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Hardcover The Philosopher and the Druids: A Journey Among the Ancient Celts Book

ISBN: 0743262808

ISBN13: 9780743262804

The Philosopher and the Druids: A Journey Among the Ancient Celts

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

There was no reason for the Greek world to be particularly concerned about the Celts in the years before and even decades after Alexander the Great. To any Greek, the Celts were just another race of distant barbarians. Traders might bring back stories of them, and occasionally a small group of Celtic warriors might appear among the mercenaries of a hired army, but they were no threat to civilized Greek folk going about their daily business. Sometime...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Archaeology, history, religion

I received this book for Christmas and have been so impressed by the wonderful way it tells the story of the Celts. I had heard of the Celts before, but I never really knew who they were or what they did. I especially liked the focus on women and archaeology. I'm recommending this book to all my friends.

Freeman does his best

The "Philosopher and the Druids" attempts to develop an ethnographic account of the Gauls, focusing on the 1st century BC when they were visited by the Greek philosopher Posidonious, who had the same objective. The book achieves only modest success, through no fault of Freeman. The problem is that only small fragments of Posidonious' study are extant, and other sources are also very incomplete. To supplement first person accounts, Posidonious makes use of what we know of Celtic Ireland, even many centuries later, as well as what we know of Bronze Age Greece (think Homer). In fact Celtic culture comes out looking a lot like that of Bronze Age Greece, supplemented by their unique priestly class, the Druids. The Druids may have been primarily a civilizing influence, promoting justice and morality, but this is not entirely clear. For me it was disappointing that a culture which had already interacted with Roman and Greek culture for centuries by the first century BC did not, as far as I can tell from Freeman's book, seem to have progressed except in a material sense. Certainly, some of their craft work as shown in the book's pictures is stunning. Freeman's book is almost always interesting, if you don't mind quite a bit of political history.

Learn about the ancient Celts

I read a great review of this book in Harper's Magazine, so I thought I'd give it a try. The author uses the travels of an ancient Greek philosopher that I'd never heard of to tie together a fascinating introduction to the ancient Celts. It's not really about the philosopher as much as it is a really interesting story about Gauls and others Celts (I never knew there was a difference), including druids, art, history , and everything else about them. If you want to learn about Celts in olden days, this is your book.

Those Bloodthirsty Battlin' Celts - As the Greeks and Romans Saw Them

All the books and articles that I have previously read about the Celts have stressed the archaeological evidence. They have especially examined the art, culture, and daily lives of the ancient Celts, and their origins as a people. Freeman, instead, looks at how the Romans and, especially, the Greeks saw them. So, of course, there are a lot of quotes about the Celts as bloodthirsty drunken louts. But once I got beyond that, there was a lot I hadn't learned from the books and articles I had read earlier. For example, there is more about the Celts of Iberia, Asia Minor, and Cisalpine Gaul (Northern Italy). The Galatians of Asia Minor seem to have been especially important as mercenaries to rulers of the Eastern Mediterranean. There is also more about Caesar's conquest of Gaul. I had previously read about this mostly from Caesar's point of view (in Latin). Freeman counters with a description of how well Vercingetorix and his people resisted Caesar, although they ultimately lost. Posidonius, a Greek aristocrat, visited only the upper crust of Celtic society, and so we don't see much of the lives of ordinary Celts. In this he is more like a historian than like an archaeologist. He is the philosopher of the title and the unifying symbol of the whole book. In the latter half of the book, Freeman drops the emphasis on the ferocity and barbarity of the Celts and says more about their mythology and religion, the position of women, and the social lives of the upper crust. This is very speculative and that's probably why other serious authors haven't had so much to say about it. But if you read it as a commentary on what the Celts might have been like, and how their neighbors reacted to them, it will give you a lot to think about. So, for what Freeman says that the other writers don't say, and especially if you've read some of the other books, I recommend this one. -- Éad

A Wonderful Book

This is the most readable introduction to the Celts I've ever seen. It takes the real journey of a Greek philosopher to Celtic lands in the days before Julius Caesar and uses it as a connecting thread to tell the whole story of the ancient Celts. I liked the way it was organized around different Celtic themes, like druids, women, war, etc. And the way it ties the ancient Celts into Irish culture is great.
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