Celtic Folklore

Forsideomslag
Cambridge University Press, 2. jun. 2016 - 454 sider
John Rhys (1840-1915), the son of a Welsh farmer, studied at Oxford and in Germany, and became the first professor of Celtic languages at Oxford in 1877. His research ranged across the fields of linguistics, history, archaeology, ethnology and religion, and his many publications were instrumental in establishing the field of Celtic studies. This two-volume work, published in 1901, had its beginnings in the late 1870s, when Rhys began collecting Welsh folk tales. His entertaining preface sheds light on folklore fieldwork and its difficulties, including fragmentary evidence, alteration of stories by those interviewed, and the hostility of the religious and educational establishment to 'superstition'. Volume 1 begins with these stories; for each text, Rhys provides fascinating information about his sources, and an English translation. Later chapters present comparative material, focusing particularly on the Isle of Man, and a detailed account of Welsh legends and customs associated with wells.

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Indhold

GOEGRAPHICAL LIST OF AUTHORITIES
xxv
LIST OF BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES
xxxi
The other preCeltic race the Picts and the people
xxxvi
CHAPTER I
1
The soul as a pigmy or a lizard and the word enaid 607
16
CHAPTER II
75
FAIRY WAYS AND Words
197
The folklore of Nant Conwy
208
Sundry traits of fairy character
244
The aged infant
257
CHAPTER IV
269
MANx Folklore
284
CHAPTER VIII
323
Trwyth in Ireland 509
334
CHAPTER VI
354
WELSH CAVE LEGENDs 456
381

Celynnog Fawr and ILanaelhaearn
222
March and his horses ears e
234

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