When people hear "druid," they often picture Stonehenge, white robes, and ancient Celtic priests. While these images contain threads of truth, modern druidry is something far more alive — and far more relevant — than historical re-enactment.
A Living Tradition
Modern druidry emerged in the 18th century revival movements and has evolved continuously since. Organisations like the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids (OBOD) and the British Druid Order have shaped it into a coherent spiritual path that honours:
- Awen — the flowing spirit of inspiration
- The three grades — Bard (creativity), Ovate (vision), Druid (wisdom)
- The sanctity of nature — not as dogma, but as direct experience
What the Ancients Actually Did
We know surprisingly little about the historical druids. Roman accounts (Caesar, Pliny, Tacitus) are filtered through conquest. Irish and Welsh mythological texts preserve fragments, but they were written down centuries after the oral tradition.
What we do know: the druids were the intellectual class of Celtic society — judges, healers, poets, astronomers, and ritualists. They trained for up to twenty years. They held their knowledge in memory, not text.
Druidry as Philosophy
At its core, druidry is a nature-based philosophy that asks: - How do we live in right relationship with the natural world? - What can the cycles of nature teach us about our own lives? - How do creativity, intuition, and wisdom relate to each other?
These are not antiquarian questions. They are urgent ones.
Starting the Path
Modern druidry does not require initiation, membership, or belief. It requires attention. Go outside. Sit beneath a tree. Listen to what the land is telling you. This is where druidry begins — not in a book, but in the soil.
Published by
The Greene Man
Learning from nature in order to self-initiate. A digital mystery school rooted in nature philosophy.