Druid History: Mummification in Scotland 1,500 BC
Scottish island of South Uist)(indications of ancestor worship). Brehon Law. Hence, the old ways transferred over sanctified and intact, partly why ancestor worship was such an important. Druids have ancestor worship this is shown in the Brehon laws protecting inheritance and mummification dating back to at least 1,500 BC. Ancestor worship is believed to have its origins in the Paleolithic period … Age; as is evidenced in Brehon Law children were not considered members of … This was a customary law, based on tradition. The Druids guarded the kinship group, and not the individual, was the most important under Brehon law. Speaking about the Gauls and their druids, [and noting … This match with Brehon Law and other historical events therefore suggests strongly that. The Brehon law-tracts prove, however, that it can only be received with …. the modern Family or group of descendants from a living ancestor.
Ancestor worship is also evident among ancient Celts and can be seen manifest in the long traditions of genealogies being maintained. It is also seen when we note that some families and peoples believed themselves to be direct descendants of mythic beings who are at one time considered both progenitor and deity to be worshipped. To what extent ancestor worship would have been overtly conducted in any given liturgical rite by any given Celtic tribe, we cannot say, but we can say that ancestor honoring and worship were conceptually present and so most likely would have been seen in some way in the liturgical cycle designed to connect the historic time/world to the mythic time/world.
Mummification was practiced at 6500 YB (Year of Brigid) (1500 BC) by us Druids as a form of Ancestor worship, pre-dating Egypt. We basically brought mummification from Scotland to the Egyptian civilization.
http://www.comhaltacht-draiocht.org/id32.html