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PathWalkers.Net Interactive :: Helping you along your path<br />

a semi-mythological race, who are often associated with the elves and the otherworld now. Fir Bolg is<br />

used to collectively describe three races: the Fir Bolg, the Fir Dhomhnann and the Gailion. This has been<br />

related to the Belgae, Dumnonii and the Gauls suggesting that Gallic Celts had settled from the continent<br />

possibly even passing through Southern Britain as those Celtic tribes were also recorded in Cornwall,<br />

Devon and Somerset. If so then Spanish, Milesian Celts invaded and took the sovereignty of Ireland<br />

away from Celts who were from Gaul and Belgium. The Tuatha de Danann could be associated with the<br />

Danes or a tribe from the Danube but as they are also associated with elves and Atlanteans we might be<br />

stretching reality a bit.<br />

The Scotti from Northern Ireland invaded and destroyed the Picts of modern Scotland. Very little of<br />

Pictish culture remains as it has been wiped out by the Celts. They were possibly non-Indo-European<br />

aboriginals of Britain and Ireland, being pushed into the mountains and wild lands when the Celts<br />

arrived.<br />

So obviously there are cracks appearing in the Celtic wall of self-righteousness. These cracks become<br />

more prominent if we delve deeper into the mythology and history.<br />

Who was King Arthur and what was his court like? There is no single answer to this question as we are<br />

dealing with a cross over point between historical fact and myth. Around the time of King Arthur, Britain<br />

was suffering after the Romans had pulled out of Britain in 407 A.D. the Britons had lived under the<br />

umbrella of the Roman Empire for over four centuries. In the southeast of the country there were many<br />

Empire citizens with a mixture of Roman and Romano- British blood. There were also the influences of<br />

the cultures used by the Romans as auxiliary soldiers and those that traded within the Empire. The<br />

Romano-British were soft from Roman wine and luxury, their population was low and they had many<br />

enemies. The Roman Empire was not universally popular in Arthur's time. Sure it was respected for its<br />

organization and military power. It was a giant trading block with a huge army at its disposal. But now it<br />

was beginning to crumble. Internal rot had set in and its neighbours were beginning to get restless. In the<br />

end pressure from outside barbarians would break the Empire borders and seize control of the Western<br />

Empire.<br />

It is probable that Britain retained many of the Roman ways even after the Empire did not protect them.<br />

There were many factions loyal to Rome and the system of roads, Villas and fortifications were used but<br />

not really maintained. There were also factions sympathetic to Celtic Nationalism especially in Wales<br />

and North Britain. Perhaps there were many powerful families all with political agendas and differing<br />

loyalties to Rome or an independent Britain. Whatever there was, the legends describe a story. A story in<br />

which a boy called Arthur united them all.<br />

The Britons desperately needed this. They were being attacked on all sides. Irish pirates raided Wales<br />

and established colonies. The Scots and Picts were raiding in the north. Angles and Saxons plundered the<br />

east. So Arthur the general of a Romano-British force must fight enemies from Ireland, Scotland and the<br />

continent. Brythonic Celts fight against the scourge of Goidelic Celts, yet it is only the Saxon that we<br />

normally associate as Arthur's enemies.<br />

A united effort by Anglo-Saxons, Picts and Irish Scotti should come as no surprise to anyone familiar<br />

with the historical record. The Romans had previously complained of a barbarian conspiracy against the<br />

influence of Rome. It was because of repeated attacks using guerrilla hit and run tactics that Hadrian's<br />

Wall was built. The Irish Gaelic, Pictish and Anglo-Saxon heathens had put their differences aside to<br />

fight a common enemy: Roman colonial expansion. They must have had some success because Britain<br />

was deemed to be too difficult to warrant continued garrisoning by Roman troops. It is more likely that<br />

Arthur's court was heavily influenced by Roman civilization. This would have included the growing<br />

Christian faith. Arthur may have marked some sort of transition period between Celtic paganism and<br />

Christianity. Certainly kingship rites still had pagan elements in their symbolism. His queen Gwenhyfar<br />

retires to become a nun at the end of the Arthurian cycle. Thus the sovereignty of Britain as symbolised<br />

by Arthur's marriage to the land and the Queen, has become part of the Christian church. In contrast the<br />

Anglo-Saxons were purely Heathen. They struck fear in the British because to them the Saxons were<br />

barbarians. They had dark religious practices and could not be trusted. If we go back further in time the<br />

tribal distinctions blur. Roman historians mapped Europe naming all those to the southwest of the Rhine<br />

http://www.pathwalkers.net/interactive/modules....ame=News&file=index&catid=&topic=1&allstories=1 (205 of 284) [12/25/2005 12:22:22 AM]

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