In Celtic cultures, a bard is an oral repository and professional story teller, verse-maker, music composer, oral historian and genealogist, employed by a patron (such as a monarch or chieftain) to commemorate one or more of the patron's ancestors and to praise the patron's own activities.
With the decline of a living bardic tradition in the modern period, the term has loosened to mean a generic minstrel or author (especially a famous one). For example, William Shakespeare and Rabindranath Tagore are respectively known as "the Bard of Avon" (often simply "the Bard") and "the Bard of Bengal". In 16th-century Scotland, it turned into a derogatory term for an itinerant musician; nonetheless it was later romanticised by Sir Walter Scott (1771–1832).
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Benjamin West - The Bard - Google Art Project.jpg
Beowulf - Beardna.jpg
"[B]eardna," (Bards) a word from Beowulf, line number #2032. For the translation see Beowulf; a hero...
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Quill and inkwell icon.
Sequani coin 5th to 1st century BCE.jpg
Songs of Innocence and of Experience, copy Y, 1825, object 54, The Voice of the Ancient Bard (Metropolitan Museum of Art).jpg
Songs of Innocence and of Experience, copy Y, 1825, object 54, The Voice of the Ancient Bard (Metrop...
The Bard.jpg