fbpx
Wikipedia

Celts

The Celts (/kɛlts/, see pronunciation for different usages) or Celtic peoples (/ˈkɛltɪk/) were a collection of Indo-European peoples[1] in Europe and Anatolia, identified by their use of Celtic languages and other cultural similarities.[2][3][4][5] Historical Celtic groups included the Gauls, the Celtiberians and Gallaeci[6][7] of Iberia, the Britons and Gaels of Britain and Ireland, the Boii, and the Galatians. The relation between ethnicity, language and culture in the Celtic world is unclear and debated;[8] for example over the ways in which the Iron Age people of Britain and Ireland should be called Celts.[5][8][9][10] In current scholarship, 'Celt' primarily refers to 'speakers of Celtic languages' rather than to a single ethnic group.[11]

Distribution of Celtic peoples over time, in the traditional view:
  •   Core Hallstatt territory, by the sixth century BC
  •   Greatest Celtic expansion by 275 BC
  •   Lusitanian area of Iberia where Celtic presence is uncertain
  •   Areas in which Celtic languages were spoken throughout the Middle Ages
  •   Areas where Celtic languages remain widely spoken today
The La Tène-style ceremonial Agris Helmet, 350 BC, Angoulême city Museum in France

The history of pre-Celtic Europe and Celtic origins is debated. The traditional "Celtic from the East" theory, says the proto-Celtic language arose in the late Bronze Age Urnfield culture of central Europe, named after grave sites in southern Germany,[12][13] which flourished from around 1200 BC.[14] This theory links the Celts with the Iron Age Hallstatt culture which followed it (c. 1200–500 BC), named for the rich grave finds in Hallstatt, Austria,[14][15] and with the following La Tène culture (c. 450 BC onward), named after the La Tène site in Switzerland. It proposes that Celtic culture spread westward and southward from these areas by diffusion or migration.[16] A newer theory, "Celtic from the West", suggests proto-Celtic arose earlier, was a lingua franca in the Atlantic Bronze Age coastal zone, and spread eastward.[17] Another newer theory, "Celtic from the Centre", suggests proto-Celtic arose between these two zones, in Bronze Age Gaul, then spread in various directions.[11] After the Celtic settlement of Southeast Europe in the 3rd century BC, Celtic culture reached as far east as central Anatolia, Turkey.

The earliest undisputed examples of Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions from the 6th century BC.[18] Continental Celtic languages are attested almost exclusively through inscriptions and place-names. Insular Celtic languages are attested from the 4th century AD in Ogham inscriptions, though they were clearly being spoken much earlier. Celtic literary tradition begins with Old Irish texts around the 8th century AD. Elements of Celtic mythology are recorded in early Irish and early Welsh literature. Most written evidence of the early Celts comes from Greco-Roman writers, who often grouped the Celts as barbarian tribes. They followed an ancient Celtic religion overseen by druids.

The Celts were often in conflict with the Romans, such as in the Roman–Gallic wars, the Celtiberian Wars, the conquest of Gaul and conquest of Britain. By the 1st century AD, most Celtic territories had become part of the Roman Empire. By c. 500, due to Romanisation and the migration of Germanic tribes, Celtic culture had mostly become restricted to Ireland, western and northern Britain, and Brittany. Between the 5th and 8th centuries, the Celtic-speaking communities in these Atlantic regions emerged as a reasonably cohesive cultural entity. They had a common linguistic, religious and artistic heritage that distinguished them from surrounding cultures.[19]

Insular Celtic culture diversified into that of the Gaels (Irish, Scots and Manx) and the Celtic Britons (Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons) of the medieval and modern periods.[2][20][21] A modern Celtic identity[22] was constructed as part of the Romanticist Celtic Revival in Britain, Ireland, and other European territories such as Galicia.[23] Today, Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Breton are still spoken in parts of their former territories, while Cornish and Manx are undergoing a revival.

Names and terminology

 
Celto-Latin stele from Galicia, 2nd century, referring to "CELTICA SUPERTAM(arica)"

Ancient

The first recorded use of the name 'Celts' – as Κελτοί (Keltoi) in Ancient Greek – was by Greek geographer Hecataeus of Miletus in 517 BC,[24] when writing about a people living near Massilia (modern Marseille), southern Gaul.[25] In the fifth century BC, Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the source of the Danube and in the far west of Europe.[26] The etymology of Keltoi is unclear. Possible roots include Indo-European *kʲel 'to hide' (seen also in Old Irish ceilid, and Modern Welsh celu), *kʲel 'to heat' or *kel 'to impel'.[27] It may come from the Celtic language. Linguist Kim McCone supports this view and notes that Celt- is found in the names of several ancient Gauls such as Celtillus, father of Vercingetorix. He suggests it meant the people or descendants of "the hidden one", noting the Gauls claimed descent from an underworld god (according to Commentarii de Bello Gallico), and linking it with the Germanic Hel.[28] Others view it as a name coined by Greeks; among them linguist Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel, who suggests it meant "the tall ones".[29]

In the first century BC, Roman leader Julius Caesar reported that the Gauls called themselves 'Celts', Latin: Celtae, in their own tongue.[30] Thus whether it was given to them by others or not, it was used by the Celts themselves. Greek geographer Strabo, writing about Gaul towards the end of the first century BC, refers to the "race which is now called both Gallic and Galatic", though he also uses Celtica as another name for Gaul. He reports Celtic peoples in Iberia too, calling them Celtiberi and Celtici.[31] Pliny the Elder noted the use of Celtici in Lusitania as a tribal surname,[32] which epigraphic findings have confirmed.[33][34]

A Latin name for the Gauls, Galli (pl.), may come from a Celtic ethnic name, perhaps borrowed into Latin during the Celtic expansion into Italy from the early fifth century BC. Its root may be Proto-Celtic *galno, meaning "power, strength" (whence Old Irish gal "boldness, ferocity", Welsh gallu "to be able, power"). The Greek name Γαλάται (Galatai, Latinized Galatae) most likely has the same origin, referring to the Gauls who invaded southeast Europe and settled in Galatia.[35] The suffix -atai might be a Greek inflection.[36] Linguist Kim McCone suggests it comes from Proto-Celtic *galatis ("ferocious, furious"), and was not originally an ethnic name but a name for young warrior bands. He says "If the Gauls' initial impact on the Mediterranean world was primarily a military one typically involving fierce young *galatīs, it would have been natural for the Greeks to apply this name for the type of Keltoi that they usually encountered".[28]

Because Classical writers did not call the inhabitants of Britain and Ireland Κελτοί (Keltoi) or Celtae,[5][8][9] some scholars prefer not to use the term for the Iron Age inhabitants of those islands.[5][8][9][10] However, they spoke Celtic languages, shared other cultural traits, and Roman historian Tacitus says the Britons resembled the Gauls in customs and religion.[11]

Modern

For at least 1,000 years the name Celt was not used at all, and nobody called themselves Celts or 'Celtic, until from about 1700, after the word Celtic was rediscovered in classical texts, it was applied for the first time to the distinctive culture, history, traditions, language of the modern Celtic nations – Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Cornwall Brittany and the Isle of Man.[37] Celt is a modern English word, first attested in 1707 in the writing of Edward Lhuyd, whose work, along with that of other late 17th-century scholars, brought academic attention to the languages and history of the early Celtic inhabitants of Great Britain.[38] The English words Gaul, Gauls (pl.) and Gaulish (first recorded in the 16–17th centuries) come from French Gaule and Gaulois, a borrowing from Frankish *Walholant, "Roman land" (see Gaul: Name), the root of which is Proto-Germanic *walha-, "foreigner, Roman, Celt", whence the English word 'Welsh' (Old English wælisċ). Proto-Germanic *walha comes from the name of the Volcae,[39] a Celtic tribe who lived first in southern Germany and central Europe, then migrated to Gaul.[40] This means that English Gaul, despite its superficial similarity, is not actually derived from Latin Gallia (which should have produced *Jaille in French), though it does refer to the same ancient region.[citation needed]

Celtic refers to a language family and, more generally, means "of the Celts" or "in the style of the Celts". Several archaeological cultures are considered Celtic, based on unique sets of artefacts. The link between language and artefact is aided by the presence of inscriptions.[41] The modern idea of a Celtic cultural identity or "Celticity" focuses on similarities among languages, works of art, and classical texts,[42] and sometimes also among material artefacts, social organisation, homeland and mythology.[43] Earlier theories held that these similarities suggest a common racial origin for the various Celtic peoples, but more recent theories hold that they reflect a common cultural and linguistic heritage more than a genetic one. Celtic cultures seem to have been diverse, with the use of a Celtic language being the main thing they had in common.[5]

Today, the term 'Celtic' generally refers to the languages and cultures of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Cornwall, the Isle of Man, and Brittany; also called the Celtic nations. These are the regions where Celtic languages are still spoken to some extent. The four are Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Breton; plus two recent revivals, Cornish (a Brittonic language) and Manx (a Goidelic language). There are also attempts to reconstruct Cumbric, a Brittonic language of northern Britain. Celtic regions of mainland Europe are those whose residents claim a Celtic heritage, but where no Celtic language survives; these include western Iberia, i.e. Portugal and north-central Spain (Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria, Castile and León, Extremadura).[44]

Continental Celts are the Celtic-speaking people of mainland Europe and Insular Celts are the Celtic-speaking people of the British and Irish islands, and their descendants. The Celts of Brittany derive their language from migrating Insular Celts from Britain and so are grouped accordingly.[45]

Origins

The Celtic languages are a branch of the Indo-European languages. By the time Celts are first mentioned in written records around 400 BC, they were already split into several language groups, and spread over much of western mainland Europe, the Iberian Peninsula, Ireland and Britain. The languages developed into Celtiberian, Goidelic and Brittonic branches, among others.[46][47]

Urnfield-Hallstatt theory

 
Overview of the Hallstatt and La Tène cultures.
  The core Hallstatt territory (HaC, 800 BC) is shown in solid yellow.
  The eventual area of Hallstatt influence (by 500 BC, HaD) in light yellow.
  The core territory of the La Tène culture (450 BC) in solid green.
  The eventual area of La Tène influence (by 250 BC) in light green.
The territories of some major Celtic tribes of the late La Tène period are labelled.

The mainstream view during most of the twentieth century is that the Celts and the proto-Celtic language arose out of the Urnfield culture of central Europe around 1000 BC, spreading westward and southward over the following few hundred years.[14][48][49][50] The Urnfield culture was preeminent in central Europe during the late Bronze Age, circa 1200 BC to 700 BC. The spread of iron-working led to the Hallstatt culture (c. 800 to 500 BC) developing out of the Urnfield culture in a wide region north of the Alps. The Hallstatt culture developed into the La Tène culture from about 450 BC, which came to be identified with Celtic art.[citation needed]

In 1846, Johann Georg Ramsauer unearthed an ancient grave field with distinctive grave goods at Hallstatt, Austria. Because the burials "dated to roughly the time when Celts are mentioned near the Danube by Herodotus, Ramsauer concluded that the graves were Celtic".[51] Similar sites and artifacts were found over a wide area, which were named the 'Hallstatt culture'. In 1857, the archaeological site of La Tène was discovered in Switzerland.[51] The huge collection of artifacts had a distinctive style. Artifacts of this 'La Tène style' were found elsewhere in Europe, "particularly in places where people called Celts were known to have lived and early Celtic languages are attested. As a result, these items quickly became associated with the Celts, so much so that by the 1870s scholars began to regard finds of the La Tène as 'the archaeological expression of the Celts'".[51] This cultural network was overrun by the Roman Empire, though traces of La Tène style were still seen in Gallo-Roman artifacts. In Britain and Ireland, the La Tène style survived precariously to re-emerge in Insular art.[citation needed]

The Urnfield-Hallstatt theory began to be challenged in the latter 20th century, when it was accepted that the oldest known Celtic-language inscriptions were those of Lepontic from the 6th century BC and Celtiberian from the 2nd century BC. These were found in northern Italy and Iberia, neither of which were part of the 'Hallstatt' nor 'La Tène' cultures at the time.[11] The Urnfield-Hallstatt theory was partly based on ancient Greco-Roman writings, such as the Histories of Herodotus, which placed the Celts at the source of the Danube. However, Stephen Oppenheimer shows that Herodotus seemed to believe the Danube rose near the Pyrenees, which would place the Ancient Celts in a region which is more in agreement with later classical writers and historians (i.e. in Gaul and Iberia).[52] The theory was also partly based on the abundance of inscriptions bearing Celtic personal names in the Eastern Hallstatt region (Noricum). However, Patrick Sims-Williams notes that these date to the later Roman era, and says they suggest "relatively late settlement by a Celtic-speaking elite".[11]

'Celtic from the West' theory

 
A map of Europe in the Bronze Age, showing the Atlantic network in red

In the late 20th century, the Urnfield-Hallstatt theory began to fall out of favour with some scholars, which was influenced by new archaeological finds. 'Celtic' began to refer primarily to 'speakers of Celtic languages' rather than to a single culture or ethnic group.[11] A new theory suggested that Celtic languages arose earlier, along the Atlantic coast (including Britain, Ireland, Armorica and Iberia), long before evidence of 'Celtic' culture is found in archaeology. Myles Dillon and Nora Kershaw Chadwick argued that "Celtic settlement of the British Isles" might date to the Bell Beaker culture of the Copper and Bronze Age (from c. 2750 BC).[53][54] Martín Almagro Gorbea (2001) also proposed that Celtic arose in the 3rd millennium BC, suggesting that the spread of the Bell Beaker culture explained the wide dispersion of the Celts throughout western Europe, as well as the variability of the Celtic peoples.[55] Using a multidisciplinary approach, Alberto J. Lorrio and Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero reviewed and built on Almagro Gorbea's work to present a model for the origin of Celtic archaeological groups in Iberia and proposing a rethinking of the meaning of "Celtic".[56]

John T. Koch[57] and Barry Cunliffe[58] have developed this 'Celtic from the West' theory. It proposes that the proto-Celtic language arose along the Atlantic coast and was the lingua franca of the Atlantic Bronze Age cultural network, later spreading inland and eastward.[11] More recently, Cunliffe proposes that proto-Celtic had arisen in the Atlantic zone even earlier, by 3000 BC, and spread eastwards with the Bell Beaker culture over the following millennium. His theory is partly based on glottochronology, the spread of ancient Celtic-looking placenames, and thesis that the Tartessian language was Celtic.[11] However, the proposal that Tartessian was Celtic is widely rejected by linguists, many of whom regard it as unclassified.[59][60]

'Celtic from the Centre' theory

Celticist Patrick Sims-Williams (2020) notes that in current scholarship, 'Celt' is primarily a linguistic label. In his 'Celtic from the Centre' theory, he argues that the proto-Celtic language did not originate in central Europe nor the Atlantic, but in-between these two regions. He suggests that it "emerged as a distinct Indo-European dialect around the second millennium BC, probably somewhere in Gaul [centered in modern France] [...] whence it spread in various directions and at various speeds in the first millennium BC". Sims-Williams says this avoids the problematic idea "that Celtic was spoken over a vast area for a very long time yet somehow avoided major dialectal splits", and "it keeps Celtic fairly close to Italy, which suits the view that Italic and Celtic were in some way linked".[11]

