Monday, August 7, 2017

THE BEAR-CULT OF ARTHUR: A DIVINE RIVER AND THE 'BEARS' OF CEREDIGION

Matunus Stone, High Rochester

My identification of Arthur with Cerdic of Wessex and then with Ceredig son of Cunedda naturally led me to a consideration of the Arthur name.  Ceredig, I discovered, had three descendants with Art- or "Bear" names.  This seemed promising, but I at first could not account for why bears were so important among the early members of this princely line.  Then I turned to the geography of their kingdom in western Wales, viz. Ceredigion.  There I noticed a river called the Arth - literally, the Bear River - in the very heartland of the region over which they ruled. 

Afon Arth in Ceredigion

I went on to surmise that the name Arthur, indisputably from the Roman/Latin Artorius, was a decknamen that had replaced an earlier Irish or Hiberno-British 'bear-king' title or name.  As Ceredig was the founder of the kingdom, he would have been the first of his line to be given a bear designation. Aerial archaeology has only recently found what is believed to be a hillfort at Llandewi Aberarth and this defensive work may well have been built or re-used by Ceredig.  


Having established all this (at least in theory!), my next question had to do with the nature of the original 'Bear-king' name/title.  Was this merely a territorial honorific, one which did no more than identify Ceredig as the King of the Arth [River]? Or was some totemic element present?  The Aeron River hard by the Arth is from a Proto-Celtic *Agrona, meaning 'Carnage-goddess'.  Divine rivers are plentiful in Celtic lands and Wales is no exception.  Several examples are known.  Might the Arth, too, have been a divine stream?  And, if so, was it worshiped by Ceredig/Arthur?  

Well, it goes without saying these questions cannot be answered definitively.  Bears were sacred animals among the Celtic peoples prior to the coming of Christianity.  Of this we have sufficient evidence. I'm posting below several scholarly treatments of Celtic bear worship.  Some are converted pdfs and, alas, lack the images once embedded in the texts.  Some problems also occurred with information arranged in columns.  Hopefully, the vast majority of the material is readable.  

My main problem with Arthur/Ceredig being a pagan has to do precisely with his decknamen Artorius.  Such Latin names were assumed because the chieftain in question wished to be perceived as a civilized Briton who looked back upon the Roman period with nostalgic longing. Connections with famous Romans of the past were constantly being sought and genealogies forced to reflect family relationships with such Romans. The Romans of the later period were, of course, thoroughly Christian.  Hence it makes little sense to propose pagan worship of a divine Bear River by a Bear-king of Ceredigion who had taken a Roman name!

Furthermore, Irish sources insists Cunedda himself was a saint.  While this sainthood could well have been bestowed on Ceredig's father only by later and, possibly, spurious tradition, it is true that Ireland itself became fully Christian fairly early on. We must consider the possibility, then, that when Cunedda and his sons (or teulu) came over to Wales they were already Christian.  

We cannot judge whether Arthur/Ceredig worshipped a divine Bear River based on a source like the Welsh Mabinogion. In the tale 'Culhwch and Olwen', for example, we are told Arthur had relatives at Caer Dathal.  This would appear significant, as the early legendary lord of that fort was none other than Math son of Mathonwy.  Math is based on an ancient taboo word for 'bear.' I would propose that Mathonwy is actually the same bear word plus the male divine suffix, with a territorial suffix -wy appended.  There are some other possibilities for Mathonwy, as Rachel Bromwich discusses in a note to her TRIADS (see below).

I long ago identified Caer Dathal with Dinas Emrys in Arfon (https://mistshadows.blogspot.com/2021/01/dinas-emrys-as-caer-dathal-late.html?fbclid=IwAR0FKsusAQbYVx_jV3wBVUC1nwRXKE-6nsBtKgsUJ7Mj08UonSVXTAL3U0E).

Arthur is said to have had as wife one Elerch ("Swan") daughter of Iaen of Caer Dathal.  In my book THE BEAR KING, I pointed out that Elerch is the name of a place on the Afon Eleri (now Afon Leri) in Ceredigion, and that the Meleri who was wife of Ceredig son of Cunedda/Cerdic of the Gewissei was 'My Eleri', a river goddess.

In that same book, I suggested that the name Arthur, as well as the other *arto- or 'bear' names in the early Ceredigion pedigree came from a divinized Afon Arth, a river not too far south of Afon Eleri.


Caer Dathal was the home of the bear-god Math son of Mathonwy.  Arthur's father Uther is said to have relatives there (according to P.C. Bartram,  Dathal's Sons of Iaen were "kindred to Arthur on his father's side, or perhaps ‘on their father's side’.").  As Arthur was regularly associated with the Welsh word arth, 'bear', this may simply be another instance of creative license on the part of the storytellers.  But it is still worthwhile to take a closer look at Math and his father, just so that we may learn a little more about this Gwynedd bear divinity.   

