Celtic religious belief Celtic was born in the 1st century AD from the Christian era, middle, east, and small Asia. "The Celts are groups of tribes speaking Indo-European languages, they use armed weapons to mount horses, spread rapidly in Europe, cross the British Isles, transfer S to France, Italy and Spain , Fought against the Macedonian by penetrating into the small Asia, they attacked the Hellenistic Center "(Columbia Encyclopedia Online). Many Celts live in Western Europe and also in the Normandy region.
The Celtic religious beliefs and practices, their love for their land, and their worship (especially the oak) into their trees have grown into what is later called pagan. For centuries it was integrated with the beliefs and rituals of other Indo-European groups. And it created many nature-based beliefs as well as making potions and ointments, throwing magic and performing magic. Celtics and other groups, collectively called magic
Celtic polytheism, commonly known as Celtic pagan, between 500 BC and 500 AD, including Celtic religious beliefs and practices of the Western European Iron Age. In the case of Icelandic island Celtics in England and Ireland, Turner era and Roman era. Celtic polytheistic is one of the great groups of the Indian European family's Iron Age polytheistic. "There is a wide range of structural similarities behind this diversity," while the Celtic people have "basic religious homogeneity" given, but in geographical and temporal terms There is a big change.
Celtic myth is the myth of religion of Celtics polytheism, Iron Age Celtic. Like other European era iron people in the European era, the early Celts maintained their polytheistic myths and religious structures. For the Celts who were in close contact with the ancient Romans like Gaulians and Keiters, their myths could not survive during the Roman Empire, so they then turned to Christianity and their Celtic I lost a word. Through their source of modern Rome and Christianity, their myths are preserved. Celts who maintain political or linguistic identity (such as Irish and Scottish Gaelic people, Wales Wales, southern England Celts and Brittany) left ancestral mythological ruins. These remnants of the Middle Ages