Linguistic evidence

The Proto-Celtic language is usually dated to the Late Bronze Age.[14] The earliest records of a Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions of Cisalpine Gaul (Northern Italy), the oldest of which pre-date the La Tène period. Other early inscriptions, appearing from the early La Tène period in the area of Massilia, are in Gaulish, which was written in the Greek alphabet until the Roman conquest. Celtiberian inscriptions, using their own Iberian script, appear later, after about 200 BC. Evidence of Insular Celtic is available only from about 400 AD, in the form of Primitive Irish Ogham inscriptions.[citation needed]

Besides epigraphic evidence, an important source of information on early Celtic is toponymy (place names).[61]

Genetic evidence

Arnaiz-Villena et al. (2017) demonstrated that Celtic-related populations of the European Atlantic (Orkney Islands, Scottish, Irish, British, Bretons, Basques, Galicians) shared a common HLA system.[clarification needed][62]

Other genetic research does not support the notion of a significant genetic link between these populations, beyond the fact that they are all West Europeans. Early European Farmers did settle Britain (and all of Northern Europe) in the Neolithic; however, recent genetics research has found that, between 2400 and 2000 BC, over 90% of British DNA was overturned by European Steppe Herders in a migration that brought large amounts of Steppe DNA (including the R1b haplogroup) to western Europe.[63] Modern autosomal genetic clustering is testament to this fact, as both modern and Iron Age British and Irish samples cluster genetically very closely with other North Europeans, and less so with Galicians, Basques or those from the south of France.[64][65]

Archaeological evidence

 
Reconstruction of a late La Tène period settlement in Altburg near Bundenbach, Germany
(first century BC)
 
Reconstruction of a late La Tène period settlement in Havranok, Slovakia
(second–first century BC)

The concept that the Hallstatt and La Tène cultures could be seen not just as chronological periods but as "Culture Groups", entities composed of people of the same ethnicity and language, had started to grow by the end of the 19th century. At the beginning of the 20th century the belief that these "Culture Groups" could be thought of in racial or ethnic terms was held by Gordon Childe, whose theory was influenced by the writings of Gustaf Kossinna.[66] As the 20th century progressed, the ethnic interpretation of La Tène culture became more strongly rooted, and any findings of La Tène culture and flat inhumation cemeteries were linked to the Celts and the Celtic language.[67]

In various[clarification needed] academic disciplines the Celts were considered a Central European Iron Age phenomenon, through the cultures of Hallstatt and La Tène. However, archaeological finds from the Halstatt and La Tène culture were rare in Iberia, southwestern France, northern and western Britain, southern Ireland and Galatia[68][69] and did not provide enough evidence for a culture like that of Central Europe. It is equally difficult to maintain that the origin of the Iberian Celts can be linked to the preceding Urnfield culture. This has resulted in a newer theory that introduces a 'proto-Celtic' substratum and a process of Celticisation, having its initial roots in the Bronze Age Bell Beaker culture.[70]

The La Tène culture developed and flourished during the late Iron Age (from 450 BC to the Roman conquest in the 1st century BC) in eastern France, Switzerland, Austria, southwest Germany, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary. It developed out of the Hallstatt culture without any definite cultural break, under the impetus of considerable Mediterranean influence from Greek, and later Etruscan civilisations. A shift of settlement centres took place in the 4th century. The western La Tène culture corresponds to historical Celtic Gaul. Whether this means that the whole of La Tène culture can be attributed to a unified Celtic people is difficult to assess; archaeologists have repeatedly concluded that language and material culture do not necessarily run parallel. Frey notes that in the 5th century, "burial customs in the Celtic world were not uniform; rather, localised groups had their own beliefs, which, in consequence, also gave rise to distinct artistic expressions".[71] Thus, while the La Tène culture is certainly associated with the Gauls, the presence of La Tène artefacts may be due to cultural contact and does not imply the permanent presence of Celtic speakers.[citation needed]

Historical evidence

 
The world according to Herodotus

The Greek historian Ephorus of Cyme in Asia Minor, writing in the 4th century BC, believed the Celts came from the islands off the mouth of the Rhine and were "driven from their homes by the frequency of wars and the violent rising of the sea". Polybius published a history of Rome about 150 BC in which he describes the Gauls of Italy and their conflict with Rome. Pausanias in the 2nd century AD says that the Gauls "originally called Celts", "live on the remotest region of Europe on the coast of an enormous tidal sea". Posidonius described the southern Gauls about 100 BC. Though his original work is lost, later writers such as Strabo used it. The latter, writing in the early 1st century AD, deals with Britain and Gaul as well as Hispania, Italy and Galatia. Caesar wrote extensively about his Gallic Wars in 58–51 BC. Diodorus Siculus wrote about the Celts of Gaul and Britain in his 1st-century history.[citation needed]

Diodorus Siculus and Strabo both suggest that the heartland of the people they call Celts was in southern Gaul. The former says that the Gauls were to the north of the Celts, but that the Romans referred to both as Gauls (linguistically the Gauls were certainly Celts). Before the discoveries at Hallstatt and La Tène, it was generally considered that the Celtic heartland was southern Gaul, see Encyclopædia Britannica for 1813.[citation needed]

Distribution

Continental

Gaul

 
A 4th century BC gold-plated disk from Gaul

The Romans knew the Celts then living in present-day France as Gauls. The territory of these peoples probably included the Low Countries, the Alps and present-day northern Italy. Julius Caesar in his Gallic Wars described the 1st-century BC descendants of those Gauls.[citation needed]

Eastern Gaul became the centre of the western La Tène culture. In later Iron Age Gaul, the social organisation resembled that of the Romans, with large towns. From the 3rd century BC the Gauls adopted coinage. Texts with Greek characters from southern Gaul have survived from the 2nd century BC.[72]

Greek traders founded Massalia about 600 BC, with some objects (mostly drinking ceramic vessels) being traded up the Rhône valley. But trade became disrupted soon after 500 BC and re-oriented over the Alps to the Po valley in the Italian peninsula. The Romans arrived in the Rhone valley in the 2nd century BC and encountered a mostly Celtic-speaking Gaul. Rome wanted land communications with its Iberian provinces and fought a major battle with the Saluvii at Entremont in 124–123 BC. Gradually Roman control extended, and the Roman province of Gallia Transalpina developed along the Mediterranean coast.[73][74] The Romans knew the remainder of Gaul as Gallia Comata – "Hairy Gaul".[citation needed]

In 58 BC the Helvetii planned to migrate westward but Julius Caesar forced them back. He then became involved in fighting the various tribes in Gaul, and by 55 BC had overrun most of Gaul. In 52 BC Vercingetorix led a revolt against Roman occupation but was defeated at the Battle of Alesia and surrendered.[75]

Following the Gallic Wars of 58–51 BC, Caesar's Celtica formed the main part of Roman Gaul, becoming the province of Gallia Lugdunensis. This territory of the Celtic tribes was bounded on the south by the Garonne and on the north by the Seine and the Marne.[76] The Romans attached large swathes of this region to neighbouring provinces Belgica and Aquitania, particularly under Augustus.[citation needed]

Place- and personal-name analysis and inscriptions suggest that Gaulish was spoken over most of what is now France.[77][78]

Iberia

 
Main language areas in Iberia, showing Celtic languages in beige, c. 300 BC

Until the end of the 19th century, traditional scholarship dealing with the Celts did acknowledge their presence in the Iberian Peninsula[79][80] as a material culture relatable to the Hallstatt and La Tène cultures. However, since according to the definition of the Iron Age in the 19th century Celtic populations were supposedly rare in Iberia and did not provide a cultural scenario that could easily be linked to that of Central Europe, the presence of Celtic culture in that region was generally not fully recognised. Modern scholarship, however, has clearly proven that Celtic presence and influences were most substantial in what is today Spain and Portugal (with perhaps the highest settlement saturation in Western Europe), particularly in the central, western and northern regions.[81][82]

In addition to Gauls infiltrating from the north of the Pyrenees, the Roman and Greek sources mention Celtic populations in three parts of the Iberian Peninsula: the eastern part of the Meseta (inhabited by the Celtiberians), the southwest (Celtici, in modern-day Alentejo) and the northwest (Gallaecia and Asturias).[83] A modern scholarly review[84] found several archaeological groups of Celts in Spain:

  • The Celtiberian group in the Upper-Douro Upper-Tagus Upper-Jalón area.[85] Archaeological data suggest a continuity at least from the 6th century BC. In this early period, the Celtiberians inhabited in hill-forts (Castros). Around the end of the 3rd century BC, Celtiberians adopted more urban ways of life. From the 2nd century BC, they minted coins and wrote inscriptions using the Celtiberian script. These inscriptions make the Celtiberian Language the only Hispano-Celtic language classified as Celtic with unanimous agreement.[86] In the late period, before the Roman Conquest, both archaeological evidence and Roman sources suggest that the Celtiberians were expanding into different areas in the Peninsula (e.g. Celtic Baeturia).
  • The Vetton group in the western Meseta, between the Tormes, Douro and Tagus Rivers. They were characterised by the production of Verracos, sculptures of bulls and pigs carved in granite.
  • The Vaccean group in the central Douro valley. They were mentioned by Roman sources already in the 220 BC. Some of their funerary rituals suggest strong influences from their Celtiberian neighbours.[citation needed]
 
Triskelion and spirals on a Galician torc terminal, Museum of Castro de Santa Tegra, A Guarda
  • The Castro Culture in northwestern Iberia, modern day Galicia and Northern Portugal.[87] Its high degree of continuity, from the Late Bronze Age, makes it difficult to support that the introduction of Celtic elements was due to the same process of Celticisation of the western Iberia, from the nucleus area of Celtiberia. Two typical elements are the sauna baths with monumental entrances, and the "Gallaecian Warriors", stone sculptures built in the 1st century AD. A large group of Latin inscriptions contain linguistic features that are clearly Celtic, while others are similar to those found in the non-Celtic Lusitanian language.[86]
  • The Astures and the Cantabri. This area was romanised late, as it was not conquered by Rome until the Cantabrian Wars of 29–19 BC.
  • Celts in the southwest, in the area Strabo called Celtica[88]

The origins of the Celtiberians might provide a key to understanding the Celticisation process in the rest of the Peninsula. The process of Celticisation of the southwestern area of the peninsula by the Keltoi and of the northwestern area is, however, not a simple Celtiberian question. Recent investigations about the Callaici[89] and Bracari[90] in northwestern Portugal are providing new approaches to understanding Celtic culture (language, art and religion) in western Iberia.[91]

John T. Koch of Aberystwyth University suggested that Tartessian inscriptions of the 8th century BC might be classified as Celtic. This would mean that Tartessian is the earliest attested trace of Celtic by a margin of more than a century.[92]

Germany, Alps and Italy

 
The Celtic city of Heuneburg by the Danube, Germany, c. 600 BC, the oldest city north of the Alps.[93]
 
Expansion of early Germanic tribes into Central Europe,[94] helping press its previous Celts further south and southeast
 
Peoples of Cisalpine Gaul during the 4th to 3rd centuries BC

The Canegrate culture represented the first migratory wave of the proto-Celtic[95][96] population from the northwest part of the Alps that, through the Alpine passes, had already penetrated and settled in the western Po valley between Lake Maggiore and Lake Como (Scamozzina culture). It has also been proposed that a more ancient proto-Celtic presence can be traced back to the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age, when North Westwern Italy appears closely linked regarding the production of bronze artefacts, including ornaments, to the western groups of the Tumulus culture.[97] La Tène cultural material appeared over a large area of mainland Italy,[98] the southernmost example being the Celtic helmet from Canosa di Puglia.[99]

Italy is home to Lepontic, the oldest attested Celtic language (from the 6th century BC).[100] Anciently spoken in Switzerland and in Northern-Central Italy, from the Alps to Umbria.[101][102][103][104] According to the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises, more than 760 Gaulish inscriptions have been found throughout present-day France – with the notable exception of Aquitaine – and in Italy,[105][106] which testifies the importance of Celtic heritage in the peninsula.[citation needed]

In 391 BC, Celts "who had their homes beyond the Alps streamed through the passes in great strength and seized the territory that lay between the Apennine Mountains and the Alps" according to Diodorus Siculus. The Po Valley and the rest of northern Italy (known to the Romans as Cisalpine Gaul) was inhabited by Celtic-speakers who founded cities such as Milan.[107] Later the Roman army was routed at the battle of Allia and Rome was sacked in 390 BC by the Senones.[108]

At the battle of Telamon in 225 BC, a large Celtic army was trapped between two Roman forces and crushed.[109]

The defeat of the combined Samnite, Celtic and Etruscan alliance by the Romans in the Third Samnite War sounded the beginning of the end of the Celtic domination in mainland Europe, but it was not until 192 BC that the Roman armies conquered the last remaining independent Celtic kingdoms in Italy.[citation needed]

Expansion east and south

 
A map of Celtic invasions and migrations in the Balkans in the 3rd centuy BC

The Celts also expanded down the Danube river and its tributaries. One of the most influential tribes, the Scordisci, established their capital at Singidunum (present-day Belgrade, Serbia) in the 3rd century BC. The concentration of hill-forts and cemeteries shows a dense population in the Tisza valley of modern-day Vojvodina, Serbia, Hungary and into Ukraine. Expansion into Romania was however blocked by the Dacians.[citation needed]

The Serdi were a Celtic tribe[110] inhabiting Thrace. They were located around and founded Serdika (Bulgarian: Сердика, Latin: Ulpia Serdica, Greek: Σαρδῶν πόλις), now Sofia in Bulgaria,[111] which reflects their ethnonym. They would have established themselves in this area during the Celtic migrations at the end of the 4th century BC, though there is no evidence for their existence before the 1st century BC. Serdi are among traditional tribal names reported into the Roman era.[112] They were gradually Thracianized over the centuries but retained their Celtic character in material culture up to a late date.[when?][citation needed] According to other sources they may have been simply of Thracian origin,[113] according to others they may have become of mixed Thraco-Celtic origin. Further south, Celts settled in Thrace (Bulgaria), which they ruled for over a century, and Anatolia, where they settled as the Galatians (see also: Gallic Invasion of Greece). Despite their geographical isolation from the rest of the Celtic world, the Galatians maintained their Celtic language for at least 700 years. St Jerome, who visited Ancyra (modern-day Ankara) in 373 AD, likened their language to that of the Treveri of northern Gaul.[citation needed]

For Venceslas Kruta, Galatia in central Turkey was an area of dense Celtic settlement.[citation needed]

The Boii tribe gave their name to Bohemia, Bologna and possibly Bavaria, and Celtic artefacts and cemeteries have been discovered further east in what is now Poland and Slovakia. A Celtic coin (Biatec) from Bratislava's mint was displayed on the old Slovak 5-crown coin.[citation needed]

As there is no archaeological evidence for large-scale invasions in some of the other areas, one current school of thought holds that Celtic language and culture spread to those areas by contact rather than invasion.[114] However, the Celtic invasions of Italy and the expedition in Greece and western Anatolia, are well documented in Greek and Latin history.[citation needed]

There are records of Celtic mercenaries in Egypt serving the Ptolemies. Thousands were employed in 283–246 BC and they were also in service around 186 BC. They attempted to overthrow Ptolemy II.[115]

Insular

 
Britain & Ireland in the early–mid 1st millennium AD, before the founding of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
  Picts.
  Gaels.

