Caer
Kaer
A Welsh word meaning ‘wall; fort, castle, citadel’ as employed in numerous place-names. Sometimes anglicized as Kaer. Entries relating to Caer are given letter by letter, whether ‘Caer’ is a separate word or a prefix.
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A Welsh word meaning ‘wall; fort, castle, citadel’ as employed in numerous place-names. Sometimes anglicized as Kaer. Entries relating to Caer are given letter by letter, whether ‘Caer’ is a separate word or a prefix.
The daughter of Ethal Anubal, prince of the Danaans of Connaught, mentioned in ancient Irish myths. It was said that she lived alternate years in the form of a maiden and a swan. She was loved by Angus Og, who also found himself transformed into a swan. All who heard the rapturous song of the swan lovers were plunged into a deep sleep, lasting for three days and nights.
In Welsh language, a caer or kaer was a royal residence during the 1st millennium AD or earlier. Caer can be loosely translated castle or palace or fort but no one English word captures the essence of a caer. A caer was home to a king, his royal family, and his retinue. This retinue was composed of the teulu, a warband of loyal retainers, a following of monks and scholars, and his chief advisers, and his bards who provided entertainment in music and poetry; together with their retinue of squires, artisans, servants, slaves and horses. Caers were famed for their great feasts that could last as long as a year, at which the kings and upper classes of two or several kingdoms would gather. Giving of feasts was a primary sign of wealth and status in Celtic society, at any rate in the fifth and sixth centuries.
At the same time, a caer was a defended fortress. They were often hill forts, such as the possibly-Camelot hill fort at South Cadbury in Somerset, or coastal forts such as Tintagel in Cornwall and Aberdyfi in Ceredigion.
Kings of small kingdoms, such as Ceredigion, had one caer. Kings of large kingdoms, such as Rheged, had several and migrated peripatetically among them.
A caer therefore comes functionally close to a capital city, but in the context of an almost totally non-urban society.
As an aside, Caer is the Welsh name for Chester, situated on the northeast border with England. It also forms, as a prefix, the Welsh equivalent of -caster, -cester and -chester in place names. Both forms derive ultimately from Latin castrum "fortified post", more common in the plural castra meaning "military camp".
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![]() | Celtic Mythology. A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Copyright © James MacKillop 1998, 2004. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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