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The Philosopher and the Druids
The Philosopher and the Druids: A Journey Among the Ancient Celts | Philip Freeman
6 posts | 2 read
Early in the first century B.C. a Greek philosopher named Posidonius began an ambitious and dangerous journey into the little-known lands of the Celts. A man of great intellectual curiosity and considerable daring, Posidonius traveled from his home on the island of Rhodes to Rome, the capital of the expanding empire that had begun to dominate the Mediterranean. From there Posidonius planned to investigate for himself the mysterious Celts, reputed to be cannibals and savages. His journey would be one of the great adventures of the ancient world. Posidonius journeyed deep into the heart of the Celtic lands in Gaul. There he discovered that the Celts were not barbarians but a sophisticated people who studied the stars, composed beautiful poetry, and venerated a priestly caste known as the Druids. Celtic warriors painted their bodies, wore pants, and decapitated their foes. Posidonius was amazed at the Celtic women, who enjoyed greater freedoms than the women of Rome, and was astonished to discover that women could even become Druids. Posidonius returned home and wrote a book about his travels among the Celts, which became one of the most popular books of ancient times. His work influenced Julius Caesar, who would eventually conquer the people of Gaul and bring the Celts into the Roman Empire, ending forever their ancient way of life. Thanks to Posidonius, who could not have known that he was recording a way of life soon to disappear, we have an objective, eyewitness account of the lives and customs of the ancient Celts.
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review
GingerAntics
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Panpan

MOTHER OF PEARL THIS BOOK SUCKED!!!
Gird your loins, because here it comes (complete with rant)...
Half the book isn‘t even about what the whole book claims to be about. The first half of the book is about the “philosopher” in Greece and Rome and what he would have heard about the Gauls from there. There is only one chapter that involved Druids. 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻

GingerAntics It‘s full of cliches and myths that were debunked in the decade before this was written, making it outdated before it was even published. The entire book boils down to “this is how it was for the pre-Christian Irish, so it must have been similar.” I don‘t get why everyone raved about this book. Even his epilogue wasn‘t what it promised. 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻 4y
GingerAntics “The Celtic Heritage” turned out to be “Rome never conquered Ireland or Scotland.” Whoopy! I should have stopped reading when he said Julius Caesar was a great source on the Celts and implied it was accurate. Was this book actually written in the 1950s?! 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻 4y
GingerAntics If you want actual, factual history, look else where. If you need something to help you fall asleep and don‘t care about facts or only making suppositions you can support with sources, this is the book for you. 4y
GingerAntics @Texreader 🎶🎵🎶Mama's pearl, let down those curls won't you give my love a whirl find what you been missin' Ooh, ooh, now baby Goody girl, let down those curls let me give your heart a twirl don't keep me wishing... 🎶🎵🎶 look what you did!!! Everything is a bloody song now. I swear, there is a musical inside my head. 🤣😂🤣 4y
12 likes5 comments
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GingerAntics
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This book has some annoying and repetitive spacing issues. Who edited this thing? The content is good, but clearly it needs an editor. There is NEVER a space between “century” and “B.C.” Never mind that it should actually be BCE.
#PhilipFreeman #ThePhilosopherAndTheDruids #Posidonius #Celtic #ContinentalCelts

Texreader Arg! 4y
GingerAntics @Texreader not to mention, I‘m on chapter 7 of 15 and Freeman still hasn‘t gotten around to what his book is supposedly about. If he doesn‘t get to the bloody point, this is going to become a DNF. I think I would have stopped by now if I wasn‘t limiting myself to 2 chapters a week. 4y
rabbitprincess Hmmm looks like some goofiness associated with small caps. Maybe a formatting issue? Formatting could have been applied after the main edit and the book not given a proofread after formatting. And ebook formatting is its own level of goofy, from what I hear. 4y
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GingerAntics @rabbitprincess true, the tiniest things can throw that off. Good point. You‘d think publishers would purposely want to put a good foot forward and check against after formatting. 4y
rabbitprincess @GingerAntics Yes, I think one last proofread after formatting is a good idea! I am an editor and just spent my day fixing goofy spacing and formatting things in a previously edited document, which is why that jumped to mind 😁 4y
GingerAntics @rabbitprincess formatting stuff is absolutely annoying when you‘re doing them and then they go totally wonky. I‘m glad you‘re looking out for the formatting wonkiness. We need more people like you. 4y
13 likes6 comments
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GingerAntics
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GingerAntics
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GingerAntics
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It‘s like Cleo is just part of my life right now!!! She‘s creeping up everywhere.
@Riveted_Reader_Melissa #Cleopatra
#PhilipFreeman #ThePhilosopherAndTheDruids #Posidonius #Celtic #ContinentalCelts

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GingerAntics
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My plan with this one (and someone please feel free to throw this statement back in my face if I start going buck wild with this thing) is to read two chapters a week, so I don‘t get too overwhelmed, I remember it better, and I finish around the same time as Cleopatra.
#PhilipFreeman #ThePhilosopherAndTheDruids #Posidonius #Celtic #ContinentalCelts