When a well-preserved human torso was discovered by a peat cutter in the Lindow Moss of the English Midlands on August 1, 1984, it set off an archaeological investigation as exciting as any detective story. Using state-of-the-art technology and possessing expert knowledge of ancient Celtic customs and beliefs, Dr. Anne Ross and Dr. Don Robins reconstruct the rich life and violent death of the 2,000-year-old who came to be known as Lindow Man and was hailed as the archaeological discovery of the decade. A fascinating series of investigations revealed that Lindow Man was a Druid nobleman and priest, ritually murdered in a spectacular Celtic May Day ceremony, sacrificing his young life to appease the gods following a brutal invasion by the Roman army in what has been called "the darkest hour in Britain’s blackest year."
As the facts emerge, Celtic Britain under the Roman occupation comes sharply into focus — especially the grim determination of the Romans to destroy the powerful and mysterious Druid religion. Caught up in this human tragedy, one can truly come to know the heroic man who gave his life to save his people and his culture, and who now speaks from the watery grave where he lay mute for nearly twenty centuries. "The Life and Death of a Druid Prince: The Story of Lindow Man, an Archaeological Sensation", is both a thrilling human drama and a spellbinding scientific detection.
Author(s): Anne Ross, Don Robins
Publisher: Summit Books
Year: 1989
Language: English
Pages: 176+XVI
City: New York
Authors' note 7
PROLOGUE
The Riddle of the Blackened Bread 9
One. The Silent Witness 15
Two. Face to Face with a Druid 34
Three. Lovernios Revealed 53
Four. The Fox's Earth 60
Five. The Black Year 79
Six. The Golden Twist 101
EPILOGUE
The Triple Echo 128
APPENDIX ONE
The Druids 130
APPENDIX TWO
Celts and Germans 157
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 168
BIBLIOGRAPHY 170
INDEX 174