Follow us on Facebook for great discount codes History of our Celtic Jewelry Celtic Astrology Celtic Bracelets Celtic Charms Celtic Crosses Celtic Engagement Rings Celtic Initial Pendants Celtic Wedding Rings Celtic Earrings Celtic Necklaces Celtic Rings Celtic Watches Claddagh Jewelry Claddagh Rings Pocket Watches Celtic Mother Range My Soul Mate Birthstones Earrings Birthstones Pendants Birthstones Rings Celtic Warrior Irish Language All prices are in US$ and include - Tax - Shipping & Handling and Presentation boxes! ***St Patrick Day Offers*** Celtic Symbols and their meanings The spiral was found on many Dolmans and gravesites. Its true meaning is not known for sure, but many of these symbols were found as far as Ireland and France. It is believed to represent the travel from the inner life to the outer soul or higher spirit forms; the concept of growth, expansion, and cosmic energy, depending on the culture in which it is used. To the ancient inhabitants of Ireland, the spiral was used to represent their sun. A basic element in Western ideography, the clockwise spiral (starting from the middle) is strongly associated with water, power, independent movement, and migrations of tribes. The sign's association with water may rather focus recurring rainy seasons, than water in general. Well in accordance with the law of the polarity of meanings of elementary graphs also often seems to denote the sun. But maybe not the ordinary sun, but the eclipsed sun. See the entry below. As stated in the entry of the basic graphic elements the dot and the spiral were used by man already 24,000 years ago. But thereafter the first instances of are found carved in rock faces not more than about 5,000 years ago. Be that as it may, one finds on discos from Crete from around 2000 B.C., and as an old symbol for potential power in Tibet. It also appears among rock carvings in Utah. A more circular and closer drawn version of the above entry sign is seen on many neolithic rock carvings. Until recently the meaning of this ideogram eluded researchers, but things have now changed. On rock carvings in Scandinavia one often finds signs which look like a strange type of boats or sleighs with short vertical lines on them. They have hitherto been interpreted as representing people. Together with them a lot of small, round signs, and the ideogram , can be seen. Why would people, thousands of years ago, hire rock carvers to work for long hours with the carving of these, seemingly rather meaningless pictures of ships or sleighs together with small, round signs and , in hard rock, as if they were messages important enough for posterity to be made to last thousands of years? Why did neolithic men think these pictures should be conveyed over eons to posterity? A breakthrough in the understandning of these strange ideograms seems to have been made in 1991. An archaeologist got the idea that the small, round signs on those rock carvings could be signs for stars in the sky. He fed the structures of some of the rock carvings into a computer and had the computer to compare them with representations of the constantly changing structure of the constellations of the brightests stars of the sky, century for century for some thousands of years. What he found was that the rock carvings were documentations of the configurations of the visible planets and the brightest of the fixed stars at times of total solar eclipses. Thus the sign might mean the eclipsed sun. Another idea states that the loosely wound anti-clockwise spiral represent the large summer sun and the tightly wound, clockwise spiral their shrinking winter sun. A variation of the preceding entry sign consists in fact of two interconnected , that is spirals with clockwise rotation (from the center seen). , made up not by lines but by rows of dots, has been found engraved on an amulett of mammoth tooth which is 24,000 years old, and thus must have been Celtic Symbols and their meanings - Irish Claddagh, Celtic Cr... http://www.123celtic-irish-jewelry.com/celticart.asp 1 di 2 16/07/14 09:15