| This update is primarily a
formatting one, with only a few minor changes from the previous
version. I have in my files a complex "family tree"
chart of Mesopagan Druid groups prepared (I recall) by Colin
Murray, then head of the Golden Section Order Society ten or
twenty years ago, which I will eventually append to and use
to update this essay. Someday we may even be able to come up
with a chronology of the Mesopagan Druid orders which all the
current groups will be able to agree upon!
Let me begin by pointing out that I am working
primarily on the "Earth Plane" level of materialistic
reality in writing these notes, and that legends about the
founding of esoteric movements are not unusual. This is especially
important as we discuss the Fraternal Druid movements of the
British Isles, many of whom sincerely believe that their orders
go back in an unbroken line to the original Paleopagan Druids.
If you are unfamiliar with these terms, you
may wish to visit my definitions page on Paleo-,
Meso- and Neopaganism. Please remember that these are
not airtight pigeonholes, but rather broad, overlapping categories.
My discussion of Paleopagan
Druidism as the Celtic branch of a common Indo-European Paleopaganism
will probably be a useful introduction to this topic. The
original Druids were wiped out by the Roman Empire and then
the Roman Catholic Church, so that by the year 1,000 of the
Common Era, Druidism as an intact belief system, rooted in
a common Indo-European
social structure and cosmology, had vanished from Western
Europe.
It is said by some that in 1245 c.e. a gathering
was held of underground Druids and Bards from several parts
of the British Isles, and that they managed to agree upon
some sort of theological unity. This accomplished, they founded
a special group called the Mount Haemus Grove, which is said
to still be in existence, with an "unbroken" line
leading back. Such claims, like those made for some Witchcraft
groups, need to be treated most carefully. There does indeed
seem to be a Mount Haemus Grove operating today, which is
recognized by some of the Mesopagan Druids in England, but
the fact of its current existence cannot, unfortunately, be
taken as proof of either its legendary history or its continuity.
It may be possible to show a continued existence back to the
1700's, but going any further back will require much more
research than seems to have been done to date.
In 1659 c.e., the scholar John Aubrey,
having done some quasi-archeological fieldwork at Stonehenge,
made the suggestion that Stonehenge might have
been a temple of the Druids. He developed this suggestion
cautiously over the next few decades in his correspondence
with his fellow scholars and in the notes for his never fully-published
work, Templa Druidim. In 1694, a firey young
Deist named John Toland discussed the theory with him
and became very enthusiastic over it. In 1695, excerpts from
Aubrey's book were published, including his theory about Druids
at Stonehenge, which thus saw light for the first time.
In 1717, a young "antiquary" (that's
what such folk were called before the term "archeologist"
was coined) named William Stuckeley obtained a copy
of Aubrey's complete manuscript of Templa Druidim,
including the portions never published. Stuckeley thought
the theory about Stonehenge being a Druid Temple was a terrific
idea and began to develop it far bevond Aubrey's original
concepts.
Also in that year, it is claimed, John Toland
held a meeting at which Druidic and Bardic representatives
from Wales, Cornwall, Britanny, Ireland, Scotland, Anglesey,
Man, York, Oxford and London supposedly appeared and formed
The Universal Druid Bond (U.D.B.). The U.D.B. has supposedly
continued to this very day (or rather, at least one current
group claiming to be part of a Universal Druid Bond says that
it goes back this far) and the present name of the head group
of the U.D.B. seems to be The Mother Grove, An Tich Geata
Gairdeachas.
In 1723 c.e., the Druid Stone Altar was invented
by Rev. Henry Rowlands in his monumental work, Mona
Antiqua Restaurata. His Druids are Patriarchs right
out of the Christian Bible, and the altars they use are cairns
and the capstones of cromlechs (though he does at least allow
the Druids to remain in their groves, rather than forcing
them to build huge stone temples). These Druid Stone Altars
quickly became part of the rapidly growing folklore of Druidism.
Prior to 1723, Druids were required to use altars made of
sod or tree stumps -- adequate, perhaps, but hardly as glamorous.
In 1726, John Toland published his History
of the Druids, in which he pictured the Druids as
unscrupulous montebanks and theocratic tyrants. This was a
rather surprising act for the man who supposedly had, nine
years earlier, helped to found a Universal Druid Bond and
been its first "Chosen Chief.'' He did, however, put
further forward the Stonehenge theory of Druid worship.
