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Irish Druids And Old Irish ReligionsGERMAN DRUIDISM Louis de Baecker, 1854,
gave an account of Teutonic Druidism, similar to that
of the Belgæ of Britain, in his De la Religion du Nord de la France avant le
Christianisme. He, unlike men of the Welsh Druidic school, joins Dr. Ledwich,
and some Irish authorities, in tracing Druidism to the German and Scandinavian
races; saying, "The religion of our pagan ancestors was that of Odin or
Woden." But he evidently refers to north-eastern France rather than
north-western, as he derives the religion from the Edda. In the book Volu-Spa,
or the Priestess, the first song of the poetic Edda, he discovers what Ossian
and other British and Irish bards describe as Spirits of the air, of earth, of
waters, of plains, and woods. "Cæsar was deceived," says he,
"when he said that the Germans had neither priests nor religious
ceremonies; for Tacitus mentions them in his Germania in the most formal
manner." By the way, if Cæsar was so mistaken about the Germans, whom he
knew so well, is his evidence about Gaulish Druids worth much? |
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