The Religion of the Ancient Celts - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
[825] Diod. Sic. v. 29; Strabo, iv. 4. 5.
[826] D'Arbois, v. 11; Diod. Sic. v. 29; Strabo, _loc. cit._
[827] _Annals of the Four Masters_, 864; _IT_ i. 205.
[828] Sil. Ital. iv. 215, v. 652; Lucan, _Phar._ i. 447; Livy, xxiii.
24.
[829] See p. 71, _supra_; _CIL_ xii. 1077. A dim memory of head-taking survived in the seventeenth century in Eigg, where headless skeletons were found, of which the islanders said that an enemy had cut off their heads (Martin, 277).
[830] Belloguet, _Ethnol. Gaul._ iii. 100.
[831] Sil. Ital. xiii. 482; Livy, xxiii. 24; Florus, i. 39.
[832] _ZCP_ i. 106.
[833] Loth, i. 90 f., ii. 218-219. Sometimes the weapons of a great warrior had the same effect. The bows of Gwerthevyr were hidden in different parts of Prydein and preserved the land from Saxon invasion, until Gwrtheyrn, for love of a woman, dug them up (Loth, ii. 218-219).
[834] See p. 338, _infra_. In Ireland, the brain of an enemy was taken from the head, mixed with lime, and made into a ball. This was allowed to harden, and was then placed in the tribal armoury as a trophy.
[835] _L'Anthropologie_, xii. 206, 711. Cf. the English tradition of the "Holy Mawle," said to have been used for the same purpose. Thorns, _Anecdotes and Traditions_, 84.
[836] Arrian, _Cyneg._ x.x.xiii.
[837] Caesar, vi. 17; Orosius, v. 16. 6.
[838] D'Arbois, i. 155.
[839] Curtin, _Tales of the Fairies_, 72; _Folk-Lore_, vii. 178-179.
[840] Mitch.e.l.l, _Past in the Present_, 275.
[841] Mitch.e.l.l, _op. cit._ 271 f.
[842] Cook, _Folk-Lore_, xvii. 332.
[843] Mitch.e.l.l, _loc. cit._ 147. The corruption of "Maelrubha" to "Maree" may have been aided by confusing the name with _mo_ or _mhor righ_.
[844] Mitch.e.l.l, _loc. cit._; Moore, 92, 145; Rh[^y]s, _CFL_ i. 305; Worth, _Hist. of Devons.h.i.+re_, 339; Dalyell, _pa.s.sim_.
[845] Livy, xxiii. 24.
[846] Sebillot, ii. 166-167; _L'Anthrop._ xv. 729.
[847] Carmichael, _Carm. Gad._ i. 163.
[848] Martin, 28. A scribe called "Sonid," which might be the equivalent of "Shony," is mentioned in the Stowe missal (_Folk-Lore_, 1895).
[849] Campbell, _Superst.i.tions_, 184 f; _Waifs and Strays of Celtic Trad._ ii. 455.
[850] Aelian, xvii. 19.
[851] Tacitus, _Ann._ xiv. 30; Dio Ca.s.s. lxii. 6.
[852] Appian, _Celtica_, 8; Livy, xxi. 28, x.x.xviii. 17, x. 26.
[853] Livy, v. 38, vii. 23; Polybius, ii. 29. Cf. Watteville, _Le cri de guerre chez les differents peuples_, Paris, 1889.
[854] Livy, v. 38.
[855] Appian, vi. 53; Muret et Chabouillet, _Catalogue des monnaies gauloises_, 6033 f., 6941 f.
[856] Diod. v. 31; Justin, xxvi. 2, 4; Cicero, _de Div._ ii. 36, 76; Tac. _Ann._ xiv. 30; Strabo, iii. 3. 6.
[857] Dio Ca.s.s. lxii. 6.
[858] Reinach, _Catal. Sommaire_, 31; Pseudo-Plutarch, _de Fluviis_, vi.
4; _Mirab. Auscult._ 86.
[859] Strabo, iv. 4. 6.
[860] Justin, xxiv, 4; Cicero, _de Div._ i. 15. 26. (Cf. the two magic crows which announced the coming of Cuchulainn to the other world (D'Arbois, v. 203); Irish _Nennius_, 145; O'Curry, _MC_ ii. 224; cf. for a Welsh instance, Skene, i. 433.)
[861] Joyce, _SH_ i. 229; O'Curry, _MC_ ii. 224, _MS Mat._ 284.
[862] _IT_ i. 129; Livy, v. 34; Loth, _RC_ xvi. 314. The Irish for consulting a lot is _crann-chur_, "the act of casting wood."
[863] Caesar, vi. 14.
[864] O'Curry, _MC_ ii. 46, 224; Stokes, _Three Irish Homilies_, 103.
[865] Cormac, 94. Fionn's divination by chewing his thumb is called _Imbas Forosnai_ (_RC_ xxv. 347).
[866] _Antient Laws of Ireland_, i. 45.
[867] Hyde, _Lit. Hist. of Ireland_, 241.
[868] Justin, xliii. 5.
[869] O'Grady, ii. 362; Giraldus, _Descr. Camb._ i. 11.
[870] Pennant, _Tour in Scotland_, i. 311; Martin, 111.
[871] Richardson, _Folly of Pilgrimages_, 70.
[872] Tertullian, _de Anima_, 57; _Coll. de Reb. Hib._ iii. 334.
[873] Campbell, _Superst.i.tions_, 263; Curtin, _Tales_, 84.