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Authors: Peter Berresford Ellis

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The construction of farmhouses, which we will discuss in Chapter 12, varied in design through the Celtic world. In Britain and Ireland, houses tended to be circular. Caesar, in a slip from his
usual propaganda about barbaric Britons, says that the houses in southern Britain were no different from those in Gaul. ‘The population is exceedingly large, the ground thickly studded with
homesteads, closely resembling those of the Gauls, and the cattle very numerous.’ In Gaul, the Celtic houses were predominantly rectangular, as they were among the Celts of the Po valley.
They were usually half-timbered constructions. Such two-storey rectangular houses were certainly being built by the Celts from the second century
BC
.

One of the interesting things in Ireland is the survival of ancient boundary pillar stones, used to delineate farm boundaries. Cormac mac Cuileannáin’s
Sanas Chormaic
, his
tenth-century ‘Glossary’, refers to these boundary markers as
gall
and
gallan
because, he says, they were first erected by Gaulish Celts when they arrived in Ireland.
True or not, the Brehon Laws, as one would expect, have some stringent rules about farmers and their duty to the land and community.

From Irish sources we learn the names and uses of implements which are similar to those we know were used in other parts of the Celtic world. We know that the ancient
Irish had mastered the art of manuring (
ottrach
) and that they used dung-heaps (
crum duma
). We know that they understood the importance of irrigation. We also learn that in
Ireland the plough was drawn not only by oxen but by horses, for we are told in the ninth-century
Féilire
of Oenghus that the Munster religious Ciaran kept ‘fifty tamed horses
for tilling and ploughing the ground’.

The picture that archaeology reveals of a stable Celtic farming economy is certainly a different one from the popular notion of itinerant war bands.

8

CELTIC PHYSICIANS

A
small family cemetery has been uncovered at Obermenzing near Munich dated to the third or early second century
BC
. In one
of the graves, described as Grave 7, a sword and iron scabbard was found whose chagrinage and bird-headed triskel make it a noteworthy item of Celtic artwork. But the most remarkable discovery in
Grave 7 was a whole range of surgeon’s equipment which promptly caused it to be labelled by the archaeologists ‘the warrior-surgeon’s grave’. The surgical instruments
included a retractor, probes and a trephining saw, a cylindrical skull drill.

According to Dr Simon James: ‘In medicine, as in so many other areas, the Celts stand favourable comparison with the classical world.’

We do not know much about specific medical practices among the Celts until the start of the Christian era when such information was committed to writing. However, we do know that surgical
medicine was advanced in the Celtic world. The ‘surgeon’s’ grave at Obermenzing is not the only one in which surgical instruments of bronze and iron have been discovered.

We know from the skulls of several skeletons that the Celts often did neurosurgery and were adept at the trephining operation, making circular cuts into the skull in
order to relieve pressure in the case of head injuries or, it has also been suggested, psychological disorders. Several times we find skulls which have been trephined as many as three times.

The best-known example demonstrating the success of ancient trephining operations was found in January 1935, off the coast of Ovingdean, Sussex, when a fisherman trawled the skull in his nets.
‘The Ovingdean Trephined Skull’ is now in the Brighton Museum, Sussex. The skull has two large round holes cut into it over the brain pan. It is dated to the second or first century
BC
. The remarkable thing about this skull is that the ancient Celtic surgeons had cut into it on two separate occasions; the healing of the bone around both holes indicated
that the patient survived both operations but eventually died of sepsis some weeks after the second. Similar skulls have been discovered on the Continent where the patient has survived the
infections and the shock of such operations. One found at Katzesdorf, Austria, actually shows three attempts at trephining. Two holes were completed but the third was not, and there are no signs of
healing. Obviously this patient died on the operating table.

The first native Celtic record of the trephining operation appears in an account of the battle of Magh Rath or Moira in
AD
637. An Irish chieftain named Cennfaelad had
his skull fractured by a sword blow. He was taken to the medical school of Tuam Brecain (Tomregan) and had the injured part of his skull and a portion of his brain removed. On his recovery, it was
said that his wits were as sharp as ever and he became a great scholar and author of
Uraicept na n-Éces
(
Primer of Poets
), a work still existing in copied form.