Scholarship of equal value was, of course,
being produced in France as well. In 1727, Jean Martin
presented Patriarchial Druids (Christian style) in his Religion
des Gaulois. Throughout this century, on both sides of
the Channel, Druids were being invented east and west, though
in France these "Pre-Christian Christians" tended
to be patriotic heroes resisting invasion, while their English
counterparts were the greatest mystics in history.
In London, throughout the century, Druid
groups appeared along with Rosicrucian and Freemason organizations.
As the Druid Order/B.C.U.B. (see below), put it in their introductory
booklet, The
Ancient Druid Order:
The 17th century saw the emergence of the
Order into its more modern shape. In the 17th and 18th centuries
there was a complex of mystical societies, Hermetes, Rosicrucians,
Freemasons and Druids, who often had members in common.
In 1781 c.e., Henry Hurle set up The
Ancient Order of Druids (sometimes just called "The Druid
Order," as were a few others, leading to no end of historical
confusion), as a secret society based on Masonic patterns
(not surprising, since Hurle was a carpenter and house builder).
This group, like most of the similar mystical societies formed
at the time, was heavily influenced by Jacob Boehme.
(Jacob Boehme, 1675-1724 c.e., was a Protestant
Christian mystic, greatly involved with alchemy, hermeticism
and Christian Cabala, as well as being a student of the famous
Meister Eckhart. His mystical writings attempted to reconcile
all these influences and had a tremendous impact upon later
generations of mystical Christians, Rosicrucians, Freemasons
and Theosophists.)
Overseas, the link between Deism, Masonry
and Druidism was once again established, in the small town
of Newburgh, New York. G. Adolf Koch has an entire chapter
on "The Society of Druids" in his book Religion
of the American Enlightenment. Deism and downright
atheism were popular during the 1780's and 90's among the
American intelligensia, especially those who had supported
the American and French revolutions. In fact, a rather large
number of the key political figures involved in both revolutions
were Deistic Masons and Rosicrucians (see Neal Wilgus, The
Illuminoids), which rather dampens claims by the Religious
Reich to America having been founded as a "Christian
nation." Koch tells the story of the Newburgh Druids
thusly:
Some influential citizens of Newburgh had
organized themselves into an interesting radical religious
body called "The Druid Society." Like its sister
organization, the Deistic Society in New York, it was a
radical offshoot of an earlier and more conservative society.
A Masonic lodge had been established in Newburgh in 1788,
and it seems, as one attempts to piece together the fragmentary
facts, that as the brothers, or at least a number of them,
became more and more radical in the feverish days of the
French Revolution, the metamorphosis from Mason to Druid
resulted. The Druids held their meetings in the room formerly
occupied by the Masons and continued to use a ceremony similar
to the Masonic. It is interesting to note, too, that as
the Druid Society died out contemporaneously with the end
of [famous Deist of the time] Palmer's activities in New
York City, a new Masonic lodge was instituted in Newburgh
in 1806.
The question naturally arises as to why
those apostate Masons chose the name of Druids. It seems
that when they abandoned Christianity, with which Masonry
in America had not been incompatible, they went back to
the religion [as they conceived of it] of the ancient Druids
who were sun worshippers. It was commonly believed at that
time, by the radicals of course, that both Christianity
and Masonry were derived from the worship of the sun...
The Druids thus went back to the pure worship of the great
luminary, the visible agent of a great invisible first cause,
and regarded Christianity as a later accretion and subversion
of the true faith, a superstition, in short, developed by
a designing and unscrupulous priesthood, to put it mildly
in the language of the day.
It appears that the famous American revolutionary
Thomas Paine, among other radicals of the time, was
convinced that Masonry was descended from Druidism. Koch refers
us to an essay bv Paine, The Origin of Freemasonry,
written in New York Citv in 1805. In this essay he mentions
a society of Masons in Dublin who called themselves Druids.
The spectacular fantasies and conjectures that have been offered
over the centuries to explain the origins of Masonry and Rosicrucianism
will have to await another article to be properly discussed.
Suffice it to say, for now, that the sorts of Druidism with
which Paine and his friends might have been familiar were
far more likely to have been offshoots of Masonry than vice
versa.
As for the group of Druid Masons in Dublin,
I know nothing else about them. I will speculate that they
may very well have been intimately linked with Irish Revolutionary
politics, which might or might not have strained their relations
with Druid Masons in England. There doesn't seem to be much
data about Irish Masonic Druidism available in this country,
but we do know a bit about developments in Wales.
