Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T13:18:14.120Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Celtic myths

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

John Collis*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology & Prehistory, University of Sheffield, Northgate House, West Street, Sheffield S1 4ET, England. E-mail: [email protected]

Extract

In ANTIQUITY a year ago, Vincent & Ruth Megaw found a useful parallel between the multiple definitions of the ancient Celts, as it can be seen from varied sources, and the several ways an individual's ethnic identity is seen and defined in the contemporary world. Here the other view is stated: that the methodology and interpretations advocated by the Megaws are both false and dangerous.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Airman, J. 1827. The History of Scotland, translated from the Latin of George Buchanan, with Motes and a Continuation to the Union in the Reign of Queen Anne. Glasgow: Blackie, Fullerton.Google Scholar
Allen, J. Romilly. 1904. Celtic Art in Pagan and Christian Times. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Almagro-Gokbea, M. (ed.). 1993. Los Celtas: Hispania y Europa. Madrid: Universidad Complutense.Google Scholar
Bertrand, A. & Reinach, S.. 1894. Les Celtes dans les Vallées du Pô et du Danube. Paris: Ernest Leroux.Google Scholar
Boudet, R. (ed.). 1996. L'Age du Fer en Europe sud-occidentale, Aquitania 12. Actes du XVIe Colloque de l'AFEAF, Agen, 28-31 mai 1992.Google Scholar
Black, R., Gillies, W. & Ómaolalaigii, R. (ed.). Forthcoming. Celtic Connections 1. Tuckwell Press. Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Celtic Studies.Google Scholar
Brown, T. (ed.) 1996. Celtism. Amsterdam: Studia Imagologica.Google Scholar
Buchanan, G. 1582. Berum Scoticarum Historia. Edinburgh: Alexander Arhuthnei.Google Scholar
Chapman, M. 1992. The Celts: the construction of a myth. Basingstoke: Macmillan Press.Google Scholar
Clarke, U.L. 1968. Analytical archaeology. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Cliquet, D., Remy-Watte, M., Guichakij, V. & Vaginay, M. (ed.). 1993. Les Celtes en Normandie: les rites funéraires en Gaule (Illème-ler siècle avant J.-C). Revue Archéologique de l'Ouest supplément 6. Actes du 14ème colloque de l'Association Française pour l'Etude de l'Age du Fer, Evreux, mai 1990.Google Scholar
Collis, J. 1986. Adieu Hallstatt! Adieu La Tène!, in Duval, & de Soto, Gomez (ed.): 327–30.Google Scholar
Collis, J. 1993. Los Celtas en Europa, in Almagro-Gorbea, (ed.): 6376.Google Scholar
Collis, J. 1994. The Iron Age, in Vyner, (ed.): 123–48.Google Scholar
Collis, J. 1995. Celts and politics, in Graves-Brown, et al. (ed.): 167–78.Google Scholar
Collis, J. 1996. Celtes, culture, contacts: confrontation et confusion, in Boudet, (ed.): 447–56.Google Scholar
Collis, J. Forthcoming a. The origin and spread of the Celts. Conference held by the Board of Celtic Studies, Cardiff, 1993, to be published in Studia Celtica 1997.Google Scholar
Collis, J. Forthcoming h. George Buchanan and the Celts of Britain, in Black, et al. (ed.).Google Scholar
Collis, J. Forthcoming c. Les tombes a char ‘Beiges’, in Actes duXIXe Colloque de l'Association Française pour l'Etude de l'Age du Fer, Troves, Hai 1995.Google Scholar
Cuming, U.S. 1858. On further discoveries of Celtic and Roman remains in the Thames off Battersea, Journal of the British Association 14: 326–30.Google Scholar
Dannheimer, H. & Gebhard, R. (ed.). 1993. Das keltische Jahrtausend. Mainz am Rhein; Philipp von Zabcrn.Google Scholar
d'Arbois de Jubainville, H. 1889. Premiers Habitants de l'Europe. Paris.Google Scholar
d'Arbois de Jubainville, H. 1902. Principaux Auteurs à consulter pour l'Histoire des Celtes. Paris: Albert Fontemoing. Cours de Littérature Celtique 12.Google Scholar
Déchelette, I. 1913. Manuel d'archéologie préhistorique, Celtique et Gallo-Romaine II-2: Second Age du Fer ou Époque de Hallstatt. Paris: Alphonse Picard.Google Scholar