All living Celtic languages today belong to the Insular Celtic languages, derived from the Celtic languages spoken in Iron Age Britain and Ireland.[116] They separated into a Goidelic and a Brittonic branch early on. By the time of the Roman conquest of Britain in the 1st century AD, the Insular Celts were made up of the Celtic Britons, the Gaels (or Scoti), and the Picts (or Caledonians).[citation needed]

Linguists have debated whether a Celtic language came to the British Isles and then split, or whether the two branches arrived separately. The older view was that Celtic influence in the Isles was the result of successive migrations or invasions from the European mainland by diverse Celtic-speaking peoples over several centuries, accounting for the P-Celtic vs. Q-Celtic isogloss. This view has been challenged by the hypothesis that the islands' Celtic languages form an Insular Celtic dialect group.[117] In the 19th and 20th centuries, scholars often dated the "arrival" of Celtic culture in Britain (via an invasion model) to the 6th century BC, corresponding to archaeological evidence of Hallstatt influence and the appearance of chariot burials in what is now England. Cunliffe and Koch propose in their newer #'Celtic from the West' theory that Celtic languages reached the Isles earlier, with the Bell Beaker culture c.2500 BC, or even before this.[118][119] More recently, a major archaeogenetics study uncovered a migration into southern Britain in the Bronze Age from 1300 to 800 BC.[120] The newcomers were genetically most similar to ancient individuals from Gaul.[120] From 1000 BC, their genetic marker swiftly spread through southern Britain,[121] but not northern Britain.[120] The authors see this as a "plausible vector for the spread of early Celtic languages into Britain".[120] There was much less immigration during the Iron Age, so it is likely that Celtic reached Britain before then.[120] Cunliffe suggests that a branch of Celtic was already spoken in Britain, and the Bronze Age migration introduced the Brittonic branch.[122]

Like many Celtic peoples on the mainland, the Insular Celts followed an Ancient Celtic religion overseen by druids. Some of the southern British tribes had strong links with Gaul and Belgica, and minted their own coins. During the Roman occupation of Britain, a Romano-British culture emerged in the southeast. The Britons and Picts in the north, and the Gaels of Ireland, remained outside the empire. During the end of Roman rule in Britain in the 400s AD, there was significant Anglo-Saxon settlement of eastern and southern Britain, and some Gaelic settlement of its western coast. During this time, some Britons migrated to the Armorican peninsula, where their culture became dominant. Meanwhile, much of northern Britain (Scotland) became Gaelic. By the 10th century AD, the Insular Celtic peoples had diversified into the Brittonic-speaking Welsh (in Wales), Cornish (in Cornwall), Bretons (in Brittany) and Cumbrians (in the Old North); and the Gaelic-speaking Irish (in Ireland), Scots (in Scotland) and Manx (on the Isle of Man).[citation needed]

Classical writers did not call the inhabitants of Britain and Ireland Celtae or Κελτοί (Keltoi),[5][8][9] leading some scholars to question the use of the term 'Celt' for the Iron Age inhabitants of those islands.[5][8][9][10] The first historical account of the islands was by the Greek geographer Pytheas, who sailed around what he called the "Pretannikai nesoi" (the "Pretannic isles") around 310–306 BC.[123] In general, classical writers referred to the Britons as Pretannoi (in Greek) or Britanni (in Latin).[124] Strabo, writing in Roman times, distinguished between the Celts and Britons.[125] However, Roman historian Tacitus says the Britons resembled the Celts of Gaul in customs and religion.[11]

Romanisation

 
A Gallo-Roman sculpture of the Celtic god Cernunnos (middle), flanked by the Roman gods Apollo and Mercury

Under Caesar the Romans conquered Celtic Gaul, and from Claudius onward the Roman empire absorbed parts of Britain. Roman local government of these regions closely mirrored pre-Roman tribal boundaries, and archaeological finds suggest native involvement in local government.[citation needed]

The native peoples under Roman rule became Romanised and keen to adopt Roman ways. Celtic art had already incorporated classical influences, and surviving Gallo-Roman pieces interpret classical subjects or keep faith with old traditions despite a Roman overlay.[citation needed]

The Roman occupation of Gaul, and to a lesser extent of Britain, led to Roman-Celtic syncretism. In the case of the continental Celts, this eventually resulted in a language shift to Vulgar Latin, while the Insular Celts retained their language.[citation needed]

There was also considerable cultural influence exerted by Gaul on Rome, particularly in military matters and horsemanship, as the Gauls often served in the Roman cavalry. The Romans adopted the Celtic cavalry sword, the spatha, and Epona, the Celtic horse goddess.[126][127]

Society

 
The Ludovisi Gaul, Roman copy of a Hellenistic sculpture of a dying Celtic couple, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme.

To the extent that sources are available, they depict a pre-Christian Iron Age Celtic social structure based formally on class and kingship, although this may only have been a particular late phase of organisation in Celtic societies. Patron-client relationships similar to those of Roman society are also described by Caesar and others in the Gaul of the 1st century BC.[citation needed]

In the main, the evidence is of tribes being led by kings, although some argue that there is also evidence of oligarchical republican forms of government eventually emerging in areas which had close contact with Rome. Most descriptions of Celtic societies portray them as being divided into three groups: a warrior aristocracy; an intellectual class including professions such as druid, poet, and jurist; and everyone else. In historical times, the offices of high and low kings in Ireland and Scotland were filled by election under the system of tanistry, which eventually came into conflict with the feudal principle of primogeniture in which succession goes to the first-born son.[citation needed]

 
The reverse side of a British bronze mirror, with spiral and trumpet motifs typical of La Tène Celtic art in Britain
 
A 4th century BC Celtic gold ring from southern Germany, decorated with human and rams heads

Little is known of family structure among the Celts. Patterns of settlement varied from decentralised to urban. The popular stereotype of non-urbanised societies settled in hillforts and duns,[128] drawn from Britain and Ireland (there are about 3,000 hill forts known in Britain)[129] contrasts with the urban settlements present in the core Hallstatt and La Tène areas, with the many significant oppida of Gaul late in the first millennium BC, and with the towns of Gallia Cisalpina.[citation needed]

Slavery, as practised by the Celts, was very likely similar to the better documented practice in ancient Greece and Rome.[130] Slaves were acquired from war, raids, and penal and debt servitude.[130] Slavery was hereditary,[131] though manumission was possible. The Old Irish and Welsh words for 'slave', cacht and caeth respectively, are cognate with Latin captus 'captive' suggesting that the slave trade was an early means of contact between Latin and Celtic societies.[130] In the Middle Ages, slavery was especially prevalent in the Celtic countries.[132] Manumissions were discouraged by law and the word for "female slave", cumal, was used as a general unit of value in Ireland.[133]

There are only very limited records from pre-Christian times written in Celtic languages. These are mostly inscriptions in the Roman and sometimes Greek alphabets. The Ogham script, an Early Medieval alphabet, was mostly used in early Christian times in Ireland and Scotland (but also in Wales and England), and was only used for ceremonial purposes such as inscriptions on gravestones. The available evidence is of a strong oral tradition, such as that preserved by bards in Ireland, and eventually recorded by monasteries. Celtic art also produced a great deal of intricate and beautiful metalwork, examples of which have been preserved by their distinctive burial rites.[134]

In some regards the Atlantic Celts were conservative: for example, they still used chariots in combat long after they had been reduced to ceremonial roles by the Greeks and Romans. However, despite being outdated, Celtic chariot tactics were able to repel the invasions of Britain attempted by Julius Caesar.[135]

According to Diodorus Siculus:

The Gauls are tall of body with rippling muscles and white of skin and their hair is blond, and not only naturally so for they also make it their practice by artificial means to increase the distinguishing colour which nature has given it. For they are always washing their hair in limewater and they pull it back from the forehead to the nape of the neck, with the result that their appearance is like that of Satyrs and Pans since the treatment of their hair makes it so heavy and coarse that it differs in no respect from the mane of horses. Some of them shave the beard but others let it grow a little; and the nobles shave their cheeks but they let the moustache grow until it covers the mouth.

Clothing

 
 

During the later Iron Age the Gauls generally wore long-sleeved shirts or tunics and long trousers (called braccae by the Romans).[136] Clothes were made of wool or linen, with some silk being used by the rich. Cloaks were worn in the winter. Brooches[137] and armlets were used, but the most famous item of jewellery was the torc, a neck collar of metal, sometimes gold. The horned Waterloo Helmet in the British Museum, which long set the standard for modern images of Celtic warriors, is in fact a unique survival, and may have been a piece for ceremonial rather than military wear.[citation needed]

Trade and coinage

Archaeological evidence suggests that the pre-Roman Celtic societies were linked to the network of overland trade routes that spanned Eurasia. Archaeologists have discovered large prehistoric trackways crossing bogs in Ireland and Germany. Due to their substantial nature, these are believed to have been created for wheeled transport as part of an extensive roadway system that facilitated trade.[138] The territory held by the Celts contained tin, lead, iron, silver and gold.[139] Celtic smiths and metalworkers created weapons and jewellery for international trade, particularly with the Romans.[citation needed]

The myth that the Celtic monetary system consisted of wholly barter is a common one, but is in part false. The monetary system was complex and is still not understood (much like the late Roman coinages), and due to the absence of large numbers of coin items, it is assumed that "proto-money" was used. This included bronze items made from the early La Tène period and onwards, which were often in the shape of axeheads, rings, or bells. Due to the large number of these present in some burials, it is thought they had a relatively high monetary value, and could be used for "day to day" purchases. Low-value coinages of potin, a bronze alloy with high tin content, were minted in most Celtic areas of the continent and in South-East Britain prior to the Roman conquest of these lands. Higher-value coinages, suitable for use in trade, were minted in gold, silver, and high-quality bronze. Gold coinage was much more common than silver coinage, despite being worth substantially more, as while there were around 100 mines in Southern Britain and Central France, silver was more rarely mined. This was due partly to the relative sparsity of mines and the amount of effort needed for extraction compared to the profit gained. As the Roman civilisation grew in importance and expanded its trade with the Celtic world, silver and bronze coinage became more common. This coincided with a major increase in gold production in Celtic areas to meet the Roman demand, due to the high value Romans put on the metal. The large number of gold mines in France is thought to be a major reason why Caesar invaded.[citation needed]

Gender and sexual norms

 
Reconstruction of the dress and equipment of an Iron Age Celtic warrior from Biebertal, Germany

Very few reliable sources exist regarding Celtic views on gender roles, though some archaeological evidence suggests their views may have differed from those of the Greco-Roman world, which tended to be less egalitarian.[140][141] Some Iron Age burials in northeastern Gaul suggest women may have had roles in warfare during the earlier La Tène period, but the evidence is far from conclusive.[142] Celtic individuals buried with both female jewellery and weaponry have been found, such as the Vix Grave in northeastern Gaul, and there are questions about the gender of some individuals buried with weaponry. However, it has been suggested that the weapons indicate high social rank rather than masculinity.[143]

Most written accounts of the Ancient Celts are from the Romans and Greeks, though it is not clear how accurate these are. Roman historians Ammianus Marcellinus and Tacitus mentioned Celtic women inciting, participating in, and leading battles.[144] Plutarch reports that Celtic women acted as ambassadors to avoid a war among Celtic chiefdoms in the Po valley during the 4th century BC.[145] Posidonius' anthropological comments on the Celts had common themes, primarily primitivism, extreme ferocity, cruel sacrificial practices, and the strength and courage of their women.[146] Cassius Dio suggests there was great sexual freedom among women in Celtic Britain:

... a very witty remark is reported to have been made by the wife of Argentocoxus, a Caledonian, to Julia Augusta. When the empress was jesting with her, after the treaty, about the free intercourse of her sex with men in Britain, she replied: "We fulfill the demands of nature in a much better way than do you Roman women; for we consort openly with the best men, whereas you let yourselves be debauched in secret by the vilest". Such was the retort of the British woman.[147]

Barry Cunliffe writes that such references are "likely to be ill-observed" and meant to portray the Celts as outlandish "barbarians".[148] Historian Lisa Bitel argues the descriptions of Celtic women warriors are not credible. She says some Roman and Greek writers wanted to show that the barbarian Celts lived in "an upside-down world [...] and a standard ingredient in such a world was the manly warrior woman".[149]

The Greek philosopher Aristotle wrote in his Politics that the Celts of southeastern Europe approved of male homosexuality. Greek historian Diodorus Siculus wrote in his Bibliotheca historica that although Gaulish women were beautiful, the men had "little to do with them" and it was a custom for men to sleep on animal skins with two younger males. He further claimed that "the young men will offer themselves to strangers and are insulted if the offer is refused". His claim was later repeated by Greco-Roman writers Athenaeus and Ammianus.[150] David Rankin, in Celts and the Classical World, suggests some of these claims refer to bonding rituals in warrior groups, which required abstinence from women at certain times,[151] and says it probably reflects "the warlike character of early contacts between the Celts and the Greeks".[152]

Under Brehon Law, which was written down in early Medieval Ireland after conversion to Christianity, a woman had the right to divorce her husband and gain his property if he was unable to perform his marital duties due to impotence, obesity, homosexual inclination or preference for other women.[153][failed verification]

Celtic art

 
The Battersea Shield, a ceremonial bronze shield dated 3rd–1st century BC, is an example of La Tène Celtic art from Britain

Celtic art is generally used by art historians to refer to art of the La Tène period across Europe, while the Early Medieval art of Britain and Ireland, that is what "Celtic art" evokes for much of the general public, is called Insular art in art history. Both styles absorbed considerable influences from non-Celtic sources, but retained a preference for geometrical decoration over figurative subjects, which are often extremely stylised when they do appear; narrative scenes only appear under outside influence. Energetic circular forms, triskeles and spirals are characteristic. Much of the surviving material is in precious metal, which no doubt gives a very unrepresentative picture, but apart from Pictish stones and the Insular high crosses, large monumental sculpture, even with decorative carving, is very rare; possibly it was originally common in wood. Celts were also able to create developed musical instruments such as the carnyces, these famous war trumpets used before the battle to frighten the enemy, as the best preserved found in Tintignac (Gaul) in 2004 and which were decorated with a boar head or a snake head.[154]