Following the successful Eisteddfod
(bardic gathering) organized by Thomas Jones in Corwen
in 1789, a huge variety of Welsh cultural and literary societies
mushroomed and flourished. In 1792, a member of several of
these groups in London named Edward Williams, later
to use the religious/pen name of Iolo Morganwg
(Iolo of Glamorgan), held an Autumn Equinox ceremony
on top of Primrose Hill (in London). Along with some other
Welsh Bards, he set up a small circle of pebbles and an altar,
which he called the Mean Gorsedd. There was a
naked sword on this altar and a part of the ritual involved
the sheathing of this sword. At the time, no one paid very
much attention to the ceremony or its obvious sexual symbolism
(which, if noticed, might legitimately have been called "Pagan"),
at least not outside of the London Bardic community.
Iolo, however, was not daunted. He declared
that the Glamorganshire Bards had an unbroken line of Bardic-Druidic
tradition going back to the Ancient Druids, and that his ceremony
was part of it. He then proceeded (almost all scholars agree)
to translate, mistranslate and occasionally forge various
documents and "ancient" manuscripts, in order to
"prove" this and his subsequent claims. Many people
feel that he muddled genuine Welsh scholarship for over a
hundred years.
In 1819, Iolo managed to get his stone circle
and its ceremony (now called, as a whole, the Gorsedd)
inserted into the genuine Eisteddfod in
Carmarthen, Wales. It was a success with the Bards and the
tourists and has been a part of the Eisteddfod tradition
ever since, with greater and greater elaborations.
The effects of Iolo's work did not stop there
however, for later writers such as Lewis Spence, Robert
Graves and Gerald
Gardner apparently took Iolo's "scholarship"
at face value and proceeded to put forward theories that have
launched dozens of occult and mystical organizations (most
of them having little if anything to do with authentic Paleopagan
Druidism).
By 1796 c.e., all megalithic monuments in
Northwestern Europe were firmly defined as "Druidic,"
especially if they were in the form of circles or lines of
standing stones. In that year, yet another element was added,
in La Tour-D'Auvergne's book, Origines Gauloises. He
thought he had discovered a word in the Breton language for
megalithic tombs, dolmin, and by both this spelling
and that of dolmen the term became part of archeological
jargon and of the growing Druid folklore. Of course, none
of these people knew that the megalithic monuments, cromlechs,
and dolmens all predated the Celtic peoples by many centuries.
By the end of the 18th Century, the folklore,
also called "Celtomania," went roughly like this:
"the Celts are the oldest people in
the world; their language is preserved practically intact
in Bas-Breton; they were profound philosophers whose inspired
doctrines have been handed down by the Welsh Bardic Schools;.
dolmens are their altars where their priests the Druids
offered human sacrifice; stone alignments were their astronomical
observatories..." (Salomon Reinach, quoted by Stuart
Piggott).
Art, music, drama and poetry were using these
fanciful Druids as characters and sources of inspiration.
Various eccentrics, many of them devout (if unorthodox) Christians,
claimed to be Druids and made colorful headlines. Wealthy
people built miniature Stonehenges in their gardens and hired
fake Druids to scare their guests. Mystically oriented individuals
drifted from Masonic groups to Rosicrucian lodges to Druid
groves, and hardly anyone, then or now, could tell the difference.
Ecumenicalism was the order of the day and in 1878, at the
Pontypridd Eisteddfod, the Archdruid presiding over
the Gorsedd ceremony inserted a prayer to Mother Kali
of India! This might have been magically quite sensible, and
was certainly in keeping with traditional Pagan attitudes
of religious eclecticism, except for the fact that the British
attitude towards Indian culture and religion was not exactly
the most cordial at the time. Of course, maybe they were anticipating
A.D.F.'s Pan-Indo-European approach to Druidism!
But before this, in 1833, the secret society
founded by Hurle apparently split up over the question of
whether it should be mainly a "benefit" (charitable)
society or a mystical one. The majority voted for being a
charitable society and changed its name to the United Ancient
Order of Druids (see the referenced essays below). This group,
with branches all over the world, still exists as a charitable
and fraternal organization rather like the Elks or Shriners,
with both their membership and their rituals overlapping heavily
with those of mainstream Masonry.
Meanwhile, the minority group, still apparently
calling itself by the old names (A.O.D. and D.O.), also continued
to exist, as a mystical Masonic sort of organization. They
may have been among the groups known to have held ceremonies
(Summer Solstice rites were the only ones held by anyone it
seems) at Stolnehenge, prior to 1900 c.e. In 1900, one of
the standing stones fell over and the angry owner of the land
(Sir Edward Antrobus) decided to fence the monument and charge
admission the better to (a) keep a closer watch on it and
(b) earn enough money to repair the damage being committed
by tourists. This caused a problem almost immediately , when
a Druidic group was holding the next Summer Solstice ceremonies
and the Chief Druid was kicked out by the police (he supposedly
laid a curse on Sir Edward, the affects of which are unrecorded).
