Ross Nichols

Ross Nichols, actually Philip Peter Ross Nichols, priestly Nuinn ( born June 28, 1902 in Norfolk, England, † 1975) was a Cambridge graduate and publishing Direction poet, artist and historian. He was also Dean of the Celtic church, consecrated by Bishop of St. Tugdual Dolay. The knowledge of it also flowed into his life's work, which was a spiritual- religious character.

He founded these reasons, in 1964 the OBOD, a branch of the 'Ancient Druid Order', a sequel to the AOD, which he became a member in 1954, which he chairs took over after the death of the ADO Chairman Robert MacGregor in 1964 and the division of the ADO. The lines of the Order can be traced back to the year 1717 meeting in the ' Apple Tree Tavern ' in Covent Garden, London.

Nichols was a friend of Gerald Brousseau Gardner, and while Gardner was working on the introduction of Wicca in the modern world, Nichols turned the practice of modern Druidism to. He led the merger of Celtic mythology and art a bard, as well as celebrating all eight annual festivals in addition to the training for the initiations in the three degrees a, in accordance with classical forms of tripartite division of the priests degrees.

Philip Carr- Gomm took over in 1988 the Order according to Nichols ' death.

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