The interlace patterns that are often regarded as typical of "Celtic art" were characteristic of the whole of the British Isles, a style referred to as Insular art, or Hiberno-Saxon art. This artistic style incorporated elements of La Tène, Late Roman, and, most importantly, animal Style II of Germanic Migration Period art. The style was taken up with great skill and enthusiasm by Celtic artists in metalwork and illuminated manuscripts. Equally, the forms used for the finest Insular art were all adopted from the Roman world: Gospel books like the Book of Kells and Book of Lindisfarne, chalices like the Ardagh Chalice and Derrynaflan Chalice, and penannular brooches like the Tara Brooch and Roscrea Brooch. These works are from the period of peak achievement of Insular art, which lasted from the 7th to the 9th centuries, before the Viking attacks sharply set back cultural life.[citation needed]

In contrast the less well known but often spectacular art of the richest earlier Continental Celts, before they were conquered by the Romans, often adopted elements of Roman, Greek and other "foreign" styles (and possibly used imported craftsmen) to decorate objects that were distinctively Celtic. After the Roman conquests, some Celtic elements remained in popular art, especially Ancient Roman pottery, of which Gaul was actually the largest producer, mostly in Italian styles, but also producing work in local taste, including figurines of deities and wares painted with animals and other subjects in highly formalised styles. Roman Britain also took more interest in enamel than most of the Empire, and its development of champlevé technique was probably important to the later Medieval art of the whole of Europe, of which the energy and freedom of Insular decoration was an important element. Rising nationalism brought Celtic revivals from the 19th century.[citation needed]

Gallic calendar

The Coligny calendar, which was found in 1897 in Coligny, Ain, was engraved on a bronze tablet, preserved in 73 fragments, that originally was 1.48 metres (4 feet 10 inches) wide and 0.9 metres (2 feet 11 inches) high (Lambert p. 111). Based on the style of lettering and the accompanying objects, it probably dates to the end of the 2nd century.[155] It is written in Latin inscriptional capitals, and is in Gaulish. The restored tablet contains 16 vertical columns, with 62 months distributed over 5 years.[citation needed]

French archaeologist J. Monard speculated that it was recorded by druids wishing to preserve their tradition of timekeeping in a time when the Julian calendar was imposed throughout the Roman Empire. However, the general form of the calendar suggests the public peg calendars (or parapegmata) found throughout the Greek and Roman world.[156]

Warfare and weapons

 
Celtic Warrior Represented in the Braganza Brooch, Hellenistic art, 250–200 BC

Tribal warfare appears to have been a regular feature of Celtic societies. While epic literature depicts this as more of a sport focused on raids and hunting rather than organised territorial conquest, the historical record is more of tribes using warfare to exert political control and harass rivals, for economic advantage, and in some instances to conquer territory.[citation needed]

The Celts were described by classical writers such as Strabo, Livy, Pausanias, and Florus as fighting like "wild beasts", and as hordes. Dionysius said that their

"manner of fighting, being in large measure that of wild beasts and frenzied, was an erratic procedure, quite lacking in military science. Thus, at one moment they would raise their swords aloft and smite after the manner of wild boars, throwing the whole weight of their bodies into the blow like hewers of wood or men digging with mattocks, and again they would deliver crosswise blows aimed at no target, as if they intended to cut to pieces the entire bodies of their adversaries, protective armour and all".[157]

Such descriptions have been challenged by contemporary historians.[158]

Polybius (2.33) indicates that the principal Celtic weapon was a long bladed sword which was used for hacking edgewise rather than stabbing. Celtic warriors are described by Polybius and Plutarch as frequently having to cease fighting in order to straighten their sword blades. This claim has been questioned by some archaeologists, who note that Noric steel, steel produced in Celtic Noricum, was famous in the Roman Empire period and was used to equip the Roman military.[159][160] However, Radomir Pleiner, in The Celtic Sword (1993) argues that "the metallographic evidence shows that Polybius was right up to a point", as around one third of surviving swords from the period might well have behaved as he describes.[161] In addition to these long bladed slashing swords, spears and specialized javelins were also used.[162]

Polybius also asserts that certain of the Celts fought naked, "The appearance of these naked warriors was a terrifying spectacle, for they were all men of splendid physique and in the prime of life."[163] According to Livy, this was also true of the Celts of Asia Minor.[164]

Head hunting

 
Stone head from Mšecké Žehrovice, Czech Republic, wearing a torc, late La Tène culture, 150-50 BC

Celts had a reputation as head hunters.[165] Paul Jacobsthal says, "Amongst the Celts the human head was venerated above all else, since the head was to the Celt the soul, centre of the emotions as well as of life itself, a symbol of divinity and of the powers of the other-world."[166] Writing in the first century BC, Greek historians Posidonius and Diodorus Siculus said Celtic warriors cut off the heads of enemies slain in battle, hung them from the necks of their horses, then nailed them up outside their homes.[165] Strabo wrote in the same century that Celts embalmed the heads of their most esteemed enemies in cedar oil and put them on display.[165] Roman historian Livy wrote that the Boii beheaded a defeated Roman general after the Battle of Silva Litana, covered his skull in gold, and used it as a ritual cup.[165] Archaeologists have found evidence that heads were embalmed and displayed by the southern Gauls.[167][168] In another example, at the southern Gaulish site of Entremont, there stood a pillar carved with skulls, within which were niches where human skulls were kept, nailed into position.[169] Roquepertuse nearby has similar carved heads and skull niches. Many lone carved heads have been found in Celtic regions, some with two or three faces.[170] Examples include the Mšecké Žehrovice Head and the Corleck Head.

Severed heads are a common motif in Insular Celtic myths, and there are many tales in which 'living heads' preside over feasts and/or speak prophecies.[165][170] The beheading game is a motif in Irish myth and Arthurian legend, most famously in the tale Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, where the Green Knight picks up his own severed head after Gawain has struck it off. There are also many legends in Celtic regions of saints who carry their own severed heads. In Irish myth, the severed heads of warriors are called the mast or nuts of the goddess Macha.[171]

Religion and mythology

 
The Celtic god Cernunnos on the Gundestrup cauldron.

Ancient Celtic religion

 
The Celtic "Prince of Glauberg", Germany, with a leaf crown, perhaps indicating a priest, c. 500 BC.

Like other European Iron Age societies, the Celts practised a polytheistic religion.[172] Celtic religion varied by region and over time, but had "broad structural similarities",[172] and there was "a basic religious homogeneity" among the Celtic peoples.[173] Because the ancient Celts did not have writing, evidence about their religion is gleaned from archaeology, Greco-Roman accounts, and literature from the early Christian period.[174]

The names of over two hundred Celtic deities have survived (see list of Celtic deities), although it is likely that many of these were alternative names, regional names or titles for the same deity.[172] Some deities were venerated only in one region, but others were more widely known.[172] According to Miranda Aldhouse-Green, the Celts were also animists, believing that every part of the natural world had a spirit.[174]

The Celts seem to have had a father god, who was often a god of the tribe and of the dead (Toutatis probably being one name for him); and a mother goddess who was associated with the land, earth and fertility[175] (Dea Matrona probably being one name for her). The mother goddess could also take the form of a war goddess as protectress of her tribe and its land.[175] There also seems to have been a male celestial god—identified with Taranis—associated with thunder, the wheel, and the bull.[175] There were gods of skill and craft, such as the pan-regional god Lugus, and the smith god Gobannos.[175] Celtic healing deities were often associated with sacred springs,[175] such as Sirona and Borvo. Other pan-regional deities include the horned god Cernunnos, the horse and fertility goddess Epona, the divine son Maponos, as well as Belenos, Ogmios, and Sucellos.[172][174] Caesar says the Gauls believed they all descended from a god of the dead and underworld.[172] Triplicity is a common theme in Celtic cosmology, and a number of deities were seen as threefold,[176] for example the Three Mothers.[177]

Greco-Roman writers say the Celts believed in reincarnation. Diodorus says they believed souls were reincarnated after a certain number of years, probably after spending time in an afterlife, and noted they buried grave goods with the dead.[178]

Celtic religious ceremonies were overseen by priests known as druids, who also served as judges, teachers, and lore-keepers. Other classes of druids performed sacrifices for the perceived benefit of the community.[179] There is evidence that ancient Celtic peoples sacrificed animals, almost always livestock or working animals. It appears some were offered wholly to the gods (by burying or burning), while some were shared between gods and humans (part eaten and part offered).[180] There is also some evidence that ancient Celts sacrificed humans, and some Greco-Roman sources claim the Gauls sacrificed criminals by burning them in a wicker man.[181]

The Romans said the Celts held ceremonies in sacred groves and other natural shrines, called nemetons.[172] Some Celtic peoples built temples or ritual enclosures of varying shapes (such as the Romano-Celtic temple and viereckschanze), though they also maintained shrines at natural sites.[172] Celtic peoples often made votive offerings: treasured items deposited in water and wetlands, or in ritual shafts and wells, often in the same place over generations.[172] Modern clootie wells might be a continuation of this.[182]

Insular Celtic mythology

Most surviving Celtic mythology belongs to the Insular Celtic peoples: Irish mythology has the largest written body of myths, followed by Welsh mythology. These were written down in the early Middle Ages, mainly by Christian scribes.

The supernatural race called the Tuatha Dé Danann are believed to represent the main Celtic gods of Ireland. Their traditional rivals are the Fomóire, whom they defeat in the Battle of Mag Tuired.[183] Barry Cunliffe says the underlying structure in Irish myth was a dualism between the male tribal god and the female goddess of the land.[172] The Dagda seems to have been the chief god and the Morrígan his consort, each of whom had other names.[172] One common motif is the sovereignty goddess, who represents the land and bestows sovereignty on a king by marrying him. The goddess Brigid was linked with nature as well as poetry, healing and smithing.[176]

Some figures in medieval Insular Celtic myth have ancient continental parallels: Irish Lugh and Welsh Lleu are cognate with Lugus, Goibniu and Gofannon with Gobannos, Macán and Mabon with Maponos, while Macha and Rhiannon may be counterparts of Epona.[184]

In Insular Celtic myth, the Otherworld is a parallel realm where the gods dwell. Some mythical heroes visit it by entering ancient burial mounds or caves, by going under water or across the western sea, or after being offered a silver apple branch by an Otherworld resident.[185] Irish myth says that the spirits of the dead travel to the house of Donn (Tech Duinn), a legendary ancestor; this echoes Caesar's comment that the Gauls believed they all descended from a god of the dead and underworld.[172]

Insular Celtic peoples celebrated four seasonal festivals, known to the Gaels as Beltaine (1 May), Lughnasa (1 August), Samhain (1 November) and Imbolc (1 February).[172]

Roman influence

The Roman invasion of Gaul brought a great deal of Celtic peoples into the Roman Empire. Roman culture had a profound effect on the Celtic tribes which came under the empire's control. Roman influence led to many changes in Celtic religion, the most noticeable of which was the weakening of the druid class, especially religiously; the druids were to eventually disappear altogether. Romano-Celtic deities also began to appear: these deities often had both Roman and Celtic attributes, combined the names of Roman and Celtic deities, and/or included couples with one Roman and one Celtic deity. Other changes included the adaptation of the Jupiter Column, a sacred column set up in many Celtic regions of the empire, primarily in northern and eastern Gaul. Another major change in religious practice was the use of stone monuments to represent gods and goddesses. The Celts had probably only created wooden cult images (including monuments carved into trees, which were known as sacred poles) before the Roman conquest.[177]

Celtic Christianity

While the regions under Roman rule adopted Christianity along with the rest of the Roman empire, unconquered areas of Ireland and Scotland began to move from Celtic polytheism to Christianity in the 5th century. Ireland was converted by missionaries from Britain, such as Saint Patrick. Later missionaries from Ireland were a major source of missionary work in Scotland, Anglo-Saxon parts of Britain, and central Europe (see Hiberno-Scottish mission). Celtic Christianity, the forms of Christianity that took hold in Britain and Ireland at this time, had for some centuries only limited and intermittent contact with Rome and continental Christianity, as well as some contacts with Coptic Christianity. Some elements of Celtic Christianity developed, or retained, features that made them distinct from the rest of Western Christianity, most famously their conservative method of calculating the date of Easter. In 664, the Synod of Whitby began to resolve these differences, mostly by adopting the current Roman practices, which the Gregorian Mission from Rome had introduced to Anglo-Saxon England.[citation needed]

Genetics

 
Distribution of Y-chromosomal Haplogroup R-M269 in Europe. The majority of ancient Celtic males have been found to be carriers of this lineage.[186][187][188]

