The Druids were an order of priests and teachers in the European religion of the countryside, called Paganism or Heathenism, which worshipped the calendar. The name is connected to the word for oak-tree, and they did venerate the oak and its mistletoe, and trees generally. They believed in metempsychosis ( the transmigration of souls) and what Christians call "magic."
No, although the Druids did revere their ancestors they did not "worship" the dead.
druids worship there
druids
Druids worship the natural world, including the earth, sun, moon, trees, and other elements of nature. They often believe in the interconnectedness of all living beings and strive to maintain harmony with the environment. Some druids also incorporate elements of Celtic or other ancient spiritual traditions into their worship practices.
the worship of nature; cosmological religion where earth and human are one: druids and Celtic religions.
the druids were preists
The Druid religion of ancient Britain died out following the arrival of Christianity. The Druids did not worship the Abrahamic God. They did not celebrate Christmas as we know it, but did have a mid-winter celebration on December 25th, the day when the sun seems to begin to reverse its annual cycle.
Druids are/were a part of the Celtic People.
The Mystery of the Druids happened in 2001.
Druids F.C. was created in 1869.
No, This seems to be a popular belief but completely incorrect. First of all Stonehenge is much, much older than the Druid order. The word Druid literally means "Knowing the oak tree" and they use to worship in the forest / woods and did not use buildings when they performed their rituals.
There was no set religion or deities for the druids as Celtic druidism was never a unified religion. What is probable is that the druids believed in whatever local gods they grew up hearing about or the gods that they had been taught to worship by more senior druids. In short a druid in eastern England may have believed in a god which a druid in western England had never heard of. What is certain is that no matter what the names or faces that these gods or goddesses had, they all represented a different part of nature from the perspective of the Celtic people. The druidic religions were all very compatible and a sea god in the western part of England would just be taken as another name for the eastern Celtic druids gods.