Mathonwy is the father of Math, and both names are believed to derive from *matu, a taboo name for the bear.  But no one seems to have seen in Mathonwy a Mathon, 'divine bear', plus the common -wy place-name (regional) suffix discussed by Melville Richards and others.  Could it not be that Mathonwy is something like "place of the divine bear?"  

I asked Professor Peter Schrijver about this.  He replied:

"Yes, certainly that is possible. But a -wy suffix could also the British Celtic cognate of Old Irish aue 'grandson, descendant' (which survives in W wyr, with the same meaning, to which -r was added secondarily on the basis of other kinship terms)."

If so, Mathonwy would be, literally, the 'grandson/descendant' of the divine bear. 

Dr. Simon Rodway has another idea for the name Mathonwy:

"Math could well be borrowed from Irish (cf. Math mac Úmóir in Lebor Gabála Érenn), with Mathonwy being formed from Math + the Welsh suffix –onwy (Euronwy etc.)."

While this is true, it does not detract from the fact that Math meant 'bear.'

[from https://mistshadows.blogspot.com/2019/01/math-son-of-mathonwy-of-caer-dathal.html]

On the name Mathonwy, from Rachel Bronwich's TRIADS:


The problem with traditional stories like 'Culhwch and Olwen' is that they are manifestly works of fiction.  In all likelihood someone arbitrarily associated Arthur with the Welsh word for bear ('arth') and then decided to link him with the inhabitants of Math's Caer Dathal for no other reason than Math was also known to denote a bear.  Thus we cannot point to a bear god Math or Mathon in Arfon and in any way relate him historically to Arthur of the Bear River in Ceredigion.

But as Ceredig and his father came from Ireland, might there have been a legendary Irish bear hero who may have inspired or influenced the bear worship of the princes of Ceredigion?

Indeed there might.  Most students of early Irish history (or heroic mythology) are familiar with the king Art ("Bear") son of Conn.  This 2nd century high-king of Ireland was famous in story (http://www.maryjones.us/ctexts/art.html). But more importantly, he is brought into close connection with one Tadg son of Cian.  And Cian is the eponymous founder of the Ciannachta, to whom Cunedda belonged.

From http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~irlkik/ihm/suineill.htm:

"Ciannachta Breagh and Fir Arda Cianachta

The annals record for 226, Cormac mac Art, king of Ireland, defeated the Ulster forces under Fearghus Duibhdeadach with the assistance of Tadg (or Teige), son of Cian. For this service the king bestowed on Tadg a large territory in Magh Breagh which extended from the Liffey (in Dublin) northwards to Drumskin in Co. Louth. Tadg's descendants were called Cianachta, "the race of Cian", from his father and the territory was afterwards known by this name. The sons of Tadgc mac Céin (of the 3rd century) were Condla (a quo Ciannacht) and Cormac Gaileng (a quo Sil Cormaic Gaileng). The ancient territory of Fir Ard Cianachta in modern co. Louth became known as the barony of Ferrard."

Could Art son of Conn, the great benefactor of Tadg son of Cian, have somehow been brought into connection with the Afon Arth?  Should the bear-names in the Ceredigion genealogy be seen in this light?

Lastly, we should consider the etymologies for the three remaining bear-names in the Ceredigion royal pedigree.  Artbodgu or Arthfoddw is 'Bear-Crow'.  While the name may seem odd, we must remember that Artbodgu's father was Bodgu, making Artbodgu the 'Bear of the Crow.'  Artgloys or Arthlwys is 'Beautiful or Holy Bear' and Arthgen (perhaps the most interesting of them all!) is 'Bear-Born' or 'Born of the Bear.' Arthgen's father is named Seissil.  Is Arthgen's human mother here being referred to as a bear?  Bear in Welsh poetic usage can be a metaphor for a warrior, so we cannot always be sure that a bear-name necessarily derives from an association with the sacred river.  Still, the most logical explanation for Arthgen is that he was thought of as being born from the mother goddess that was the Afon Arth.

In the nebulous period following the Roman withdrawal from Britain, religion was surely not so black and white as we would like to think it was. There must have been an admixture of pagan and Christian among some individuals and groups.  The worship of Christ and a sacred river may not, for awhile at least, have been seen as mutually exclusive.  We have instances of pagan gods and goddesses being 'converted' into Christian saints, of churches being built atop temples, of pagan holy wells being co-opted by their Christian successors.  Folk beliefs are often a curious amalgam of the supposedly extirpated pagan religion and Christian practice. Pagan myths or, at least, motifs, were faithfully copied and preserved by Christian scribes.  Ancient Celtic tales were transmogrified by troubadours and writers into chivalric romance.  Given that all this is demonstrably true, perhaps it is not too difficult to provisionally accept the idea that Arthur and his bear-named descendants had, indeed, worshiped the Afon Arth.


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