Genetic studies on the limited amount of material available suggest continuity between Iron Age people from areas considered Celtic and the earlier Bell Beaker culture of Bronze Age Western Europe.[189][190][191] Like the Bell Beakers, ancient Celts carried a substantial amount of steppe ancestry, which is derived from Yamnaya pastoralists who expanded westwards from the Pontic–Caspian steppe during late Neolithic and early Bronze Age.[192] This ancestry was particularly prevalent among Celts of Northwest Europe.[191] Examined individuals overwhelmingly carry types of the paternal haplogroup R-M269,[186][187][188] while the maternal haplogroups H and U are frequent.[193][194] These lineages are associated with steppe ancestry.[186][193] The spread of Celts into Iberia and the emergence of the Celtiberians is associated with an increase in north-central European ancestry in Iberia, and may be connected to the expansion of the Urnfield culture.[195] The paternal haplogroup haplogroup I2a1a1a has been detected among Celtiberians.[196] There appears to have been significant gene flow among Celtic peoples of Western Europe during the Iron Age.[197][191] While the Gauls of southern France display genetic links with the Celtiberians, the Gauls of northern France display links with Great Britain and Sweden.[198] Modern populations of Western Europe, particularly those who still speak Celtic languages, display substantial genetic continuity with the Iron Age populations of the same areas.[199][200][201]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Mac Cana & Dillon. "The Celts, an ancient Indo-European people, reached the apogee of their influence and territorial expansion during the 4th century bc, extending across the length of Europe from Britain to Asia Minor."; Puhvel, Fee & Leeming 2003, p. 67. "[T]he Celts, were Indo-Europeans, a fact that explains a certain compatibility between Celtic, Roman, and Germanic mythology."; Riché 2005, p. 150. "The Celts and Germans were two Indo-European groups whose civilizations had some common characteristics."; Todd 1975, p. 42. "Celts and Germans were of course derived from the same Indo-European stock."; Encyclopedia Britannica. Celt. "Celt, also spelled Kelt, Latin Celta, plural Celtae, a member of an early Indo-European people who from the 2nd millennium bce to the 1st century bce spread over much of Europe.";
  2. ^ a b Drinkwater 2012, p. 295. "Celts, a name applied by ancient writers to a population group occupying lands mainly north of the Mediterranean region from Galicia in the west to Galatia in the east. (Its application to the Welsh, the Scots, and the Irish is modern.) Their unity is recognizable by common speech and common artistic traditions.
  3. ^ Waldman & Mason 2006, p. 144. "Celts, in its modern usage, is an encompassing term referring to all Celtic-speaking peoples."
  4. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica. Celt. "Celt, also spelled Kelt, Latin Celta, plural Celtae, a member of an early Indo-European people who from the 2nd millennium bce to the 1st century bce spread over much of Europe. Their tribes and groups eventually ranged from the British Isles and northern Spain to as far east as Transylvania, the Black Sea coasts, and Galatia in Anatolia and were in part absorbed into the Roman Empire as Britons, Gauls, Boii, Galatians, and Celtiberians. Linguistically they survive in the modern Celtic speakers of Ireland, Highland Scotland, the Isle of Man, Wales, and Brittany.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Koch, John (2005). Celtic Culture: a historical encyclopedia. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. p. xix–xxi. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0. Retrieved 9 June 2010. This Encyclopedia is designed for the use of everyone interested in Celtic studies and also for those interested in many related and subsidiary fields, including the individual CELTIC COUNTRIES and their languages, literatures, archaeology, folklore, and mythology. In its chronological scope, the Encyclopedia covers subjects from the HALLSTATT and LA TENE periods of the later pre-Roman Iron Age to the beginning of the 21st century.
  6. ^ Luján, E. R. (2006). "PUEBLOS CELTAS Y NO CELTAS DE LA GALICIA ANTIGUA: FUENTES LITERARIAS FRENTE A FUENTES EPIGRÁFICAS" (PDF). Xxii seminario de lenguas y epigrafía antigua. (PDF) from the original on 25 December 2009. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  7. ^ "If, as is the first criterion of this Encyclopedia, one bases the concept of 'Celticity' on language, one can apply the term 'Celtic' to ancient Galicia", Koch, John T., ed. (2006). Celtic culture: a historical encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 790. ISBN 1-85109-440-7.
  8. ^ a b c d e f James, Simon (1999). The Atlantic Celts – Ancient People or Modern Invention. University of Wisconsin Press.
  9. ^ a b c d e Collis, John (2003). The Celts: Origins, Myths and Inventions. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7524-2913-7.
  10. ^ a b c Pryor, Francis (2004). Britain BC. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-00-712693-4.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sims-Williams (August 2020). "An Alternative to 'Celtic from the East' and 'Celtic from the West'". Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 30 (3): 511–529. doi:10.1017/S0959774320000098.
  12. ^ Louwen, A.J (2021). Breaking and making the ancestors. Piecing together the urnfield mortuary process in the Lower-Rhine-Basin, ca. 1300 - 400 BC (PhD). Leiden University.
  13. ^ Probst 1996, pp. 258.
  14. ^ a b c d Chadwick, Nora; Corcoran, J. X. W. P. (1970). The Celts. Penguin Books. pp. 28–33.
  15. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (1997). The Ancient Celts. Penguin Books. pp. 39–67.
  16. ^ Koch, John T (2010). Celtic from the West Chapter 9: Paradigm Shift? Interpreting Tartessian as Celtic – see map 9.3 The Ancient Celtic Languages c. 440/430 BC – see third map in PDF at URL provided which is essentially the same map (PDF). Oxbow Books, Oxford, UK. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-84217-410-4. (PDF) from the original on 9 July 2012.
  17. ^ Koch, John T (2010). Celtic from the West Chapter 9: Paradigm Shift? Interpreting Tartessian as Celtic – see map 9.2 Celtic expansion from Hallstatt/La Tene central Europe – see second map in PDF at URL provided which is essentially the same map (PDF). Oxbow Books, Oxford, UK. p. 190. ISBN 978-1-84217-410-4. (PDF) from the original on 9 July 2012.
  18. ^ Stifter, David (2008). Old Celtic Languages (PDF). pp. 24–37. Archived (PDF) from the original on 30 June 2011.
  19. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2003). The Celts – a very short introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-19-280418-1.
  20. ^ Minahan, James (2000). One Europe, Many Nations: A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 179. ISBN 978-0-313-30984-7. The Cornish are related to the other Celtic peoples of Europe, the Bretons,* Irish,* Scots,* Manx,* Welsh,* and the Galicians* of northwestern Spain
  21. ^ Minahan, James (2000). One Europe, Many Nations: A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 766. ISBN 978-0-313-30984-7. Celts, 257, 278, 523, 533, 555, 643; Bretons, 129–33; Cornish, 178–81; Galicians, 277–80; Irish, 330–37; Manx, 452–55; Scots, 607–12; Welsh
  22. ^ Waldman & Mason 2006, p. 144. "CELTS location: Greater Europe time period: Second millennium B.C.E. to present ancestry: Celtic
  23. ^ McKevitt, Kerry Ann (2006). (PDF). E-Keltoi. 6: 651–73. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
  24. ^ Sarunas Milisauskas, European prehistory: a survey. Springer. 2002. p. 363. ISBN 978-0-306-47257-2. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  25. ^ H. D. Rankin, Celts and the classical world. Routledge. 1998. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-0-415-15090-3. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  26. ^ Herodotus, The Histories, 2.33; 4.49.
  27. ^ John T. Koch (ed.), Celtic Culture: a historical encyclopedia. 5 vols. 2006. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, p. 371.
  28. ^ a b McCone, Kim (2013). "The Celts: questions of nomenclature and identity", in Ireland and its Contacts. University of Lausanne. pp.21–27
  29. ^ P. De Bernardo Stempel 2008. "Linguistically Celtic ethnonyms: towards a classification", in Celtic and Other Languages in Ancient Europe, J. L. García Alonso (ed.), 101–18. Ediciones Universidad Salamanca.
  30. ^ Julius Caesar, Commentarii de Bello Gallico 1.1: "All Gaul is divided into three parts, one of which the Belgae live, another in which the Aquitani live, and the third are those who in their own tongue are called Celtae, in our language Galli."
  31. ^ Strabo, Geography, 3.1.3; 3.1.6; 3.2.2; 3.2.15; 4.4.2.
  32. ^ Pliny the Elder, The Natural History 21: "the Mirobrigenses, surnamed Celtici" ("Mirobrigenses qui Celtici cognominantur").
  33. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2010. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  34. ^ Fernando De Almeida, Breve noticia sobre o santuário campestre romano de Miróbriga dos Celticos (Portugal): D(IS) M(ANIBUS) S(ACRUM) / C(AIUS) PORCIUS SEVE/RUS MIROBRIGEN(SIS) / CELT(ICUS) ANN(ORUM) LX / H(IC) S(ITUS) E(ST) S(IT) T(IBI) T(ERRA) L(EVIS).
  35. ^ Koch, John Thomas (2006). Celtic culture: a historical encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 794–95. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0.
  36. ^ Spencer and Zwicky, Andrew and Arnold M (1998). The handbook of morphology. Blackwell Publishers. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-631-18544-4.
  37. ^ Who were the Celts? It’s complicated, Irish Times, Denis Staunton, October 20, 2015, accessed April 17, 2023.
  38. ^ Lhuyd, E. Archaeologia Britannica; An account of the languages, histories, and customs of the original inhabitants of Great Britain. (reprint ed.) Irish University Press, 1971, p. 290. ISBN 0-7165-0031-0.
  39. ^ Koch, John Thomas (2006). Celtic culture: a historical encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 532. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0.
  40. ^ Mountain, Harry (1998). The Celtic Encyclopedia, Volume 1. uPublish.com. p. 252. ISBN 978-1-58112-889-5.
  41. ^ Kruta, Venceslas; et al. (1991). The Celts. Thames and Hudson. pp. 95–102.
  42. ^ Paul Graves-Brown, Siân Jones, Clive Gamble, Cultural identity and archaeology: the construction of European communities, pp. 242–244. Routledge. 1996. ISBN 978-0-415-10676-4. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  43. ^ Carl McColman, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Celtic Wisdom. Alpha Books. 2003. pp. 31–34. ISBN 978-0-02-864417-2. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  44. ^ Monaghan, Patricia (2008). The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore. Facts on File Inc. ISBN 978-0-8160-7556-0.
  45. ^ Chadwick, Nora (1970). The Celts with an introductory chapter by J.X.W.P. Corcoran. Penguin Books. p. 81.
  46. ^ "Celtic language Branch - Origins & Classification - MustGo". MustGo.com. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  47. ^ John T. Koch (2006). Celtic culture : a historical encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp. 34, 365–366, 529, 973, 1053. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0. OCLC 62381207.
  48. ^ Chadwick, Nora (1970). The Celts. p. 30.
  49. ^ Kruta, Venceslas (1991). The Celts. Thames and Hudson. pp. 89–102.
  50. ^ Stifter, David (2008). Old Celtic Languages - Addenda. p. 25.
  51. ^ a b c Koch, John (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 386.
  52. ^ Oppenheimer, Stephen (2007). The Origins of the British. Robinson. pp. 21–56.
  53. ^ Myles Dillon and Nora Kershaw Chadwick, The Celtic Realms, 1967, 18–19
  54. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2010). Celtic from the West Chapter 1: Celticization from the West – The Contribution of Archaeology. Oxbow Books, Oxford, UK. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-84217-410-4.
  55. ^ 2001 p 95. La lengua de los Celtas y otros pueblos indoeuropeos de la península ibérica. In Almagro-Gorbea, M., Mariné, M. and Álvarez-Sanchís, J.R. (eds) Celtas y Vettones, pp. 115–21. Ávila: Diputación Provincial de Ávila.
  56. ^ Lorrio and Ruiz Zapatero, Alberto J. and Gonzalo (2005). . E-Keltoi. 6: The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula: 167–254. Archived from the original on 24 June 2011. Retrieved 12 August 2010.
  57. ^ Koch, John (2009). "Tartessian: Celtic from the Southwest at the Dawn of History in Acta Palaeohispanica X Palaeohispanica 9" (PDF). Palaeohispánica: Revista Sobre Lenguas y Culturas de la Hispania Antigua. Palaeohispanica: 339–51. ISSN 1578-5386. (PDF) from the original on 23 June 2010. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  58. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2008). A Race Apart: Insularity and Connectivity in Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 75. The Prehistoric Society. pp. 55–64 [61].
  59. ^ Sims-Williams, Patrick (2 April 2020). "An Alternative to 'Celtic from the East' and 'Celtic from the West'". Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 30 (3): 511–529. doi:10.1017/s0959774320000098. ISSN 0959-7743. S2CID 216484936.
  60. ^ Hoz, J. de (28 February 2019), "Method and methods", Palaeohispanic Languages and Epigraphies, Oxford University Press, pp. 1–24, doi:10.1093/oso/9780198790822.003.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-879082-2, retrieved 29 May 2021
  61. ^ e.g. Patrick Sims-Williams, Ancient Celtic Placenames in Europe and Asia Minor, Publications of the Philological Society, No. 39 (2006); Bethany Fox, 'The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland', The Heroic Age, 10 (2007), "Fox—The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland". Archived from the original on 11 January 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2018. (also available at Fox: P-Celtic Place-Names).[permanent dead link] See also List of Celtic place names in Portugal.
  62. ^ International Journal of Modern Anthropology Int. J. Mod. Anthrop. (2017) 10: 50–72 HLA Genes in Atlantic Celtic populations: Are Celts Iberians? Available online at: www.ata.org.tn
  63. ^ Olalde, I; et al. (May 2017). "The Beaker Phenomenon and the Genomic Transformation of Northwest Europe". bioRxiv 10.1101/135962.
  64. ^ Novembre, J; et al. (November 2008), "Genes mirror geography within Europe", Nature, 456 (7218): 98–101, Bibcode:2008Natur.456...98N, doi:10.1038/nature07331, PMC 2735096, PMID 18758442
  65. ^ Lao O, Lu TT, Nothnagel M, et al. (August 2008), "Correlation between genetic and geographic structure in Europe", Curr. Biol., 18 (16): 1241–48, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2008.07.049, PMID 18691889, S2CID 16945780
  66. ^ Murray, Tim (2007). Milestones in Archaeology: A Chronological Encyclopedia. p. 346. ISBN 978-1-57607-186-1. from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  67. ^ Jones, Andrew (2008). Prehistoric Europe: Theory and Practice. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-4051-2597-0. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  68. ^ Harding, Dennis William (2007). pg5. ISBN 978-0-415-35177-5. from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  69. ^ Celtic Culture: A-Celti. 2006. p. 386. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0. from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  70. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 August 2006. Retrieved 27 April 2006. The Celts in Iberia: An Overview – Alberto J. Lorrio (Universidad de Alicante) & Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero (Universidad Complutense de Madrid) – Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic studies, Volume 6: 167–254 The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula, 1 February 2005
  71. ^ *. Setting the Glauberg finds in context of shifting iconography, Royal Irish Academy (2004)
  72. ^ "Arrival of Celts - France - SpottingHistory.com". www.spottinghistory.com. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  73. ^ Dietler, Michael (2010). Archaeologies of Colonialism: Consumption, Entanglement, and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26551-6.
