Ogham (OH-yam) is believed to have been devised by the
Irish somewhere between the first and third centuries AD. Surviving
examples place its' primary use to the Christian period, however, some
Celtic scholars believe it to be of far greater antiquity.
Existing examples suggest that Ogham was used primarily on grave and
boundry markers. Indeed, most inscriptions read "so and so, son of
so and so, son of so and so" and so on. Evidence exists, however,
supporting its' use by Druids for recording tales, histories, poetry,
geneologies, and the like. Bards are thought to have carried a Táball-Lorg
or 'Poets Staff'. This would have been a staff comprised of several
wooden wands, fastened at the bottom so as to open into a fan shape. It
was on these wands that the poets would have inscribed their tales. In
the 'Voyage of Bran' the hero is described as having committed some 50
or 60 quatrains in Ogham to a Táball-Lorg, which he then cast into the
sea. Having been constructed of wood, it is highly unlikely that a
Poet's Staff would have survived to the present day.
The name Ogham or Ogam (Ohm) was derived from that of the Celtic god
of literature and eloquence, Ogma, who is credited with its' invention.
The letters are constructed using a combination of lines placed adjacent
to or crossing a midline. An individual letter may contain from one to
five vertical or angled strokes. Vowels were sometimes described as a
combination of dots. The midline was, most often, the edge of the object
on which the inscription was carved. Ogham is read from top to bottom,
left to right.
In keeping with Druidic concepts, each of the Ogham's twenty letters
bears the name of a tree. A-Ailim (Elm), B-Bithe (Birch), C-Coll
(Hazel), for example. This is not surprising until it is realized that
not all of the twenty plants of the Ogham were found in the
post-Christian Celtic world of the British Isles. This fact would seem
to lend some credence to the theory that Ogham predates the first
century AD. According to Curtis Clark, "If one were to pick a
region where the plants of the Ogham were best represented, it would be
the valley of the Rhine River, home of the Iron Age La Tené culture
that is regarded to be ancestral to the Celts."
There are 369 verified examples of Ogham writing surviving today.
These exist in the form of gallán (standing stones) concentrated in
Ireland but scattered across Scotland, the Isle of Man, South Wales,
Devonshire, and as far afield as Silchester (the ancient Roman city of
Calleva Attrebatum). Similar markings, dating to 500 BC, have been found
on standing stones in Spain and Portugal. It is from this area of the
Iberian Peninsula that the Celts who colonized Ireland may have come.
The discovery of similar carvings in the state of West Virginia in the
United States, has caused some speculation that the Celts may have come
to the New World as early as 100 BC.