pornography

Celtic Paganism: Celtic Marriage

 

Celtic Marriage

This article is not just for those interested in the traditions of Celtic Marriage, it is also a look into the complex body of law that governed the ancient Celts.

For the ancient Celts, marriage was a very different thing than what we conceive of as "marriage" today. For them, marriage or handfasting as some know it was a form of contract that had several purposes. These included the protection of property rights, the care of progeny (children), and the rights of the individuals involved in the relationships themselves.

 

Read more here: » Ancient Celts: Celtic Marriage

Celtic Paganism: Beltane - May 1 or May Day

Beltane is celebrated on May 1st and is one of the original Celtic festivals. Beltane or May Day is also known as the Lover's holiday. Beltane is one of the four Celtic Fire festivals, and is probably the second most important festival next to Samhain. Beltane is primarily a sun festival and was performed during the day. The most important part of Beltane was the kindling of the fires. The Irish Celts would extinguish their fires the night before and would eat a cold meal to insure that all fires were out. Then they would attend the ceremony, returning with an ember to once more start their fires.

 

Read more here: » Beltane: Beltane - May 1 or May Day

Celtic Paganism: Beltane - May Day Recipes

Beltane is celebrated on May 1st and is one of the original Celtic festivals.

 

7 recipies for Beltane including MEADE, FARLS, BELTANE CREAM PIE, OATCAKES - IRISH, OATCAKES - SCOTS, IRISH SODA BREAD, SAND TARTS (OLD GERMAN STYLE)

 

Read more here: » Beltane: Beltane - May Day Recipes

Celtic Paganism: THE PENTAGRAM

THE PENTAGRAM

The pentagram, or five-pointed star, may be the most misunderstood religious symbol around these days. Being the most common symbol of Neo-Pagan Witchcraft, it has nevertheless been denigrated by movie and publishing industries which seem 'hell-bent' on connecting it with Satanism and other malevolent practices. However, like the Roman Cross or Crucifix, it is only when the symbol is INVERTED that it alludes to negativity. And even then, there are exceptions, as we shall see.

 

Read more here: » Paganism: THE PENTAGRAM

Celtic Paganism: Reflections on OLD GUARD PAGANISM

Reflections on OLD GUARD PAGANISM

'Old Guard Paganism'. The phrase started out as a joke, but then caught on. This tells us something. It tells us there is a NEED for such a term. It also implies its own antithesis, 'New Guard Paganism'. And it indicates that there is some difference between the two -- a 'difference that makes a difference' -- and thus requires differentiating labels. (It should perhaps be noted that the word 'Paganism' is used in the present context -- however inaccurately -- to refer to modern Neo-Pagan Witchcraft, or Wicca. With grave misgivings, I have adopted this usage here.)

 

Read more here: » Paganism: Reflections on OLD GUARD PAGANISM

Celtic Paganism: SEXUAL COME-ONS AT PAGAN FESTIVALS - An Open Letter to the Web of Oz

SEXUAL COME-ONS AT PAGAN FESTIVALS - An Open Letter to the Web of Oz

Like many another Neo-Pagan, I began life under the heavy indoctrination of Christian precepts. Like many others, I found this upbringing to be not only painful, but psychologically damaging, as well. It has taken years of disciplined work to shrug off the feelings of guilt and self-recrimination foisted upon me during those years. Especially, I remember the pain of being taught to feel shame and remorse over each and every thought I had of a sexual nature. And any overt sexual act (other than narrowly defined exceptions) was anathema -- a cause for eternal damnation. 

 

Read more here: » Paganism: SEXUAL COME-ONS AT PAGAN FESTIVALS - An Open Letter to the Web of Oz

Celtic Paganism: Encyclopedia - Celtic calendar

The term Celtic calendar is used to refer to a variety of calendars used by Celtic-speaking peoples at different times in history. Celtic calendar - Neolithic Calendar?. A neolithic engraved stone found at Knowth, Ireland, may be a graphical representation of a lunar calendar. While pre-dating the Celts, Brennan (1994) speculates that it operates on the same principle as the Coligny calendar. Irish calendar, Celtic art Celtic calendar - Continental Celt ...

Including:

Read more here: » Celtic calendar: Encyclopedia - Celtic calendar

Celtic Paganism: Encyclopedia - Samhain

For information on the band, see Samhain (band). Samhain (IPA: /ˈsawənʲ/) is the word for November in Irish and Scottish Gaelic. The same word was used for the first month of the ancient Celtic calendar, and in particular the first three nights of this month, the festival marking the beginning of the winter season. Elements of the festival are continued in the traditions of All Souls Day and Halloween. The name is also used for one of the ...

Including:

Read more here: » Samhain: Encyclopedia - Samhain

Celtic Paganism: Encyclopedia - Celtic polytheism

Celtic polytheism (also called Druidic polytheism) is the term for the religious beliefs and practices of the ancient Celts. Celtic polytheism - Extent of Celtic polytheism. As the religion of the ancient Celts, the shifts in the fortunes of Celtic Polytheism coincided with those of its people. The Celts, like other ancient Indo-European peoples, practised a form of polytheism, which reached the apogee of its influence and territorial expansion during the 4th century BC, extending across the length o ...

Including:

Read more here: » Celtic polytheism: Encyclopedia - Celtic polytheism

Celtic Paganism: Encyclopedia - Pagan

Pagan may refer to: A believer in Paganism or Neopaganism Pagan, Myanmar Pagan Island, of the Northern Mariana Islands Pagan (Ultima), the world in which the Ultima VIII:Pagan computer game takes place Pagan Lorn, a metal band from Luxembourg, Europe (1994-1998) Pagan, the 6th album by Celtic metal band Cruachan A member of the Pagans Motorcycle Club Pagan - People. There are also numerous people for whom Pagan is eithe ...

Including:

Read more here: » Pagan: Encyclopedia - Pagan

Celtic Paganism: Encyclopedia - Celtic Rite

One part of Britain, indeed, derived a great part of its Christianity from post-Patrician Irish missions. St. Ia and her companions, and St. Piran, St. Sennen, St. Petrock, and the rest of the Irish saints who came to Cornwall in the late fifth and early sixth centuries found there, at any rate in the West, a population which had perhaps relapsed into Paganism under the Pagan King Teudar. When these saints introduced, or reintroduced, Christianity, they probably brought with them whatever rites they were accustomed to, and Cornwall certainly ...

Including:

Read more here: » Celtic Rite: Encyclopedia - Celtic Rite

More material related to Celtic Paganism can be found here:
YouTube Videos
related to
Celtic Paganism
Index of Articles
related to
Celtic Paganism
Glossary
related to
Celtic Paganism



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