  74. ^ Dietler, Michael (2005). Consumption and Colonial Encounters in the Rhône Basin of France: A Study of Early Iron Age Political Economy. Monographies d'Archéologie Meditérranéenne, 21, CNRS, France. ISBN 978-2-912369-10-9.
  75. ^ "Vercingetorix | Gallic chieftain | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
  76. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2003). The Celts. Oxford Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-19-280418-1.
  77. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2003). The Celts. Oxford Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-19-280418-1.
  78. ^ Dietler, Michael (2010). Archaeologies of Colonialism: Consumption, Entanglement, and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France. University of California Press. pp. 75–94. ISBN 978-0-520-26551-6.
  79. ^ Chambers, William; Chambers, Robert (1842). Chambers's information for the people. p. 50. from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  80. ^ Brownson, Orestes Augustus (1859). Brownson's Quarterly Review. p. 505. from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  81. ^ Quintela, Marco V. García (2005). . E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. Center for Celtic Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. 6 (1). Archived from the original on 6 January 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  82. ^ Pedreño, Juan Carlos Olivares (2005). . E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6 (1). Archived from the original on 24 September 2009. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  83. ^ Prichard, James Cowles (1841). Researches into the Physical History of Mankind. from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  84. ^ Alberto J. Lorrio, Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero (2005). . E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 167–254. Archived from the original on 24 June 2011. Retrieved 12 August 2010.
  85. ^ Burillo Mozota, Francisco (2005). . E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 411–80. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  86. ^ a b Jordán Cólera, Carlos (2005). (PDF). E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 749–850. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2011. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  87. ^ Alberro, Manuel (2005). . E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 1005–35. Archived from the original on 17 April 2009. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  88. ^ Berrocal-Rangel, Luis (2005). "The Celts of the Southwestern Iberian Peninsula". E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 481–96. from the original on 16 April 2009.
  89. ^ R. Luján Martínez, Eugenio (2005). . E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 715–48. Archived from the original on 17 April 2009. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  90. ^ Coutinhas, José Manuel (2006), Aproximação à identidade etno-cultural dos Callaici Bracari, Porto.
  91. ^ Archeological site of Tavira Archived 23 February 2011 at Wikiwix, official website
  92. ^ John T. Koch, Tartessian: Celtic From the South-west at the Dawn of History, Celtic Studies Publications, (2009)
  93. ^ "Celtic City: Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg".
  94. ^ Kinder, Hermann (1988), Penguin Atlas of World History, vol. I, London: Penguin, p. 108.
  95. ^ Alfons Semler, Überlingen: Bilder aus der Geschichte einer kleinen Reichsstadt,Oberbadische Verlag, Singen, 1949, pp. 11–17, specifically 15.
  96. ^ Venceslas Kruta: La grande storia dei celti. La nascita, l'affermazione e la decadenza, Newton & Compton, 2003, ISBN 88-8289-851-2, 978-88-8289-851-9
  97. ^ "The Golasecca civilization is therefore the expression of the oldest Celts of Italy and included several groups that had the name of Insubres, Laevi, Lepontii, Oromobii (o Orumbovii)". (Raffaele C. De Marinis)
  98. ^ Vitali, Daniele (1996). "Manufatti in ferro di tipo La Tène in area italiana: le potenzialità non-sfruttate". Mélanges de l'École Française de Rome. Antiquité. 108 (2): 575–605. doi:10.3406/mefr.1996.1954.
  99. ^ Piggott, Stuart (2008). . Transaction Publishers. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-202-36186-4. Archived from the original on 19 February 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  100. ^ Schumacher, Stefan; Schulze-Thulin, Britta; aan de Wiel, Caroline (2004). Die keltischen Primärverben. Ein vergleichendes, etymologisches und morphologisches Lexikon (in German). Innsbruck: Institut für Sprachen und Kulturen der Universität Innsbruck. pp. 84–87. ISBN 978-3-85124-692-6.
  101. ^ Percivaldi, Elena (2003). I Celti: una civiltà europea. Giunti Editore. p. 82.
  102. ^ Kruta, Venceslas (1991). The Celts. Thames and Hudson. p. 55.
  103. ^ Stifter, David (2008). (PDF). p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  104. ^ Morandi 2004, pp. 702–03, n. 277
  105. ^ Peter Schrijver, "Gaulish", in Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe, ed. Glanville Price (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), 192.
  106. ^ Landolfi, Maurizio (2000). Adriatico tra 4. e 3. sec. a.C. L'Erma di Bretschneider. p. 43.
  107. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2003). The Celts – A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-19-280418-1.
  108. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Senones". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 647–648.
  109. ^ "Battle of Telamon, 225 BC". www.historyofwar.org. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
  110. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume 3, Part 2: The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and Other States of the Near East, from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries BC by John Boardman, I. E. S. Edwards, E. Sollberger, and N. G. L. Hammond, ISBN 0-521-22717-8, 1992, p. 600: "In the place of the vanished Treres and Tilataei we find the Serdi for whom there is no evidence before the first century BC. It has for long being supposed on convincing linguistic and archeological grounds that this tribe was of Celtic origin"
  111. ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), SE´RDICA". perseus.tufts.edu.
  112. ^ M. B. Shchukin, Rome and the Barbarians in Central and Eastern Europe: 1st Century B.C.–1st Century A.D.
  113. ^ Britannica
  114. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2003). The Celts: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-19-280418-1.
  115. ^ Cartwright, Mark (1 April 2021). "Ancient Celts". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  116. ^ Ball, Martin, Muller, Nicole (eds.) The Celtic Languages, Routledge, 2003, pp. 67ff.
  117. ^ Koch, J.T., (2006) Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 1-85109-440-7, p. 973.
  118. ^ Cunliffe, Barry, Koch, John T. (eds.), Celtic from the West, David Brown Co., 2012
  119. ^ Cunliffe, Barry, Facing the Ocean, Oxford University Press, 2004
  120. ^ a b c d e Patterson, N.; Isakov, M.; Booth, T. (2021). "Large-scale migration into Britain during the Middle to Late Bronze Age". Nature. 601 (7894): 588–594. Bibcode:2022Natur.601..588P. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-04287-4. PMC 8889665. PMID 34937049. S2CID 245509501.
  121. ^ "Ancient DNA study reveals large scale migrations into Bronze Age Britain". University of York. 22 December 2021. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  122. ^ "Ancient mass migration transformed Britons' DNA". BBC News. 22 December 2021. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  123. ^ Collis, John (2003). The Celts: Origins, Myths and Inventions. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. p. 125. ISBN 978-0-7524-2913-7.
  124. ^ Collis, John (2003). The Celts: Origins, Myths and Inventions. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-7524-2913-7.
  125. ^ Collis, John (2003). The Celts: Origins, Myths and Inventions. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-7524-2913-7.
  126. ^ Tristram, Hildegard L. C. (2007). The Celtic languages in contact. Potsdam University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-3-940793-07-2.
  127. ^ Ní Dhoireann, Kym. . Archived from the original on 14 May 2010.
  128. ^ "The Iron Age". Smr.herefordshire.gov.uk. 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  129. ^ "The Landscape of Britain". Michael Reed (1997). CRC Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-203-44411-6
  130. ^ a b c Simmons, Victoria (2006). John T. Koch (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. I. ABC-CLIO. p. 1615. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0.
  131. ^ "Holy Spirit - Gifts of the Holy Spirit". Sacramentum Mundi Online. doi:10.1163/2468-483x_smuo_com_001832. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  132. ^ Simmons, op. cit., citing Wendy Davies, Wales in the Early Middle Ages, 64.
  133. ^ Simmons, op. cit., at 1616, citing Kelly, Guide to Early Irish Law, 96.
  134. ^ Cunliffe, Barry W. (2018). The ancient Celts (2nd ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom. pp. 49, 192, 200. ISBN 978-0-19-875293-6. OCLC 1034807416.
  135. ^ Caesar, Julius (1982). The conquest of Gaul. S. A. Handford, Jane F. Gardner. London. pp. Section 3: 33. ISBN 0-14-044433-5. OCLC 21116188.
  136. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica
  137. ^ "BBC - Wales - Education - Iron Age Celts - Factfile". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  138. ^ Casparie, Wil A.; Moloney, Aonghus (January 1994). "Neolithic wooden trackways and bog hydrology". Journal of Paleolimnology. Springer Netherlands. 12 (1): 49–64. Bibcode:1994JPall..12...49C. doi:10.1007/BF00677989. S2CID 129780014.
  139. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2011. (369 KB) Beatrice Cauuet (Université Toulouse Le Mirail, UTAH, France)
  140. ^ J.A. MacCulloch (1911). The Religion of the Ancient Celts. Morrison & Gibb. pp. 4–5.
  141. ^ Evans, Thomas L. (2004). Quantified Identities: A Statistical Summary and Analysis of Iron Age Cemeteries in North-Eastern France 600–130 BC, BAR International Series 1226. Archaeopress. pp. 34–40, 158–88.
  142. ^ Evans, Thomas L. (2004). Quantified Identities: A Statistical Summary and Analysis of Iron Age Cemeteries in North-Eastern France 600–130 BC, BAR International Series 1226. Archaeopress. pp. 34–37.
  143. ^ Nelson, Sarah M. (2004). Gender in archaeology: analyzing power and prestige: Volume 9 of Gender and archaeology series. Rowman Altamira. p. 119.
  144. ^ Tierney, J. J. (1960). The Celtic Ethnography of Posidonius, PRIA 60 C. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. pp. 1.89–275.
  145. ^ Ellis, Peter Berresford (1998). The Celts: A History. Caroll & Graf. pp. 49–50. ISBN 978-0-7867-1211-3.
  146. ^ Rankin, David (1996). Celts and the Classical World. Routledge. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-415-15090-3.
  147. ^ Roman History Volume IX Books 71–80, Dio Cassiuss and Earnest Carry translator (1927), Loeb Classical Library ISBN 0-674-99196-6.
  148. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2018). The Ancient Celts. Oxford University Press. p. 236.
  149. ^ Bitel, Lisa M. (1996). Land of Women: Tales of Sex and Gender from Early Ireland. Cornell University Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-8014-8544-2.
  150. ^ Percy, William A. (1996). Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece. University of Illinois Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-252-06740-2. Retrieved 18 September 2009.; Rankin, H.D. Celts and the Classical World, p. 55
  151. ^ Rankin, p. 78
  152. ^ Rankin, p. 55
  153. ^ University College, Cork. Cáin Lánamna (Couples Law) . 2005."Cáin Lánamna". from the original on 16 December 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2007. Access date: 7 March 2006.
  154. ^ "Accueil" [Home] (in French). Site archéologique de Tintignac-Naves. from the original on 1 August 2015.
  155. ^ Lambert, Pierre-Yves (2003). La langue gauloise. Paris, Editions Errance. 2nd edition. ISBN 2-87772-224-4. Chapter 9 is titled "Un calandrier gaulois"
  156. ^ Lehoux, D. R. Parapegmata: or Astrology, Weather, and Calendars in the Ancient World, pp 63–65. PhD Dissertation, University of Toronto, 2000 23 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  157. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities p. 259 Excerpts from Book XIV
  158. ^ Ellis, Peter Berresford (1998). The Celts: A History. Caroll & Graf. pp. 60–63. ISBN 978-0-7867-1211-3.
  159. ^ "Noricus ensis," Horace, Odes, i. 16.9
  160. ^ Vagn Fabritius Buchwald, Iron and steel in ancient times, 2005, p. 127
  161. ^ Radomir Pleiner, in The Celtic Sword, Oxford: Clarendon Press (1993), p. 159.
  162. ^ Kevin F. Kiley (2013). Uniforms of the Roman world.[full citation needed]
  163. ^ Polybius, Histories II.28
  164. ^ Livy, History XXII.46 and XXXVIII.21
  165. ^ a b c d e Koch, John (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 897–898.
  166. ^ Paul Jacobsthal Early Celtic Art
  167. ^ Salma Ghezal, Elsa Ciesielski, Benjamin Girard, Aurélien Creuzieux, Peter Gosnell, Carole Mathe, Cathy Vieillescazes, Réjane Roure (2019), "Embalmed heads of the Celtic Iron Age in the south of France", Journal of Archaeological Science, Volume 101, pp.181-188, doi:10.1016/j.jas.2018.09.011.
  168. ^ "The Gauls really did embalm the severed heads of enemies, research shows". The Guardian. 7 November 2018.
  169. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (1997). The Ancient Celts. Oxford, UK; New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-19-815010-7.
  170. ^ a b Davidson, Hilda Ellis (1988). Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe: Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions. Syracuse University Press. pp. 72–75.
  171. ^ Egeler, Matthias (2013). Celtic Influences in Germanic Religion. Utz. p. 112.
  172. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cunliffe, Barry (2018) [1997]. "Chapter 11: Religious systems". The Ancient Celts (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 275–277, 286, 291–296.
  173. ^ Ross, Anne (1986). The Pagan Celts. London: B.T. Batsford. p. 103.
  174. ^ a b c Green, Miranda (2012). "Chapter 25: The Gods and the supernatural", The Celtic World. Routledge. pp.465–485
  175. ^ a b c d e Koch, John (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 1488–1491.
  176. ^ a b Sjoestedt, Marie-Louise (originally published in French, 1940, reissued 1982). Gods and Heroes of the Celts. Translated by Myles Dillon, Turtle Island Foundation ISBN 0-913666-52-1, pp. 16, 24–46.
  177. ^ a b Inse Jones, Prudence, and Nigel Pennick. History of pagan Europe. London: Routledge, 1995. Print.
  178. ^ Koch (2006), p.850
  179. ^ Sjoestedt (1982) pp. xxvi–xix.
  180. ^ Green, Miranda (2002). Animals in Celtic Life and Myth. Routledge. pp. 94–96.
  181. ^ Koch, John (2012). The Celts: History, Life, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. pp. 687–690. ISBN 978-1598849646.
  182. ^ "'It's upset a lot of people': outrage after tidy-up of Scottish sacred well". The Guardian. 30 January 2022.
  183. ^ Koch, John (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 1326.
  184. ^ Sjoestedt (1940) pp. xiv–xvi.
  185. ^ Koch, John (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 1671.
  186. ^ a b c Fischer et al. 2019, pp. 4–6.
  187. ^ a b Schiffels et al. 2016, p. 3, Table 1.
  188. ^ a b Martiniano et al. 2018, p. 3, Table 1.
  189. ^ Fischer et al. 2018, pp. 1, 14–15.
  190. ^ Brunel et al. 2020, pp. 5–6.
  191. ^ a b c Fischer et al. 2022.
  192. ^ Fischer et al. 2019, pp. 1, 4–6, 14–15.
  193. ^ a b Fischer et al. 2018, p. 7.
  194. ^ Fischer et al. 2022, pp. 5–6.
  195. ^ Olalde et al. 2019, p. 3.
  196. ^ Olalde et al. 2019, Supplementary Tables, Table 4, Row 91.
  197. ^ Fischer et al. 2018, p. 1.
  198. ^ Fischer et al. 2022, p. 8.
  199. ^ Martiniano et al. 2018, pp. 1.
  200. ^ Fischer et al. 2018, pp. 14–15.
  201. ^ Fischer et al. 2022, p. 4.