Déchelette, I. 1914. Manuel d'archéologie préhistorique, Celtique et Gallo-Romaine II-3: Deuxième Age du Fer ou Époque de La Tène. Paris: Alphonse Picard.Google Scholar
de Mortillet, G. 18701871. Les Gaulois de Marzabotto dans l'Apennin, Revue Archéologique 22: 288–90, plate 22.Google Scholar
Duval, A. & De Soto, J. Gomez (ed.). 1980. Actes du Ville Colloque sur les Ages du Fer en France non-Mediterranéenne, Angoulême, 1984. Aquitania Supplément 1.Google Scholar
Evans, A.J. 1890. On a Late Celtic urnfield at Aylesford, Kent, Archaeologia 52: 315–88.Google Scholar
Evans, A.J. 1896. On two fibulae of Celtic fabric from Aesica, Archaeologia 55: 179–98.Google Scholar
Evans, D.E. 1995. The early Celts: the evidence of language, in Green, (ed.): 820.Google Scholar
Fischer, F. 1972. Die Kelten bei Herodot: Bermerkingen zu einigen geographischen and ethnographischen Problemen, Madrider Mitteilungen 13: 109–24.Google Scholar
Gebiiard, G. 1993. Die Kelten - ein Volk Alteuropas, in Dannheimer, & Gebhard, (ed.): 26.Google Scholar
Graves-Brown, P., Jones, S. & Gamble, C. (ed.). 1995. Cultural identity and archaeology: the construction of European communities. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Green, M.J. (ed.). 1995. The Celtic World. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hildebrand, H. 1874. Sur les commencements de l'âge du feien Europe, Congrès Internationale d'Anthropologie et d'Archéologie Préhistorique, Stockholm: 592601.Google Scholar
Hodder, L (ed.) 1987, The archaeology of contextual meanings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
James, S. 1993 Exploringthe world of the Celts. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Kemble, J.M., Franks, A.W. & Latham, R.G.. 1863. Horae Ferales: studies in the archaeology of the northern nations. London: Lovell & Reeve.Google Scholar
Kossinna, G. 1911. Zur Herkunft der Germanen, zur Methode der Siedlungsarchäologie, Mannus-Bibliothek 6.Google Scholar
Kuna, M. & Venclovà, N. (ed.). 1995. Whither archaeology? Papers in honour of Evzen Neustupny. Prague: Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Megaw, R. & Megaw, V.. 1989. Celtic art, from its beginnings to the Book of Kells. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Megaw, R. 1995. The prehistoric Celts: identity and contextuality, in Kuna, & Venclová, (ed.): 230–45.Google Scholar
Megaw, R. 1996. Ancient Celts and modern ethnicity, Antiquity 70:175–81.Google Scholar
Pare, C. 1991. Fürstensitze, Celts and the Mediterranean world: developments in the West Hallstatt Culture in the 6th and 5th centuries BC, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 52(2): 183202.Google Scholar
Pauli, L. 1980a. Das keltische Mitteleuropa vom 6. bis zum 2. Jahrhundert v. Chr., in Pauli, 1980b: 2536.Google Scholar
Pauli, L. (Ed.) 1980b. Die Kelten in Mitteleuropa: Kultur, Kunst, Wirtschaft. Salzburger Landesausteilung 1 Mai-30 Sept. 1980 im Keltenmuseum Hallein, Österreich.Google Scholar
Plon, P. & Guichard, V.. 1993. Tombes et nécropoles en France et au Luxembourg entre le IIIème et le ler siècles avant J.-C: essai d'inventaire, in Cliquet, et al. (ed.): 175200.Google Scholar
Powell, T.G.E. 1958. The Celts. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Reinecke, P. 1911. In Reinecke, P. (1965), Maimer Aufsätze zur Chronologie der Bronze- und Eisenzeit. Bonn: Habelt.Google Scholar
Ruiz Zapatero, G. 1993. El concepto de Celtas en la prehistoria europea y española, in Almagro-Gorbea, (ed.): 2362.Google Scholar
Simms-Williams, P. 1996. The invention of Celtic nature poetry, in Brown, (ed.): 97124.Google Scholar
Spriggs, M. 1990. Review of Hodder (1987), Australian Archaeology 30: 103.Google Scholar
Thierry, A. 1828. Histoire des Gaulois. Paris: Didier et Cie.Google Scholar
Vyner, B. (ed.) 1994. Building on the past: a celebration of 150 years of the Royal Archaeological Institute. London: Royal Archaeological Institute.Google Scholar