enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Druidry (modern) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Druidry_(modern)

    A central prayer in modern Druidic traditions is "The Druid's Prayer", which was written in the 18th century by Druid Iolo Morganwg and originally addressed to a monotheistic god. In modern times, with the increase in polytheistic Druidry, and the widespread acceptance of goddess-worship, the word "Goddess" has largely replaced the word "God ...

  3. The Druid Order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Druid_Order

    The Druid Order is a contemporary druidry fraternal order, founded in 1909 by George Watson MacGregor Reid in the United Kingdom. At various times it has also been known as The Ancient Druid Order, An Druidh Uileach Braithreachas, and The British Circle of the Universal Bond. Initiated members are called companions.

  4. Druid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Druid

    Based on all available forms, the hypothetical proto-Celtic word may be reconstructed as *dru-wid-s (pl. *druwides), whose original meaning is traditionally taken to be "oak-knower", based upon the association of druids' beliefs with oak trees, which was made by Pliny the Elder, who also suggested that the word is borrowed from the Greek word ...

  5. Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Bards,_Ovates_and...

    OBOD was founded in 1964 as a split from the Ancient Druid Order with Ross Nichols as its leader. [7]In 1988, more than a decade after Nichols' passing, and after study in the Order and helping to further its reaches, [8] Philip Carr-Gomm was asked to lead the Order.

  6. Celtic nations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_nations

    The Celtic nations or Celtic countries [1] are a cultural area and collection of geographical regions in Northwestern Europe where the Celtic languages and cultural traits have survived. [2] The term nation is used in its original sense to mean a people who share a common identity and culture and are identified with a traditional territory.

  7. Modern paganism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_paganism

    Strmiska stresses that modern paganism is a "new", "modern" religious movement, even if some of its content derives from ancient sources. [55] Contemporary paganism as practiced in the United States in the 1990s has been described as "a synthesis of historical inspiration and present-day creativity".

  8. The Druid Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Druid_Network

    The Druid Network was created in 2003 to help its members and those in society understand and practice Druidry as a religion. "Its practitioners revere their deities, most often perceived as the most powerful forces of nature (such as thunder, sun and earth), spirits of place (such as mountains and rivers), and divine guides of a people (such as Brighid, Rhiannon and Bran)."

  9. Neotribalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neotribalism

    French sociologist Michel Maffesoli was perhaps the first to use the term neotribalism in a scholarly context in his 1988 book The Time of the Tribes.Maffesoli predicted that as the culture and institutions of modernism declined, societies would embrace nostalgia and look to the organizational principles of the distant past for guidance, and that therefore the post-modern era would be the era ...