Sources

External links

Geography

  • An interactive map showing the lands of the Celts between 800 BC and 305 AD.
  • Map of Celtic lands

Organisations

  • newworldcelts.org

celts, this, article, about, ancient, medieval, peoples, europe, present, modern, other, uses, celt, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsource. This article is about the ancient and medieval peoples of Europe For Celts of the present day see Celts modern For other uses see Celt disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Celts news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Celts k ɛ l t s see pronunciation for different usages or Celtic peoples ˈ k ɛ l t ɪ k were a collection of Indo European peoples 1 in Europe and Anatolia identified by their use of Celtic languages and other cultural similarities 2 3 4 5 Historical Celtic groups included the Gauls the Celtiberians and Gallaeci 6 7 of Iberia the Britons and Gaels of Britain and Ireland the Boii and the Galatians The relation between ethnicity language and culture in the Celtic world is unclear and debated 8 for example over the ways in which the Iron Age people of Britain and Ireland should be called Celts 5 8 9 10 In current scholarship Celt primarily refers to speakers of Celtic languages rather than to a single ethnic group 11 Distribution of Celtic peoples over time in the traditional view Core Hallstatt territory by the sixth century BC Greatest Celtic expansion by 275 BC Lusitanian area of Iberia where Celtic presence is uncertain Areas in which Celtic languages were spoken throughout the Middle Ages Areas where Celtic languages remain widely spoken today The Dying Gaul an ancient Roman statue The La Tene style ceremonial Agris Helmet 350 BC Angouleme city Museum in France The history of pre Celtic Europe and Celtic origins is debated The traditional Celtic from the East theory says the proto Celtic language arose in the late Bronze Age Urnfield culture of central Europe named after grave sites in southern Germany 12 13 which flourished from around 1200 BC 14 This theory links the Celts with the Iron Age Hallstatt culture which followed it c 1200 500 BC named for the rich grave finds in Hallstatt Austria 14 15 and with the following La Tene culture c 450 BC onward named after the La Tene site in Switzerland It proposes that Celtic culture spread westward and southward from these areas by diffusion or migration 16 A newer theory Celtic from the West suggests proto Celtic arose earlier was a lingua franca in the Atlantic Bronze Age coastal zone and spread eastward 17 Another newer theory Celtic from the Centre suggests proto Celtic arose between these two zones in Bronze Age Gaul then spread in various directions 11 After the Celtic settlement of Southeast Europe in the 3rd century BC Celtic culture reached as far east as central Anatolia Turkey The earliest undisputed examples of Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions from the 6th century BC 18 Continental Celtic languages are attested almost exclusively through inscriptions and place names Insular Celtic languages are attested from the 4th century AD in Ogham inscriptions though they were clearly being spoken much earlier Celtic literary tradition begins with Old Irish texts around the 8th century AD Elements of Celtic mythology are recorded in early Irish and early Welsh literature Most written evidence of the early Celts comes from Greco Roman writers who often grouped the Celts as barbarian tribes They followed an ancient Celtic religion overseen by druids The Celts were often in conflict with the Romans such as in the Roman Gallic wars the Celtiberian Wars the conquest of Gaul and conquest of Britain By the 1st century AD most Celtic territories had become part of the Roman Empire By c 500 due to Romanisation and the migration of Germanic tribes Celtic culture had mostly become restricted to Ireland western and northern Britain and Brittany Between the 5th and 8th centuries the Celtic speaking communities in these Atlantic regions emerged as a reasonably cohesive cultural entity They had a common linguistic religious and artistic heritage that distinguished them from surrounding cultures 19 Insular Celtic culture diversified into that of the Gaels Irish Scots and Manx and the Celtic Britons Welsh Cornish and Bretons of the medieval and modern periods 2 20 21 A modern Celtic identity 22 was constructed as part of the Romanticist Celtic Revival in Britain Ireland and other European territories such as Galicia 23 Today Irish Scottish Gaelic Welsh and Breton are still spoken in parts of their former territories while Cornish and Manx are undergoing a revival Contents 1 Names and terminology 1 1 Ancient 1 2 Modern 2 Origins 2 1 Urnfield Hallstatt theory 2 2 Celtic from the West theory 2 3 Celtic from the Centre theory 2 4 Linguistic evidence 2 5 Genetic evidence 2 6 Archaeological evidence 2 7 Historical evidence 3 Distribution 3 1 Continental 3 1 1 Gaul 3 1 2 Iberia 3 1 3 Germany Alps and Italy 3 1 4 Expansion east and south 3 2 Insular 4 Romanisation 5 Society 5 1 Clothing 5 2 Trade and coinage 5 3 Gender and sexual norms 5 4 Celtic art 5 5 Gallic calendar 6 Warfare and weapons 6 1 Head hunting 7 Religion and mythology 7 1 Ancient Celtic religion 7 2 Insular Celtic mythology 7 3 Roman influence 7 4 Celtic Christianity 8 Genetics 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksNames and terminology Celto Latin stele from Galicia 2nd century referring to CELTICA SUPERTAM arica Main article Names of the Celts Ancient The first recorded use of the name Celts as Keltoi Keltoi in Ancient Greek was by Greek geographer Hecataeus of Miletus in 517 BC 24 when writing about a people living near Massilia modern Marseille southern Gaul 25 In the fifth century BC Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the source of the Danube and in the far west of Europe 26 The etymology of Keltoi is unclear Possible roots include Indo European kʲel to hide seen also in Old Irish ceilid and Modern Welsh celu kʲel to heat or kel to impel 27 It may come from the Celtic language Linguist Kim McCone supports this view and notes that Celt is found in the names of several ancient Gauls such as Celtillus father of Vercingetorix He suggests it meant the people or descendants of the hidden one noting the Gauls claimed descent from an underworld god according to Commentarii de Bello Gallico and linking it with the Germanic Hel 28 Others view it as a name coined by Greeks among them linguist Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel who suggests it meant the tall ones 29 In the first century BC Roman leader Julius Caesar reported that the Gauls called themselves Celts Latin Celtae in their own tongue 30 Thus whether it was given to them by others or not it was used by the Celts themselves Greek geographer Strabo writing about Gaul towards the end of the first century BC refers to the race which is now called both Gallic and Galatic though he also uses Celtica as another name for Gaul He reports Celtic peoples in Iberia too calling them Celtiberi and Celtici 31 Pliny the Elder noted the use of Celtici in Lusitania as a tribal surname 32 which epigraphic findings have confirmed 33 34 A Latin name for the Gauls Galli pl may come from a Celtic ethnic name perhaps borrowed into Latin during the Celtic expansion into Italy from the early fifth century BC Its root may be Proto Celtic galno meaning power strength whence Old Irish gal boldness ferocity Welsh gallu to be able power The Greek name Galatai Galatai Latinized Galatae most likely has the same origin referring to the Gauls who invaded southeast Europe and settled in Galatia 35 The suffix atai might be a Greek inflection 36 Linguist Kim McCone suggests it comes from Proto Celtic galatis ferocious furious and was not originally an ethnic name but a name for young warrior bands He says If the Gauls initial impact on the Mediterranean world was primarily a military one typically involving fierce young galatis it would have been natural for the Greeks to apply this name for the type of Keltoi that they usually encountered 28 Because Classical writers did not call the inhabitants of Britain and Ireland Keltoi Keltoi or Celtae 5 8 9 some scholars prefer not to use the term for the Iron Age inhabitants of those islands 5 8 9 10 However they spoke Celtic languages shared other cultural traits and Roman historian Tacitus says the Britons resembled the Gauls in customs and religion 11 Modern For at least 1 000 years the name Celt was not used at all and nobody called themselves Celts or Celtic until from about 1700 after the word Celtic was rediscovered in classical texts it was applied for the first time to the distinctive culture history traditions language of the modern Celtic nations Ireland Scotland Wales Cornwall Brittany and the Isle of Man 37 Celt is a modern English word first attested in 1707 in the writing of Edward Lhuyd whose work along with that of other late 17th century scholars brought academic attention to the languages and history of the early Celtic inhabitants of Great Britain 38 The English words Gaul Gauls pl and Gaulish first recorded in the 16 17th centuries come from French Gaule and Gaulois a borrowing from Frankish Walholant Roman land see Gaul Name the root of which is Proto Germanic walha foreigner Roman Celt whence the English word Welsh Old English waelisċ Proto Germanic walha comes from the name of the Volcae 39 a Celtic tribe who lived first in southern Germany and central Europe then migrated to Gaul 40 This means that English Gaul despite its superficial similarity is not actually derived from Latin Gallia which should have produced Jaille in French though it does refer to the same ancient region citation needed Celtic refers to a language family and more generally means of the Celts or in the style of the Celts Several archaeological cultures are considered Celtic based on unique sets of artefacts The link between language and artefact is aided by the presence of inscriptions 41 The modern idea of a Celtic cultural identity or Celticity focuses on similarities among languages works of art and classical texts 42 and sometimes also among material artefacts social organisation homeland and mythology 43 Earlier theories held that these similarities suggest a common racial origin for the various Celtic peoples but more recent theories hold that they reflect a common cultural and linguistic heritage more than a genetic one Celtic cultures seem to have been diverse with the use of a Celtic language being the main thing they had in common 5 Today the term Celtic generally refers to the languages and cultures of Ireland Scotland Wales Cornwall the Isle of Man and Brittany also called the Celtic nations These are the regions where Celtic languages are still spoken to some extent The four are Irish Scottish Gaelic Welsh and Breton plus two recent revivals Cornish a Brittonic language and Manx a Goidelic language There are also attempts to reconstruct Cumbric a Brittonic language of northern Britain Celtic regions of mainland Europe are those whose residents claim a Celtic heritage but where no Celtic language survives these include western Iberia i e Portugal and north central Spain Galicia Asturias Cantabria Castile and Leon Extremadura 44 Continental Celts are the Celtic speaking people of mainland Europe and Insular Celts are the Celtic speaking people of the British and Irish islands and their descendants The Celts of Brittany derive their language from migrating Insular Celts from Britain and so are grouped accordingly 45 OriginsMain articles Pre Celtic and Celticization The Celtic languages are a branch of the Indo European languages By the time Celts are first mentioned in written records around 400 BC they were already split into several language groups and spread over much of western mainland Europe the Iberian Peninsula Ireland and Britain The languages developed into Celtiberian Goidelic and Brittonic branches among others 46 47 Urnfield Hallstatt theory Overview of the Hallstatt and La Tene cultures The core Hallstatt territory HaC 800 BC is shown in solid yellow The eventual area of Hallstatt influence by 500 BC HaD in light yellow The core territory of the La Tene culture 450 BC in solid green The eventual area of La Tene influence by 250 BC in light green The territories of some major Celtic tribes of the late La Tene period are labelled The mainstream view during most of the twentieth century is that the Celts and the proto Celtic language arose out of the Urnfield culture of central Europe around 1000 BC spreading westward and southward over the following few hundred years 14 48 49 50 The Urnfield culture was preeminent in central Europe during the late Bronze Age circa 1200 BC to 700 BC The spread of iron working led to the Hallstatt culture c 800 to 500 BC developing out of the Urnfield culture in a wide region north of the Alps The Hallstatt culture developed into the La Tene culture from about 450 BC which came to be identified with Celtic art citation needed In 1846 Johann Georg Ramsauer unearthed an ancient grave field with distinctive grave goods at Hallstatt Austria Because the burials dated to roughly the time when Celts are mentioned near the Danube by Herodotus Ramsauer concluded that the graves were Celtic 51 Similar sites and artifacts were found over a wide area which were named the Hallstatt culture In 1857 the archaeological site of La Tene was discovered in Switzerland 51 The huge collection of artifacts had a distinctive style Artifacts of this La Tene style were found elsewhere in Europe particularly in places where people called Celts were known to have lived and early Celtic languages are attested As a result these items quickly became associated with the Celts so much so that by the 1870s scholars began to regard finds of the La Tene as the archaeological expression of the Celts 51 This cultural network was overrun by the Roman Empire though traces of La Tene style were still seen in Gallo Roman artifacts In Britain and Ireland the La Tene style survived precariously to re emerge in Insular art citation needed The Urnfield Hallstatt theory began to be challenged in the latter 20th century when it was accepted that the oldest known Celtic language inscriptions were those of Lepontic from the 6th century BC and Celtiberian from the 2nd century BC These were found in northern Italy and Iberia neither of which were part of the Hallstatt nor La Tene cultures at the time 11 The Urnfield Hallstatt theory was partly based on ancient Greco Roman writings such as the Histories of Herodotus which placed the Celts at the source of the Danube However Stephen Oppenheimer shows that Herodotus seemed to believe the Danube rose near the Pyrenees which would place the Ancient Celts in a region which is more in agreement with later classical writers and historians i e in Gaul and Iberia 52 The theory was also partly based on the abundance of inscriptions bearing Celtic personal names in the Eastern Hallstatt region Noricum However Patrick Sims Williams notes that these date to the later Roman era and says they suggest relatively late settlement by a Celtic speaking elite 11 Celtic from the West theory A map of Europe in the Bronze Age showing the Atlantic network in red In the late 20th century the Urnfield Hallstatt theory began to fall out of favour with some scholars which was influenced by new archaeological finds Celtic began to refer primarily to speakers of Celtic languages rather than to a single culture or ethnic group 11 A new theory suggested that Celtic languages arose earlier along the Atlantic coast including Britain Ireland Armorica and Iberia long before evidence of Celtic culture is found in archaeology Myles Dillon and Nora Kershaw Chadwick argued that Celtic settlement of the British Isles might date to the Bell Beaker culture of the Copper and Bronze Age from c 2750 BC 53 54 Martin Almagro Gorbea 2001 also proposed that Celtic arose in the 3rd millennium BC suggesting that the spread of the Bell Beaker culture explained the wide dispersion of the Celts throughout western Europe as well as the variability of the Celtic peoples 55 Using a multidisciplinary approach Alberto J Lorrio and Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero reviewed and built on Almagro Gorbea s work to present a model for the origin of Celtic archaeological groups in Iberia and proposing a rethinking of the meaning of Celtic 56 John T Koch 57 and Barry Cunliffe 58 have developed this Celtic from the West theory It proposes that the proto Celtic language arose along the Atlantic coast and was the lingua franca of the Atlantic Bronze Age cultural network later spreading inland and eastward 11 More recently Cunliffe proposes that proto Celtic had arisen in the Atlantic zone even earlier by 3000 BC and spread eastwards with the Bell Beaker culture over the following millennium His theory is partly based on glottochronology the spread of ancient Celtic looking placenames and thesis that the Tartessian language was Celtic 11 However the proposal that Tartessian was Celtic is widely rejected by linguists many of whom regard it as unclassified 59 60 Celtic from the Centre theory Celticist Patrick Sims Williams 2020 notes that in current scholarship Celt is primarily a linguistic label In his Celtic from the Centre theory he argues that the proto Celtic language did not originate in central Europe nor the Atlantic but in between these two regions He suggests that it emerged as a distinct Indo European dialect around the second millennium BC probably somewhere in Gaul centered in modern France whence it spread in various directions and at various speeds in the first millennium BC Sims Williams says this avoids the problematic idea that Celtic was spoken over a vast area for a very long time yet somehow avoided major dialectal splits and it keeps Celtic fairly close to Italy which suits the view that Italic and Celtic were in some way linked 11 Linguistic evidence Main article Proto Celtic language Further information Celtic toponymy The Proto Celtic language is usually dated to the Late Bronze Age 14 The earliest records of a Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions of Cisalpine Gaul Northern Italy the oldest of which pre date the La Tene period Other early inscriptions appearing from the early La Tene period in the area of Massilia are in Gaulish which was written in the Greek alphabet until the Roman conquest Celtiberian inscriptions using their own Iberian script appear later after about 200 BC Evidence of Insular Celtic is available only from about 400 AD in the form of Primitive Irish