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The Celts: First Masters of Europe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Celts: First Masters of Europe
French cover. Detail from the Gundestrup cauldron (Denmark), 1st century AD, National Museum of Copenhagen. English editions featuring identical cover artwork.
AuthorChristiane Éluère
Original titleL'Europe des Celtes
TranslatorDaphne Briggs
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Series
Release number
158th in collection
SubjectCelts, Celtic Europe
GenreNonfiction monograph
PublisherFR: Éditions Gallimard
US: Harry N. Abrams
UK: Thames & Hudson
Publication date
10 November 1992
Published in English
1993
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages176 pp.
ISBN978-2-070-53171-4 (first edition)
OCLC27719510
Preceded byLa guerre de Sécession : Les États désunis 
Followed byDarius : Les Perses et l'Empire 

The Celts: First Masters of Europe (US title: The Celts: Conquerors of Ancient Europe; French: L'Europe des Celtes) is a 1992 illustrated monograph on the history of the Celts. Written by French Celticist Christiane Éluère, and published by Éditions Gallimard as the 158th volume in the "Découvertes" collection, in collaboration with the Réunion des Musées Nationaux. According to the German archaeologist Ferdinand Maier [de], this "little book is aimed at the general public who have an increasingly 'visual interest' in ancient cultures and the alike".[1]

Contents and synopsis

Christiane Éluère traces more than half a millennium of the Celtic history with an archaeological approach, from roughly 9th century BC to the 1st century AD, and the survival of their culture to the island peoples, eventually reborn in the art of Celtic Christianity.

The book opens with a series of bronze masks and hoary faces carved in stone from 7th century BC to 1st century AD (pp. 1–9),[2] which were discovered in France, Austria and Bohemia. The body text is divided into six chapters: 1, "Birth of a Warrior Aristocracy" (Naissance d'une aristocratie guerrière, pp. 13–27); 2, "The First Celtic Princes" (La splendeur des premiers princes celtes, pp. 29–49); 3, "The All-Conquering Celts" (Les Celtes à la conquête du monde, pp. 51–77); 4, "The Celts Against the Might of Rome" (Les Celtes face au géant romain, pp. 79–101); 5, "Realms of Religion" (L'Univers des dieux, pp. 103–119); 6, "Celtic Memories" (Mémoires celtiques, pp. 121–127).

The following "Documents" section is made up of an anthology divided into nine parts, which delves into more specialised texts and relevant authors on multiple aspects of the Celts, including an introduction of homosexuality among the ancient Celts.[3]

  1. Celtic territory on the map of the ancient world (Le pays des Celtes, pp. 130–133);
  2. Classic portraits of early 'European Man' (Portrait de l'«homo europeanus», pp. 134–137);
  3. Society and private life (Société et vie privée, pp. 138–143);
  4. Languages and writing in Celtic culture (Langue et écriture, pp. 144–147);
  5. Were the Celts bloodthirsty warriors? (Des guerriers sanguinaires, pp. 148–153);
  6. The druids (Les druides, pp. 154–159);
  7. Celtic gold (L'or des Celtes, pp. 160–161);
  8. Celtic art (English edition exclusive, pp. 162–165);
  9. The first British heroine (English edition exclusive, pp. 166–167)
  • Further reading (p. 168)
  • List of illustrations (pp. 168–173)
  • Index (pp. 173–175)
  • Acknowledgments/Photo credits (p. 175)

Reception

Sarah Anderson wrote in her book Anderson's Travel Companion: "[The book] is concise, well illustrated and packed with nuggets of information."[4]

According to the opinion of a reviewer of the Encyclopédie de l'Arbre Celtique, this is a "great book, very well illustrated. However, it is regrettable that the almost abusive use of examples, at the expense of a generalization, and of a comprehensive idea of the Celts' lifestyle."[5]

In its book review section, the archaeology magazine Minerva gave a positive review to the book: "The book treads a well worn path, leading us from the late Hallstatt Fürstensitze ('princely seats' or 'seats of princes') through the development and spread of the La Tène culture across Europe and the emergence of Roman power. [...] The present version adheres closely to the original and in an excellent translation retains the flowing, elegant quality of the original French."[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Maier, Ferdinand (1994). "Eluère, L'Europe des Celtes". Germania [de] (in German). 72 (1): 334–335. ISBN 9783805314862. ISSN 0016-8874. Retrieved 21 November 2021. Demgegenüber wendet sich das Büchlein von Christiane Eluère an eine Öffentlichkeit, deren zunehmend visuelles Interesse an alten Kulturen u. a.
  2. ^ Davies, Jim (1994). "In the beginning was the picture". Eye. Vol. 4, no. 13. London: Eye Magazine Ltd. ISSN 0960-779X. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  3. ^ Sellner, Edward Cletus (2013). The Double: Male Eros, Friendship and Mentoring—From Gilgamesh to Kerouac. Amherst, MA: Lethe Press. pp. 84 & 102. ISBN 9781590213148.
  4. ^ Anderson, Sarah (2016). Anderson's Travel Companion: A Guide to the Best Non-Fiction and Fiction for Travelling. Milton Park: Routledge. ISBN 9781351958394.
  5. ^ "L'Europe des Celtes, par Christiane Éluère, Découvertes Gallimard/Réunion des Musées Nationaux". arbre-celtique.com (in French). Retrieved 1 November 2018. Bon livre, très bien illustré. On peut cependant regretter l'utilisation presque abusive d'exemples, au détriment de la généralisation, d'une idée globale du mode de vie des Celtes...
  6. ^ "The Celts: First Masters of Europe, by Christiane Eluère. New Horizons series, Thames and Hudson, London, 1993. 175pp., over 250 illus, most in colour. Paperback, £6.95". Minerva. Vol. 5. London: Aurora Publications. 1994. p. 47. ISSN 0957-7718.

External links

This page was last edited on 29 August 2023, at 12:39
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