A druid was a member of the learned class in ancient Celtic cultures. Some were priests, but the title was also used for doctors, law-speakers, and other high-ranking professionals.

Druid may also refer to:

Roles and organizations

  • Druid, the highest level of study within the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids
  • Druid, a member of the Ancient Order of Druids, a social service organisation
  • Druid, a rank within the Gorsedd of Bards
  • Druides, a World War II spy ring, led by Georges Lamarque, that provided V-1 and V-2 Intelligence<!--ref></ref-->
  • Druidry (modern), a variety of modern spiritual or religious practices, appealing to perceived aspects of ancient Druidic practice

Arts, entertainment, and media

  • Henry Hall Dixon (1822–1870) or The Druid, English lawyer and sporting journalist
  • Druid (band), a British progressive rock band from the late 1970s
  • Druid (character class), a character that represents a magical priest of nature in role-playing games
  • Druid (Dungeons & Dragons), a character class in Dungeons & Dragons
  • Druid (video game), a computer game for the Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum
  • Druid Theatre Company, a theatre company in Galway, Ireland
  • Druids (film), a 2001 film about Gallic druids resisting the Roman armies
  • Shannara Druids, an order of historians, philosophers, magic-users, teachers and researchers in the Shannara series of fantasy novels by Terry Brooks
  • The Druid King, a 2003 historical novel by American novelist Norman Spinrad
  • The Druids of Stonehenge (band), a 1960s American band based in New York City

Other uses

  • Aedia funesta or the druid, a moth of the family Erebidae
  • Druid, Denbighshire, Wales
  • Druid (open-source data store), also called Apache Druid
  • Druid, in software, another name for a wizard user interface function that leads a user through a series of steps
  • Druids, a hairpin bend at Brands Hatch racetrack, England
  • Druid High School, defunct high school in Alabama, United States
  • USS Druid (SP-321), a United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919