Hello,
My "Path" is referred to as "Draoieacht" (Irish Gaelic Druidry) and so I refer to the grades as Bard-Filidh-Druid. I use the word "Imbas" instead of Awen as this word is Welsh (nothing against the Welsh, I just use the Irish from whence I came wherever possible).
The Filidh were what the OBOD would call "Ovates" (roughly).
I am still trying to re discover a passage about St. Patrick converting a large group of Druids. The passage goes something like this; "Padraig (Gaelic for Patrick) walks in amongst the arguing Druids and argues on behalf of one group against the rest. The argument is of one group that wants to write things down and the rest are much against it. The group quits the Druids and follows Padraig afterwards attending to himself and his ministries both."
Many tracts of Gaelic writings say that the Filidh suddenly all walked away and began following St. Patrick and Christianity (in that order sometimes).
I know for a fact that Saint Patrick was personally attended by a Druid named Dubhthach. This same Druid was also demi-royalty of some sort (probably a wealthy land owner) and that Brighide (the same Christian female Saint at Kildare) was his daughter. Padraig also had two other Druids that became his close personal attendants "Ios" and "Auo" I think....
One of these three becomes one of the first Irish Bishops and possibly one of the first Arch Bishops. This of course all before the Vatican sends 150 of their own Bishops to supersede Patricks good works and (of course) the Irish Bishopry he emplaced.
Short verbage;
The Druidic group known as Filidh walk away one day after a heated argument about writing something and follow Patrick to the end of their existence.
The Filidh were responsible for the keeping of knowledge, usually by memorizing vast tracts of information by rote and endlessly repeating it to students and each other.
The Druids in several other tracts mention the fact the Roman writings and speech is eerywhere and people speak more Latin than Gaelic by the end of the first century.
The earliest Christian monks were mostly former Druids ("Filidh") and are responsible for writing much of what we now have (and use and refer to) as the earliest Irish/ Welsh/ Manx/ Scottish texts and stories.
Is it possible that the argument that Patrick walked in on was the Filidh saying that Gaelic was a dying language in a country overrun by Romans and that they all felt that things should be written down before everyone simply forgot about it?




H.E.