Their Nature and Legacy
This is the first survey of religious beliefs in the British Isles from the Old
Stone Age to the coming of Christianity, one of the least familiar but most
extensive periods in Britain's history. Ronald Hutton draws upon a wealth of
new data, much of it archaeological, that has transformed interpretation over
he past decade. Giving more or less equal weight to all periods, from the
Neolithic to the Middle Ages, he considers a fascinating range of evidence for
Celtic and Romano-British paganism: from burial sites, cairns, megaliths and
causeways, to carvings, figurines, jewellery, weapons, votive objects, literary
texts and folklore.
The author reveals the important rethinking that has taken place over Christianization
and the decline of paganism, and reviews the exciting progress that has been
made in tracing the survival of pre-Christian beliefs and imagery into the Middle Ages.
Dr. Hutton shows how a host of recieved ideas have been demolished, and how the pagans
of ancient Britain were far more creative, complex, enigmatic and dynamic than has
previously been supposed.
This book contains over a hundred illustrations and will be of wide interest - to general
readers and to students, as well as to historians, archaeologists and anthropologists.
Ronald Hutton was educated at Cambridge and then at Oxford, where he held a fellowship
at Magdalen College. In 1981, he moved to the University of Bristol, where he is now
Reader in British History. He is a historian of wide interests ranging from political
affairs and popular culture to topics covering the whole of the British Isles.
This is his fifth book.
"A brilliant synthesis... Hutton's book gives us by far the best, most level-headed
overview of this fascinating but contentious subject ... To anyone interested in the
rites and religions of ancient Britain and Ireland this is an invaluable book."
- Times Literary Supplement
"A fascinating, comprehensive and long-overdue survey of ancient British religious beliefs...
invaluable for academics and 'earth mystics' alike."
- The Wiccan