Hero of Celtic and Germanic myths Through the myths of Celtic people and Germans in Northern Europe, there are lots of stories of magnificent heroes and their extraordinary acts. These stories depict incredible feathered heroes; many of them seem to be magical, superhuman and completely impossible (for example, involving the ocean, almost one side It defeated the military in a like manner, and it is other shocking). attack). As the Celtic and German ancient tribes lived in neighboring lands and were very close to each other (in the UK, many of their contemporary descendants continued to do so), they often build intimate relationships What was not surprising.
Celtic myth is the myth of religion of Celtics polytheism, Iron Age Celtic. Like other European era iron people in the European era, early Celts retained polytheistic myths and religious buildings. 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
Hero of Celtic and Germanic myths Through the myths of Celtic people and Germans in Northern Europe, there are lots of stories of magnificent heroes and their extraordinary acts. These stories depict incredible feathered heroes; many of them seem to be magical, superhuman and completely impossible (for example, involving the ocean, almost one side It defeated the military in a like manner, and it is other shocking). attack). As the Celtic and German ancient tribes lived in neighboring lands and were very close to each other (in the UK, many of their contemporary descendants continued to do so), they often build intimate relationships What was not surprising.
Ancient Celtics has a vibrant myth of hundreds of stories. However, they did not record their myths in writing, but verbally. Our understanding of the gods, heroes, villains in Celtic myths comes from other sources - mainly Romans. However, as Romans sometimes use Roman names to refer to Celtic gods, their claim is not always reliable. Furthermore, because the Romans and Celtic people are enemies in the battlefield, the explanation of the Roman Celtic beliefs is often disadvantageous. Sad Deirdre forced to live with Conchobhar never smiled and showed to the king how much she hated him. At the end of the story, Deirdre hit his head on the rock and took his life. The tragic story of Deirdre is the source of inspiration for poetry, drama, and stories of later Irish writers, including William Butler Yeats and J. M. Synge.