Tuesday, December 8, 2009

celtic tree of life tattoo

Celtic Tree Of Life
The Celtic Tree Of Life Tattoo
The Celtic tree of life tattoo was first used by the Celts after the advent of Christianity. The design has been found in the Book of Kells, as well as carved on stones in Northumberland and Scotland. The tree of life is an idea that is important to Celtic culture, and many Celtic tattoos have come to reflect this importance. Again, the modern tree of life tattoo has drawn inspiration from ancient Celtic designs.

Although the Garden of Eden was home to the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, the central tree or axis mundi (world axis) is also a great archetype of human thought, from totem poles in the Pacific Northwest to Mesopotamian ziggurats. For the Celts, however, the central tree was particularly meaningful. The word Druid, the word used to refer to the learned class in ancient Celtic society, may itself have come from the word for "knowing or finding the oak tree" and their early gatherings took place in clearings in the forest. Although there is no direct connection between the Tree of Life motif used to symbolize Christ in the illustrated manuscripts and the importance of the tree to ancient Celtic Druids, it is interesting to speculate that the image, if not the concept, has resonated for millennia in Celtic thought and design.

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