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Encyclopedia > Ogam
Ogham letters
ᚁ Beith ᚐ Ailm
ᚂ Luis ᚑ Onn
ᚃ Fearn ᚒ Úr
ᚄ Sail ᚓ Eadhadh
ᚅ Nion ᚔ Iodhadh
ᚆ Uath ᚕ Éabhadh
ᚇ Dair ᚖ Ór
ᚈ Tinne ᚗ Uilleann
ᚉ Coll ᚘ Ifín
ᚊ Ceirt ᚙ Eamhancholl
ᚋ Muin ᚚ Peith
ᚌ Gort
ᚍ nGéadal
ᚎ Straif
ᚏ Ruis
Ogham

Ogham (Old Irish Ogam) was an alphabet used primarily to represent Gaelic languages that was probably often written in wood in early times. The main flowering of the use of "classical" Ogham in stone seems to be 5th6th century AD. Monumental Ogham inscriptions are found in Ireland, Scotland, Wales, England, and the Isle of Man, mainly employed as territorial markers and memorials. The more ancient examples are standing stones, script being carved into the edge (droim or faobhar) of the stone, which forms a stemline against which individual characters are cut. Text is read beginning from the bottom left-hand side of a stone, continuing upward, across the top and down the right-hand side in the case of long inscriptions. Inscriptions written on stemlines cut into the face of the stone, instead of along its edge, are known as "scholastic", and are of a later date (post 7th century). Notes were also commonly written in Ogham in manuscripts down to the sixteenth century.


Some people have theorized that Ogham could also be used as a secret gestural cypher, because of its structure: the fingers of one hand, using the nose or shin or any other "straight" edge as a stemline could, it is suggested, be used to signal individual Ogham letters, which, it is asserted, could be readily read by an Ogham practitioner. There doesn't appear to be any evidence to support this theory.


The Ogham alphabet consists of twenty-five distinct characters (feda), the first twenty of which are considered to be primary, the last five (forfeda) supplementary. The four primary series are called aicmí (plural of aicme "family"). Each aicme was named after its first character (Aicme Beithe, Aicme hÚatha, Aicme Muine, Aicme Ailme, "the B Group", "the H Group", "the M Group", "the A Group"). Some of the names and all of the values of the forfeda are open to question.


See also

External links

  • Every Ogham Thing on the Web (http://www.evertype.com/standards/og/ogmharc.html)
  • Celtic Ogham (http://www.csupomona.edu/~jcclark/ogham/) - by Curtis Clark

  Results from FactBites:
 
Ogam - ogham inscriptions, trees, plant lore, druids and celts... (255 words)
Branch ogam was usually carved on a branch of the specific tree it is related to, the way it is inscribed is in the same vein as the stave version.
This is the most commonly used for divination purposes, for those of you that wish to create your own ogam set, gently collect a branch from the specific plant, stave the end of slightly and carve into the exposed wood.
Finger ogam was perhaps the most secret, because certain fingers related to specific letters/associations druids could pass secret messages by touching anothers hand in a certain way or by holding an object.
Ogam: The Writeen Language of the Celts (453 words)
Ogam: A form of writing in which the letters are represented by combinations of parallel strokes in number from one to five, set in varied positions along a central stemline.
Ogam is the 'occult manner of writing used by the ancient Irish', according to the Highland Society of Scotland's Dictionary of the Gaelic Language (1828).
Ogam characters are also found on the Isle of Man and in the north and east of Scotland.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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