BBC Countryfile Magazine

MEET THE DRUIDS

As the summer solstice approaches, 21st-century druids prepare to gather at sacred sites in the countrysid­e. But who are the druids, and what do they believe in?

- By Ian Vince

On the summer solstice, druids will gather at ancient sites such as Stonehenge and Avebury. But who are they, and what is their history?

King Arthur is on the phone. He’s laughing hard at a story about the real roots of modern druidry. That’s Arthur Uther Pendragon, born John Timothy Rothwell, who sees himself as the reinventio­n of King Arthur’s spirit in the body of a modern-day warrior, biker, rabblerous­er, road protestor and, as English Heritage probably refer to him, ‘Stonehenge stakeholde­r’.

Arthur is talking about the National Eisteddfod, an event intertwine­d with the reinventio­n of druidry. “The first Eisteddfod wasn’t in Wales, or even in Welsh,” Arthur chuckles. “It was in English, on Primrose Hill in London.”

Arthur is referring to the Eisteddfod of 1792, the earliest agreed date for the rebirth of druidry (though some point to evidence of a gathering in 1717, held by Irish satirist John Toland). The history of modern druidry is full of such twisted tales and diversions.

“The original druid revival was started by a couple of Christian priests,” says druid Adrian Rooke. He is referring to the English antiquaria­n and vicar William Stukeley and Welsh poet and literary forger Iolo Morganwg, who was as devoted to the Welsh Spirituali­st Church as he was to druidry.

“They thought it would be nice to honour the solstices. Originally it was a bit like the Round Table. Intellectu­als got together to share their love of history, explore standing stones and reconnect to the land. They felt it was slipping away in the Industrial Revolution – people were moving into towns and losing their connection to the wheel of the year.”

ORGANIC ORDERS

The druid movement today is a tangled web. Druids rally to a number of organisati­ons, including the British Druid Order, founded in 1979; the Druid Network; the Order of Bard, Ovates and Druids (OBOD); and the Council of British Druid Orders.

Each strand of druidry involves, in varying proportion­s, religion, music philosophy, a literary tradition, and political protest. A guiding principle unites all druids, though: a reverence for nature and ecology, and a spirituali­ty that nods at the

universal sacred wisdoms of Earth based faiths. A common motif in all modern druidry is the need to reestablis­h the connection that our ancestors had with the land.

“Some believe the word ‘druid’ comes from a Gaelic word for oak,” says Rooke, of OBOD. “The ancient druids watched nature, they saw the oak was the most giving of trees – it supports hundreds of species of flora and fauna. Each oak is in itself its own universe.”

The roots of environmen­tal concern, like the oak, run deep. Since the 1970s, druids have increasing­ly aligned themselves with ecological movements but a connection with nature has always been a part of their belief system and their rituals seek to unite people with the land they live upon.

SOURCING THE ANCIENTS

Informatio­n about ancient druidry is sparse: it was an oral tradition so they left no written account of themselves. The oldest detailed descriptio­n comes from Julius Caesar in his Commentari­i

de Bello Gallico (50s BC), who claimed they were one of the two most important social groups in Celtic culture, alongside the nobles.

They were not just priests but judges, philosophe­rs, healers, teachers and keepers of the lore. And they had to work hard – Caesar estimated it took 20 years of study to become a druid.

“They would learn 300 or more stories,” says Rooke. “They had to make a lineage of their chieftains going back hundreds of years. The fact that you could learn those names was part of the immortalit­y of the individual.”

Ancient druidry was centred on the sacred natural places of these islands. “The whole of the British Isles was a very spiritual place, people came here from the continent to seek spiritual direction, training and teaching, in the same way that Rome was a place of pilgrimage in the Middle Ages,” explains Rooke.

Later writers also referenced the druids, including Cicero and Tacitus. The Romans clearly feared the druids’ potential to unite, rabble-rouse and engage in guerrilla warfare, and the druids suffered two calamitous defeats at the hands of Romans, on Ynys Môn (Anglesey). The defeats marked the end of ancient druidry. By the 2nd century, the druids had disappeare­d from written record.

PLAYING THE PAST

King Arthur – the reincarnat­ion of Britain’s greatest tribal chieftain – styles himself on these ancient counterpar­ts. “From my point of view, I don’t like the term ‘neo-druid’ . I’m closer to the ancient druids and the proto-druids that built Stonehenge. That’s why my order is a warrior arm of the druid movement – we fight for truth, honour and justice.”

Arthur’s fight is peaceful – he insists on non-violent direct action of the kind exercised by peace campaigner­s and road protestors in the recent past.

Today, just as King Arthur rides a motorbike rather than a horse, druidic teaching is in the electronic age. OBOD runs remote learning courses. Rooke, who is a tutor with OBOD, estimates 10-15,000 people have passed through OBOD’s training. Studies are in three parts: ‘bards’ learn the central tenets of druidry and its rituals; ‘ovates’ then practise divination, working with ancestral spirits and healing with herbs and trees; and finally ‘druids’ consolidat­e all that has been learned.

It’s striking how history repeats itself. Today’s druids have much in common with their counterpar­ts.

“Druids were priests, judges, healers, teachers and keepers of the lore”

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