Celtic animism

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Celtic polytheist sources

Wikipedia: "Present-day scholars frequently speak of 'the toutates' as plural, referring respectively to the patrons of the several tribes."

"Two of the most important groups of divine powers were those associated with the sky and water. Archaeological evidence suggests that the sun and thunder were perceived as especially potent. From as early as the Bronze Age, people in much of temperate Europe used the motif of the spoked wheel to represent the sun, and, by the later Iron Age and Romano-Celtic periods, solar deities were represented with wheel-symbols. ... The Celts also had a native thunder-god Taranis ... There is abundant evidence for the veneration of water by the Celts (and, indeed, by their Bronze Age forebears)." Romanization turned rivers into goddesses. Miranda J. Green, The World of the Druids, p. 25

Celtic Christian sources

Gildas

I shall not speak of the ancient errors, common to all races, that bound the whole of humanity fast before the coming of Christ in the flesh . I shall not enumerate the devilish monstrosities of my land, numerous almost as those that plagued Egypt, some of which we can see today, stark as ever, inside or outside deserted city walls: outlines still ugly, faces still grim. I shall not name the mountains and hills and rivers, once so pernicious, now useful for human needs, on which, in those days, a blind people heaped divine honours.
On the Ruin of Britain

Book of Leinster

A poem in the Book of Leinster lists many of the Tuatha Dé, but ends "Although [the author] enumerates them, he does not worship them."

Archaeology

Wiki

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