Image for Celtic folklore  : Welsh and Manx

Celtic folklore : Welsh and Manx

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Anthropology series
See all formats and editions

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'.

For each text, Rhys provides fascinating information about his sources, and an English translation.

He analyses possible origins for the tales, in imagination and myth, and in early British history, and compares them with legends from elsewhere in the British Isles.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108079105 / 9781108079105
Mixed media product
02/06/2016
United Kingdom
English
2 volumes (454, 328 pages)
22 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More