The only Druidic group known for sure to
have used the monument through the years between 1901 and
1914 c.e. was called The Druid Hermeticists. It may have been
a member of this group who was the model for Alick P. F. Ritchie's
"Stonehenge 1911" painting done originally for "Vanity
Fair" magazine and shown here.
In 1915 c.e., Stonehenge was sold by the
owner to someone else who immediately gave it to the British
government, at a ceremony in which Druids of some sort assisted.
Since 1919 c.e., when Stonehenge became a national monument,
many different Druid groups have asked government pemission
to use it, while other groups (because of political and metaphysical
squabbles) celebrated instead at various nearby spots. Some
groups, of course, may have used Stonehenge without government
permission or knowledge.
From the 1970's to the 90's, under increasingly
fascistic governments, Stonehenge has been repeatedly blocked
off from use by British Druids and everyone else, in order
to control the activities of the British counterculture (which
began having festivals nearby, and using the neighborhood
for anti-nuclear and ecological protests). A review in the
Lughnasadh/Fall '96 issue (31) of Keltria
Journal highly recommends Who Owns Stonehenge?
by Christopher Chippendale et. al., as a source that
will provide more details, at least up until 1990 or so. On
June 22, 1998 c.e., Maggie Thatcher having been replaced by
a Labor Party Prime Minister, the Mesopagan and Neopagan Druids
and their friends (at least 100 of them) were once again allowed
to exercise their civil rights by celebrating the Summer Solstice
inside Stonehenge. The following year, however, conflict between
the British Government and protestors again kept the Druids
from celebrating within the circle of stones.
Over the last century, things of a Druidic
nature were occurring outside of Stonehenge, of course. In
Wales. the National Eisteddfod Court runs an Esteddfod
every year, alternating between northern and southern Wales,
and has the "Gorsedd of Bards" arrange the
rituals for each occasion. Bardic and Druidic groups have
also arisen in France, Britanny, Cornwall (where they were
responsible for rescuing the Cornish language from the very
brink of extinction), the Isle of Man, Scotland, Ireland various
parts of England, Germany, Sweden and elsewhere.
Counting out and pinning down the number
and variety of Mesopagan Druid organizations that have existed,
even just in England, may well be impossible. As I have mentioned
in discussions of Witchcraft history and as the A.O.D. booklet
quoted earlier hints, the British Isles are very small! Esoteric
and fraternal organizations tend to have overlapping memberships,
to attend each other's rites, and to borrow ideas and terminology
from each other. Thus where Piggott or another scholar may
see a dozen "different" Druid orders, their members
may see one or two or three, working along often parallel
lines, and all holding to the same ideals of wisdom, character
and public service.
Masonic/Fraternal Druidism is a religious
and philosophical system that has lasted for at least two
centuries, helping thousands of people to gain a better understanding
of themselves and their times. Its attitude of reverent skepticism
is fully in keeping with the ideals of the founders of the
Reformed and Neopagan Druid movements. These Mesopagans have
a great deal of wisdom and experience that we would do well
to avail ourselves of, and many of the current Fraternal Druids
are right on the borderline between Meso- and Neopaganism.
It is to be hoped that more lines of communication will be
opened between us in the years to come.
For more details about Mesopagan Druidism,
read the essays referenced below.
Mesopagan Druid Literature
The
Story of Druidism: History, Legend and Lore This is a
booklet I received from the California & Nevada Lodge
of the United Ancient Order of Druids (U.A.O.D.) twenty years
ago. It expresses clearly the Masonic-style of fraternal dedication
and idealism of the order.
The
Ancient Druid Order This is a booklet from The Druid Order
/ British Circle of the Universal Bond (B.C.U.B.), sent to
me fifteen years ago.
The
Druid Order, by Dr. Thomas Maughan, D.Sc. This is an essay
written sometime before 1976, by the then head of the D.O.
/ B.C.U.B., which I presume owns the copyright. I think it
clearly and succinctly expresses the essence of Mesopagan
Druid mysticism and folklore. Obviously, modern science and
scholarship (not to mention Neopagan polytheology) would disagree
vigorously with many of his statements.
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