THEOSOPHY
WALES

PAGES ABOUT
WALES
Wales is
a Principality within the United
Kingdom and has an eastern border
with England.
The land area is just over 8,000 square miles. Snowdon is the highest mountain at
3,650 feet. The coastline is almost 750 miles long. The population of Wales
as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.

Theosophy Wales
is pleased to present
general
pages about Wales,
Welsh History
and
The History of Theosophy in Wales
____________________
The Celts
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The Celts originally were
from Indo-European stock, arising in what is now South
Russia and the Ukraine before
1200 BCE. They came into Europe
from the east and settled in central Europe
and referred to themselves as "Keltoi" from
the greek meaning barbarian.
(There is no soft "C" sound in greek
hence Celtic etc. should be pronounced with a hard "K" sound. The
only exceptions are the pronouncation of sports teams
such as Glasgow Celtic and Boston Celtic since the British Empire wanted to
distinguish British Latin from other Latin and made one of the differences the
use of the soft "C".)
Modern scholars divide Celtic
culture into two parts named after the areas where Celtic civilisations
have been uncovered. The earliest is known as the Halstatt
Culture found near Salzkammergut in Austria.
They were a warrior race, but were known to the Greeks also as wealthy traders.
The Greek writer Euphorus describes them as one of
the 4 "great peoples", the others being the Scythions,
Persians and Lybians.
The later La Tene Culture found near Lake
Neuchatel
in Switzerland
marked another impetus in expansion, trade and war. The Celts probably found
their way into Scotland
and the rest of the British Isles
around 500 BCE, but also moved south into the Po
Valley displacing the Etruscans. When the Etruscans asked the Romans for help
the Celts assumed that the Romans were also a great race and thus began trade
with Rome.
However, the Roman envoys began to assist the Etruscans in their struggle and
the Celts marched on Rome.
In 387 BCE, Rome
was sacked and Brennus, the Celtic leader, demanded
his weight in gold.
By this time the Celts had
already conquered France
by the Celtic tribe Galli; Belgium
by the Celtic tribe Belgae; Spain,
the Balkans and Turkey
by the Galatians. Yet such dominance was short-lived and in 225 BC the Romans
had defeated the Celts at the Battle
of Telernon.
One by one the Celtic nations
fell to the Romans, leaving only the British Isles
remaining. After the Roman invasion of Britain
and the later massacre of the Druids (Priest Caste) in Anglesey,
North Wales
that, too, seemed a dying culture. But the Romans never completely defeated Scotland
or Ireland,
nor the language of the Britons - and the Celtic legacy is still strong today.
The Celtic languages today
are split into two camps: P-Celtic is the old Briton, similar to Welsh, also
Cornish and Breton. Q-Celtic is Scots Gaelic, Manx and Irish
Gaelic. These countries: Scotland,
Ireland
and Wales,
together with the regions of Cornwall,
the Isle of Man
and Brittany
are regarded as the Celtic heartland, although some include England
and northern Spain
into this amalgam.
In Drumchapel,
the history of the Celts can be traced by the Knapper's
henge; a druid temple discovered in the 1930s around
the site of the Goals Five-a-side football complex. Not all Celtic races would
have Druids, there is no record of a druid with the
warrior leader Brennus, for example, nor any
associated with the Belgae.
It was only in the British
Isles and France
that druidism evolved, other Celtic areas may have been too busy warring with
their enemies to have this caste system in place.
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THEOSOPHY
WALES

PAGES ABOUT WALES
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