Fians, Fairies and Picts
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About This Book
Published in 1893 by the Scottish antiquarian David MacRitchie (1851-1925), this study advances one of the most provocative theories in nineteenth-century folklore scholarship: that the fairies of British and Celtic legend were not supernatural beings but folk memories of a real, small-statured pre-Celtic race. MacRitchie marshals evidence from Scottish place-names, archaeological sites, and oral traditions to argue that the Picts, the Fians of Irish legend, and the fairy folk of Highland tradition all originate from the same historical people. The theory, known as Fairy Euhemerism, attracted both support and sharp criticism. Readers interested in Celtic mythology, Scottish antiquities, or Victorian folklore studies will find it both stimulating and richly documented.
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Publication Details
| First Published | 1893 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & co., ltd |
| Pages | 77 |
| ISBN | 9780524011980 |
| Language | En |
| Copyright | Public Domain |
| Open Library | View editions |