

The marks on the edges of this pillar stone (left) are characters from an alphabet that was used in fifth-century Ireland.

Known as ogham, the 25-letter alphabet was supposedly inspired by Ogma, god of eloquence.



Ogham was carved and read from BOTTOM to TOP.

(Also carved, occasionally, right to left).

was carved and read from BOTTOM to TOP. Also written as ogam or ogum , it is pronounced "AHG-m" or "OH-ehm."

or , it is pronounced "AHG-m" or "OH-ehm." Ogham served as an alphabet for one of the ancient Celtic languages. Its origin is uncertain: it may have been adapted from a sign language.

Current understanding is that the names of the main twenty letters are also the names of 20 trees sacred to the druids .

Some authors have suggested the existance of a 13 month calendar which shared some of these names.

Current understanding is that the names of the main twenty letters are also the names of 20 sacred to the . Some authors have suggested the existance of a 13 month calendar which shared some of these names. A 15th century treatise on Ogham, The Book of Ballymote, confirms that ogham was a secret, ritualistic language.

However, there is no direct evidence that the Ogham alphabet was used [in antiquity] for divination or any other magical purposes. ( see notes )

(photo courtesy " The World of Celtic Art)

link to almost 80 photographic examples of ogham inscribed stones

Any wood carvings have of course long vanished: the Cetlic runes are known principally from incriptions cut on the edges of rough standing gravesones. These are found primarily in west Ireland, but they have also been found in Wales, Cornwall, western Scotland, the Isle of Man, and the Shetland Islands.

The Irish had no other written alphabet until Christian missionaries introduced Latin (though runes may have also been used).

Ogham ceased to be used after the first few centuries of the Christian era, as the use of inscription languages (like runes and ogham) was reviled as a pagan practice.

...or as lines crossing the middle divider, like this.

* NOTE: "BETH" is also spelled (perhaps more accurately) "BEITH."



There is a more modern custom of orienting the writing by placing it on its side, like this:



This is a "ogham line" showing all 25 "letters" of the Ogham alphabet:



The following image of a Ogham wheel is a segment from the 14th-century Book of Ballymote , a manuscript that contains a collection of Irish sagas, law texts, and genealogies, as well as a guide to the ogham alphabet. Much of the information available on ogham has come from this manuscript (currently housed in the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin) and this information is thought to have been copied from a much earlier 9th century manuscript. It is from this text that the descriptions of Ogham characters have largely been drawn.

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