We know, from early Irish sources, the Irish Celtic names of some of these surgical instruments. Early Irish physicians carried a stethoscope, a horn called a
gipne
or
gibne
,
explained in Cormac’s Glossary with the words
adarc lege
(physician’s horn). The surgical probe was called a
fraig
.

In the ancient Celtic world, water was the source of health as well as of life. The link with water, the divine waters from heaven from which the Celtic peoples, according to their philosophy,
had their origin, was all-pervasive. Therefore we find that rivers and springs were the focus of ritual practices designed to ensure well-being. Like their fellow Indo-Europeans, the Hindus, the
Celts regarded water with veneration and they had their sacred rivers. They bathed in them and offered votive gifts to the deities of the springs and rivers; these offerings included wooden models
of themselves or the affected part of their limbs, together with all manner of treasures.

Most Celtic river names are identified with goddesses. The Marne, for example, comes from Matrona, which means ‘mother’; the Severn in Britain is named after Sabrina; the Wharfe is
sacred to Verbeia; the Boyne in Ireland is named after the goddess Boann; while the Shannon takes its name from the goddess Siannon. Sequana was the goddess of the Seine, and the source of the
river on the Châtillon plateau, north-west of Dijon, was where she was particularly worshipped with votive objects being cast into the river to ensure well-being and health. Among these were
solar wheel amulets. A healing shrine was established at ‘Fontes Sequanae’ (The Springs of Sequana) and the Romans took over the site and built two temples and other structures
there.

Sequana seems to have been particularly prayed to and given offerings in connection with various diseases of the organs. Some of the votive offerings are wooden and stone images of limbs,
organs, heads and complete bodies, many images showing blindness or swollen eyes. The images were offered to her with coins and items of jewellery. This does not mean, of course, that the people
placed their faith in the offering to the goddess alone but that, as well as placing themselves in the hands of their physicians, a prayer to their gods and goddesses
would
not come amiss. In fact, there was little difference in their attitude to our attitude today.

The offering of images of limbs and organs was by no means confined to the Celtic world. The practice occurred among the Greeks, and even in medieval times in certain Christian communities. But
certainly it was widespread in the Celtic world, and many such images are to be found at the healing shrines in Britain. One fascinating example is a pair of sculptured breasts which were offered
to the goddess Sulis at Aquae Sulis (Bath). Presumably a young woman was suffering, perhaps from breast cancer, and sought to invoke the aid of the goddess. Sulis was a major deity of healing and
her sanctuaries were found in Britain and in Gaul.

We find, in the Irish medical tracts, that baths were frequently prescribed for healing. Fingin, the Druid physician of Conchobhar Mac Nessa, cured the wounded warriors by baths of medical
herbs. In Cormac’s Glossary such a medicated bath was called
fothrucad
and most often given for leprosy –
doinnlóbru.

A hot air bath was used in Ireland as a cure for, among other things, rheumatism. It was called a
tigh ’n alluis
, or ‘sweating house’. One such ancient structure
survives on Inishmurray, in Donegal Bay, and several have been described in nineteenth-century sources which have now been vandalised and destroyed. The ‘sweating house’ was a stone
cabin, around 2 metres long. A turf fire was kindled inside and the place heated like an oven. The fire was removed. The patient, wrapped in a blanket, went inside and sat down on a bench. The door
was closed up. The patient remained until a profuse perspiration developed and then, on leaving, they plunged in cold water before being rubbed dry. The patient was encouraged to meditate
(
dercad
) to achieve a state of peace (
sitcháin
). This process has been found in many cultures in the world, even among the Native American peoples, and has the same
religious connotations as in the Celtic world.

The fame of the Irish baths spread to the Continent. Professor Henry Hennessy observed, in 1885, that ‘it is remarkable that what are called Turkish baths in
Ireland and Great Britain have been designated Roman-Irish baths in Germany and Bohemia’.

There were also male deities connected with healing. Lenus was the physician-deity of the Treveri, worshipped at Trier and Pommern, where the spring and a small set of baths were situated. He
seemed to look after children particularly, and many images have been found with children holding out gifts, specifically of doves, to him. Lenus was also worshipped among the British Celts, at
Caerwent in Gwent, and Chedworth in Gloucestershire.

