"How about a definition of anybody out there on this newsgroup. What
do you think defines Celts?"
Here I do this again, and I really would like to get some answers.
Oh, by the way, thanks to the one answer I already found, perhaps you
could try to explain a little bit more detailed what you mean, Harry
H.Howard. I want to start this thread with some more or less provocative
statements in the beginning, but I will not be able to take part
in this converssation for the next two weeks I assume, as I am off
to Ireland tomorrow morning and won`t be back till the third of May.
So I will be offline a little bit and see who has verbally killed
me only in some weeks.
I will start with two different opinions, which both are not mine,
but which I have collected during my study of archaeology at the
University of Vienna, Austria.
First (which I have from Prof. John Collis, University of Sheffield):
We only should call Celts those peoples, whom of we have direct
historical evidence that they were considering themselves to be Celts.
This means, some Gaulish tribes in Middle France (for instance the
Averni), would be Celts, as mentioned by Caesar, as is true for some
tribes at the lower Danube, as we know from Aristoteles. We perhaps
may assume that some Celts lived at the upper Danube as says Herodot,
and perhaps some tribes at the western edge of Spain, as told to us
by Livy. The Rest of what settled in Europe was not celtic, and thus
their heirs cannot be Celtic either. This means: Neither Scots, nor
Irish, nor Welsh, nor Bretons, nor anybody else who claims to be
celtic actually is. There are no Celts anymore, and there were not
many at any time.
Second (which is a transmutation of a theory of Prof. Falko Daim,
University of Vienna originally targeted towards some slavic tribes,
who became that by stopping to be Awars)
Anybody who thinks of himself as being a Celt actually is. Thus, if
you hit a dog on his head and it becomes intelligent and you tell
him he is a Celt and he believes, so he is.
Actually I do not believe in both of these theories, at least not in
the radicalised form I have used to describe them above.
Additionally I will ask some questions now, which also have to do
with the main question above:
1) Can Archaeology on its own tell that something is Celtic?
2) Do the messages of the ancient historical authors have any
importance to assuming something is Celtic?
3) Can Linguistics help anything to define what is Celtic?
4) From which date on towards which ending date may we talk of Celts?
5) In which region may we talk of Celts?
6) Which methods of natural sciences may be used to define what is
Celtic?
7) Is Art history of any use for defining whats Celtic?
8) Is Religion important to define something as Celtic?
9) I am sure I mised some important questions, but anyone who has
should fill in his here.
I do not want to give any statement of myself by the moment, because
it could either sound too patronizing, too scholarly or perhaps could
take the discussion into too close borders, and that is not what I
want, I really do want that we first try to discuss this as openly as
possible and then perhaps come to a consense somehow. I think this
could be very helpful for further discussions.
RAY
Just to come back to the point that I am in Ireland for the next two
weeks approximatly. If somebody on this group living in Ireland wants
to meet me personally, perhaps just to talk oà to hit me in the face
for all the rubbish I publish here, I do a lecture on Continental
Celtic Archaeology at the Society for Celtic Studies at the University
of Maynooth on the 28th of February, I think somewhen in the evening.
So if you`d like to meet me, just be there.
> I do want to start a new thread here, which does what I think would
> be methodically important for this newsgroup, namely to define what
> anybody considers to be Celtic and perhaps come to a more common
> opinion concerning that. I feel that the diversity of understanding
> what is Celtic is very problematic, as I think that for most of the
> time we are not talking about the same thing, when we talk about
> Celts. I asked the question:
>
> "How about a definition of anybody out there on this newsgroup. What
> do you think defines Celts?"
<snipped a lot of interesting discourse>
Really, I thought we had decided we couldn't do this since it doesn't
seem to depend on genes, race, culture, locality, or even language,
since the language of this group is English. Someone proposed that
if you felt you were Celtic, you were. This is attractive since in
theory no-one would normally claim to be Celtic who has not got some
affinity.
But <snipping a lot more earnest monologue>,
Prof. John Collis, University of Sheffield is said to have said:
> "We only should call Celts those peoples, whom of we have direct
> historical evidence that they were considering themselves to be Celts.
> This means, some Gaulish tribes in Middle France (for instance the
> Averni), would be Celts, as mentioned by Caesar, as is true for some
> tribes at the lower Danube, as we know from Aristoteles. We perhaps
> may assume that some Celts lived at the upper Danube as says Herodot,
> and perhaps some tribes at the western edge of Spain, as told to us
> by Livy. The Rest of what settled in Europe was not celtic, and thus
> their heirs cannot be Celtic either. This means: Neither Scots, nor
> Irish, nor Welsh, nor Bretons, nor anybody else who claims to be
> celtic actually is. There are no Celts anymore, and there were not
> many at any time."
This is like defining 'land' as the little bits sticking up above the
water. Since the Celts are a prehistoric people, a definition based
on history is not much use.
Might as well add my tuppence, having copied over the whole thing.
> 1) Can Archaeology on its own tell that something is Celtic?
No
> 2) Do the messages of the ancient historical authors have any
> importance to assuming something is Celtic?
Yes
> 3) Can Linguistics help anything to define what is Celtic?
Not as presently understood but yes, certainly
> 4) From which date on towards which ending date may we talk of Celts?
I believe something very like Celts were around, using
something very like a Celtic language before 3000 BC.
> 5) In which region may we talk of Celts?
Since you have to accommodate the Scots and Irish, this is
a problem. You need to see them all over Western Europe.
I even believe most of the present population of England
is or was Celtic. They've forgotten, so maybe they don't
count.
> 6) Which methods of natural sciences may be used to define what is
> Celtic?
Pass
> 7) Is Art history of any use for defining what's Celtic?
You mean like whirly things? Perhaps
> 8) Is Religion important to define something as Celtic?
Define religion.
9) Is it a Celtic trait to try to define the indefinable and to
continue to do so after it is evidently impossible to do so?
--
Sheila McGregor
<snip>
This poor Germanic plonker is way out of line. I don't know what
he thinks he is (a 'scientist' perhaps) or what he thinks I am,
but he is certainly not a Celt, by my definition, since (a) he has
no sense of humour; (b) he takes himself seriously; (c) he thinks
he knows a lot; (d) he thinks he knows more than I do; (e) and
he has no sense of humour.
He started this thread. I'm not that interested in it. It seems
no-one else is interested in it either. So if he has a problem
defining 'Celtic' he seems to be alone in this.
The End. Byeee!!
--
Sheila McGregor
As is now definitly proofen bejond any doubt that Austria today is
a Celtic Country, as is that it alsways was, we now have to see how
far back in prehistory we can take this.
The earliest finds from Austria made at all date about 70000 years
of age, and they are from the inner alpine Region. As nobody there
remembers anything of ever having come there, and having proofen that
Austria is a Celtic Country today, it is absolutely logical that
our ancestors 70000 years ago already were Celts.
And that is what the point is Sheila. That is the way you are
obviously doing it with perthshire, and now, would you be so nice
and show why my theory I presented here is wrong?
Thanks you for reading all this lot, Sheila McGregor, I a m pleased
you take your time in making those interesting debates with me
RAY
VANNARIX MAQQ VANNABILUGOS