Belenus, the name meaning ‘bright’ or ‘brilliant’, was a sun deity who probably represented the sun’s curative powers. Vindonnus, whose sanctuary was at
Châtillon-sur-Seine in Burgundy, was invoked in the case of eye afflictions for there are bronze plaques there depicting the eyes. He is, significantly, a god of light and his name is argued
to mean ‘clear light’.

Grannus was a healing deity who, according to Dio Cassius, was invoked by the Roman emperor Caracalla who went to his temple sanctuary. We are unsure which sanctuary this was, for his cult was
found from north-east Gaul (Brittany) as far east as Hungary, and a pot discovered at Vestmanlung in Sweden bears a dedication to Grannus. This pot probably arrived in Sweden by means of trade or
plunder. The name means ‘sun’ and at Trier the god is depicted driving a sun chariot.

Only in Irish mythology do we have a god of medicine clearly defined. This was Dian Cécht who, with his daughter Airmid, guarded a healing spring which restored the dead and wounded to
life. After Nuada, the leader of the Tuatha Dé Danaan, lost his hand in the first battle of Magh Tuireadh, Dian Cécht supplied him with a silver hand, earning Nuada the nickname Nuada
Airgetlámh. However, this blemish excluded Nuada from kingship and Bres, the half Fomorii,
became king. Dian Cécht’s son, Miach, proved himself a better
physician by providing Nuada with a new hand of flesh and blood and allowed him to regain his kingdom.

Dian Cécht grew increasingly jealous of his son especially when Miach and his sister sewed a cat’s eye into the socket of the one-eyed porter of Nuada’s palace and gave him
sight. In rage Dian Cécht killed his son. Airmid gathered the herbs that grew on her brother’s grave and laid them out on her cloak in order of their various healing properties. Dian
Cécht, still jealous, overturned the cloak and hopelessly confused the herbs so that no human would learn the secret of immortality by their use.

Pliny was the first classical writer to give an account of Celtic medical knowledge, and he pointed out that it was the Druids who possessed these skills. As the Druids were the Celtic
intellectual caste, it was natural that the professional role of healer would be one of those assumed by them. It has been asserted that the medical knowledge of the Druids was what gave them power
in Celtic society, although this is a matter for debate. Pliny, in the first century
AD
, also stressed that the Druidic physicians were possessed of ‘magical
lore’, something he was particularly interested in when writing his
Naturalis Historia
.

When records begin in insular Celtic, the Druidic physicians are regarded as skilled in the prescription of herbs as well as in surgery; among the operations they performed were Caesarean
sections, neurosurgery and straightforward amputations. We even find an entire medical corps accompanying the army of Conchobhar Mac Nessa during the
Táin
wars under the direction
of Fingín Fáithliaig. It is no coincidence that the name is a compound of
fáith
, a seer, and
liaig
, a physician.

We know from later European sources that the Irish physicians were renowned for their skill in medical botany, including the production of herbal sleeping potions (
deoch suaim
).
Of course, the use of poisons was known. A herb called
éccinél
was recorded as a deadly poison but, alas, we are not sure to what this word refers. It
corresponds with the old Irish word for hurtful, unkindly and unnatural. We are told that the poet Cridenbél was poisoned
tre luib éccineol
.

It is Pliny who links the Druids with mistletoe, saying: ‘They believe that mistletoe given in drink will impart fertility to any animal that is barren, and that it is an antidote to all
poisons.’ In the modern pharmacopoeia, mistletoe is reputed to be beneficial to sufferers of insomnia, high blood pressure and certain malignant tumours. Pliny tells us that the smoke
produced by burning the selago plant was thought to be good for all diseases of the eye.

In the pre-Christian period, in most European societies, even those of Greece and Rome, little provision was made for the treatment of the ailing poor. The sick, feeble and elderly were often
put to death as the ultimate remedy for their ills. Disease was regarded as a curse inflicted by the supernatural powers. These powers had to be propitiated rather than the sick cured. There was no
‘system’ of health care. It is now part of European cultural folklore that the first hospice in Europe for the sick and needy, the first hospital, was established by the Christian
matron, St Fabiola (d.
c
.
AD
399) at Porto near Rome.

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