Ogham inscriptions citation needed Besides epigraphic evidence an important source of information on early Celtic is toponymy place names 61 Genetic evidence See also Corded Ware culture Genetic studies Arnaiz Villena et al 2017 demonstrated that Celtic related populations of the European Atlantic Orkney Islands Scottish Irish British Bretons Basques Galicians shared a common HLA system clarification needed 62 Other genetic research does not support the notion of a significant genetic link between these populations beyond the fact that they are all West Europeans Early European Farmers did settle Britain and all of Northern Europe in the Neolithic however recent genetics research has found that between 2400 and 2000 BC over 90 of British DNA was overturned by European Steppe Herders in a migration that brought large amounts of Steppe DNA including the R1b haplogroup to western Europe 63 Modern autosomal genetic clustering is testament to this fact as both modern and Iron Age British and Irish samples cluster genetically very closely with other North Europeans and less so with Galicians Basques or those from the south of France 64 65 Archaeological evidence Further information Iron Age Europe Reconstruction of a late La Tene period settlement in Altburg near Bundenbach Germany first century BC Reconstruction of a late La Tene period settlement in Havranok Slovakia second first century BC The concept that the Hallstatt and La Tene cultures could be seen not just as chronological periods but as Culture Groups entities composed of people of the same ethnicity and language had started to grow by the end of the 19th century At the beginning of the 20th century the belief that these Culture Groups could be thought of in racial or ethnic terms was held by Gordon Childe whose theory was influenced by the writings of Gustaf Kossinna 66 As the 20th century progressed the ethnic interpretation of La Tene culture became more strongly rooted and any findings of La Tene culture and flat inhumation cemeteries were linked to the Celts and the Celtic language 67 In various clarification needed academic disciplines the Celts were considered a Central European Iron Age phenomenon through the cultures of Hallstatt and La Tene However archaeological finds from the Halstatt and La Tene culture were rare in Iberia southwestern France northern and western Britain southern Ireland and Galatia 68 69 and did not provide enough evidence for a culture like that of Central Europe It is equally difficult to maintain that the origin of the Iberian Celts can be linked to the preceding Urnfield culture This has resulted in a newer theory that introduces a proto Celtic substratum and a process of Celticisation having its initial roots in the Bronze Age Bell Beaker culture 70 The La Tene culture developed and flourished during the late Iron Age from 450 BC to the Roman conquest in the 1st century BC in eastern France Switzerland Austria southwest Germany the Czech Republic Slovakia and Hungary It developed out of the Hallstatt culture without any definite cultural break under the impetus of considerable Mediterranean influence from Greek and later Etruscan civilisations A shift of settlement centres took place in the 4th century The western La Tene culture corresponds to historical Celtic Gaul Whether this means that the whole of La Tene culture can be attributed to a unified Celtic people is difficult to assess archaeologists have repeatedly concluded that language and material culture do not necessarily run parallel Frey notes that in the 5th century burial customs in the Celtic world were not uniform rather localised groups had their own beliefs which in consequence also gave rise to distinct artistic expressions 71 Thus while the La Tene culture is certainly associated with the Gauls the presence of La Tene artefacts may be due to cultural contact and does not imply the permanent presence of Celtic speakers citation needed Historical evidence The world according to Herodotus The Greek historian Ephorus of Cyme in Asia Minor writing in the 4th century BC believed the Celts came from the islands off the mouth of the Rhine and were driven from their homes by the frequency of wars and the violent rising of the sea Polybius published a history of Rome about 150 BC in which he describes the Gauls of Italy and their conflict with Rome Pausanias in the 2nd century AD says that the Gauls originally called Celts live on the remotest region of Europe on the coast of an enormous tidal sea Posidonius described the southern Gauls about 100 BC Though his original work is lost later writers such as Strabo used it The latter writing in the early 1st century AD deals with Britain and Gaul as well as Hispania Italy and Galatia Caesar wrote extensively about his Gallic Wars in 58 51 BC Diodorus Siculus wrote about the Celts of Gaul and Britain in his 1st century history citation needed Diodorus Siculus and Strabo both suggest that the heartland of the people they call Celts was in southern Gaul The former says that the Gauls were to the north of the Celts but that the Romans referred to both as Gauls linguistically the Gauls were certainly Celts Before the discoveries at Hallstatt and La Tene it was generally considered that the Celtic heartland was southern Gaul see Encyclopaedia Britannica for 1813 citation needed DistributionContinental Gaul A 4th century BC gold plated disk from Gaul Main article Gauls The Romans knew the Celts then living in present day France as Gauls The territory of these peoples probably included the Low Countries the Alps and present day northern Italy Julius Caesar in his Gallic Wars described the 1st century BC descendants of those Gauls citation needed Eastern Gaul became the centre of the western La Tene culture In later Iron Age Gaul the social organisation resembled that of the Romans with large towns From the 3rd century BC the Gauls adopted coinage Texts with Greek characters from southern Gaul have survived from the 2nd century BC 72 Greek traders founded Massalia about 600 BC with some objects mostly drinking ceramic vessels being traded up the Rhone valley But trade became disrupted soon after 500 BC and re oriented over the Alps to the Po valley in the Italian peninsula The Romans arrived in the Rhone valley in the 2nd century BC and encountered a mostly Celtic speaking Gaul Rome wanted land communications with its Iberian provinces and fought a major battle with the Saluvii at Entremont in 124 123 BC Gradually Roman control extended and the Roman province of Gallia Transalpina developed along the Mediterranean coast 73 74 The Romans knew the remainder of Gaul as Gallia Comata Hairy Gaul citation needed In 58 BC the Helvetii planned to migrate westward but Julius Caesar forced them back He then became involved in fighting the various tribes in Gaul and by 55 BC had overrun most of Gaul In 52 BC Vercingetorix led a revolt against Roman occupation but was defeated at the Battle of Alesia and surrendered 75 Following the Gallic Wars of 58 51 BC Caesar s Celtica formed the main part of Roman Gaul becoming the province of Gallia Lugdunensis This territory of the Celtic tribes was bounded on the south by the Garonne and on the north by the Seine and the Marne 76 The Romans attached large swathes of this region to neighbouring provinces Belgica and Aquitania particularly under Augustus citation needed Place and personal name analysis and inscriptions suggest that Gaulish was spoken over most of what is now France 77 78 Iberia Main language areas in Iberia showing Celtic languages in beige c 300 BC Main articles Celtiberians and Gallaeci See also Castro culture Pre Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula Prehistoric Iberia Hispania Lusitania Gallaecia Celtici and Vettones Until the end of the 19th century traditional scholarship dealing with the Celts did acknowledge their presence in the Iberian Peninsula 79 80 as a material culture relatable to the Hallstatt and La Tene cultures However since according to the definition of the Iron Age in the 19th century Celtic populations were supposedly rare in Iberia and did not provide a cultural scenario that could easily be linked to that of Central Europe the presence of Celtic culture in that region was generally not fully recognised Modern scholarship however has clearly proven that Celtic presence and influences were most substantial in what is today Spain and Portugal with perhaps the highest settlement saturation in Western Europe particularly in the central western and northern regions 81 82 In addition to Gauls infiltrating from the north of the Pyrenees the Roman and Greek sources mention Celtic populations in three parts of the Iberian Peninsula the eastern part of the Meseta inhabited by the Celtiberians the southwest Celtici in modern day Alentejo and the northwest Gallaecia and Asturias 83 A modern scholarly review 84 found several archaeological groups of Celts in Spain The Celtiberian group in the Upper Douro Upper Tagus Upper Jalon area 85 Archaeological data suggest a continuity at least from the 6th century BC In this early period the Celtiberians inhabited in hill forts Castros Around the end of the 3rd century BC Celtiberians adopted more urban ways of life From the 2nd century BC they minted coins and wrote inscriptions using the Celtiberian script These inscriptions make the Celtiberian Language the only Hispano Celtic language classified as Celtic with unanimous agreement 86 In the late period before the Roman Conquest both archaeological evidence and Roman sources suggest that the Celtiberians were expanding into different areas in the Peninsula e g Celtic Baeturia The Vetton group in the western Meseta between the Tormes Douro and Tagus Rivers They were characterised by the production of Verracos sculptures of bulls and pigs carved in granite The Vaccean group in the central Douro valley They were mentioned by Roman sources already in the 220 BC Some of their funerary rituals suggest strong influences from their Celtiberian neighbours citation needed Triskelion and spirals on a Galician torc terminal Museum of Castro de Santa Tegra A Guarda The Castro Culture in northwestern Iberia modern day Galicia and Northern Portugal 87 Its high degree of continuity from the Late Bronze Age makes it difficult to support that the introduction of Celtic elements was due to the same process of Celticisation of the western Iberia from the nucleus area of Celtiberia Two typical elements are the sauna baths with monumental entrances and the Gallaecian Warriors stone sculptures built in the 1st century AD A large group of Latin inscriptions contain linguistic features that are clearly Celtic while others are similar to those found in the non Celtic Lusitanian language 86 The Astures and the Cantabri This area was romanised late as it was not conquered by Rome until the Cantabrian Wars of 29 19 BC Celts in the southwest in the area Strabo called Celtica 88 The origins of the Celtiberians might provide a key to understanding the Celticisation process in the rest of the Peninsula The process of Celticisation of the southwestern area of the peninsula by the Keltoi and of the northwestern area is however not a simple Celtiberian question Recent investigations about the Callaici 89 and Bracari 90 in northwestern Portugal are providing new approaches to understanding Celtic culture language art and religion in western Iberia 91 John T Koch of Aberystwyth University suggested that Tartessian inscriptions of the 8th century BC might be classified as Celtic This would mean that Tartessian is the earliest attested trace of Celtic by a margin of more than a century 92 Germany Alps and Italy Main articles Golasecca culture Lepontii and Cisalpine Gaul The Celtic city of Heuneburg by the Danube Germany c 600 BC the oldest city north of the Alps 93 Expansion of early Germanic tribes into Central Europe 94 helping press its previous Celts further south and southeast Peoples of Cisalpine Gaul during the 4th to 3rd centuries BC Further information History of the Alps The Canegrate culture represented the first migratory wave of the proto Celtic 95 96 population from the northwest part of the Alps that through the Alpine passes had already penetrated and settled in the western Po valley between Lake Maggiore and Lake Como Scamozzina culture It has also been proposed that a more ancient proto Celtic presence can be traced back to the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age when North Westwern Italy appears closely linked regarding the production of bronze artefacts including ornaments to the western groups of the Tumulus culture 97 La Tene cultural material appeared over a large area of mainland Italy 98 the southernmost example being the Celtic helmet from Canosa di Puglia 99 Italy is home to Lepontic the oldest attested Celtic language from the 6th century BC 100 Anciently spoken in Switzerland and in Northern Central Italy from the Alps to Umbria 101 102 103 104 According to the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises more than 760 Gaulish inscriptions have been found throughout present day France with the notable exception of Aquitaine and in Italy 105 106 which testifies the importance of Celtic heritage in the peninsula citation needed In 391 BC Celts who had their homes beyond the Alps streamed through the passes in great strength and seized the territory that lay between the Apennine Mountains and the Alps according to Diodorus Siculus The Po Valley and the rest of northern Italy known to the Romans as Cisalpine Gaul was inhabited by Celtic speakers who founded cities such as Milan 107 Later the Roman army was routed at the battle of Allia and Rome was sacked in 390 BC by the Senones 108 At the battle of Telamon in 225 BC a large Celtic army was trapped between two Roman forces and crushed 109 The defeat of the combined Samnite Celtic and Etruscan alliance by the Romans in the Third Samnite War sounded the beginning of the end of the Celtic domination in mainland Europe but it was not until 192 BC that the Roman armies conquered the last remaining independent Celtic kingdoms in Italy citation needed Expansion east and south A map of Celtic invasions and migrations in the Balkans in the 3rd centuy BC Main article Gallic invasion of the Balkans The Celts also expanded down the Danube river and its tributaries One of the most influential tribes the Scordisci established their capital at Singidunum present day Belgrade Serbia in the 3rd century BC The concentration of hill forts and cemeteries shows a dense population in the Tisza valley of modern day Vojvodina Serbia Hungary and into Ukraine Expansion into Romania was however blocked by the Dacians citation needed The Serdi were a Celtic tribe 110 inhabiting Thrace They were located around and founded Serdika Bulgarian Serdika Latin Ulpia Serdica Greek Sardῶn polis now Sofia in Bulgaria 111 which reflects their ethnonym They would have established themselves in this area during the Celtic migrations at the end of the 4th century BC though there is no evidence for their existence before the 1st century BC Serdi are among traditional tribal names reported into the Roman era 112 They were gradually Thracianized over the centuries but retained their Celtic character in material culture up to a late date when citation needed According to other sources they may have been simply of Thracian origin 113 according to others they may have become of mixed Thraco Celtic origin Further south Celts settled in Thrace Bulgaria which they ruled for over a century and Anatolia where they settled as the Galatians see also Gallic Invasion of Greece Despite their geographical isolation from the rest of the Celtic world the Galatians maintained their Celtic language for at least 700 years St Jerome who visited Ancyra modern day Ankara in 373 AD likened their language to that of the Treveri of northern Gaul citation needed For Venceslas Kruta Galatia in central Turkey was an area of dense Celtic settlement citation needed The Boii tribe gave their name to Bohemia Bologna and possibly Bavaria and Celtic artefacts and cemeteries have been discovered further east in what is now Poland and Slovakia A Celtic coin Biatec from Bratislava s mint was displayed on the old Slovak 5 crown coin citation needed As there is no archaeological evidence for large scale invasions in some of the other areas one current school of thought holds that Celtic language and culture spread to those areas by contact rather than invasion 114 However the Celtic invasions of Italy and the expedition in Greece and western Anatolia are well documented in Greek and Latin history citation needed There are records of Celtic mercenaries in Egypt serving the Ptolemies Thousands were employed in 283 246 BC and they were also in service around 186 BC They attempted to overthrow Ptolemy II 115 Insular Britain amp Ireland in the early mid 1st millennium AD before the founding of Anglo Saxon kingdoms Celtic Britons Picts Gaels Main article Insular Celts All living Celtic languages today belong to the Insular Celtic languages derived from the Celtic languages spoken in Iron Age Britain and Ireland 116 They separated into a Goidelic and a Brittonic branch early on By the time of the Roman conquest of Britain in the 1st century AD the Insular Celts were made up of the Celtic Britons the Gaels or Scoti and the Picts or Caledonians citation needed Linguists have debated whether a Celtic language came to the British Isles and then split or whether the two branches arrived separately The older view was that Celtic influence in the Isles was the result of successive migrations or invasions from the European mainland by diverse Celtic speaking peoples over several centuries accounting for the P Celtic vs Q Celtic isogloss This view has been challenged by the hypothesis that the islands Celtic languages form an Insular Celtic dialect group 117 In the 19th and 20th centuries scholars often dated the arrival of Celtic culture in Britain via an invasion model to the 6th century BC corresponding to archaeological evidence of Hallstatt influence and the appearance of chariot burials in what is now England Cunliffe and Koch propose in their newer Celtic from the West theory that Celtic languages reached the Isles earlier with the Bell Beaker culture c 2500 BC or even before this 118 119 More recently a major archaeogenetics study uncovered a migration into southern Britain in the Bronze Age from 1300 to 800 BC 120 The newcomers were genetically most similar to ancient individuals from Gaul 120 From 1000 BC their genetic marker swiftly spread through southern Britain 121 but not northern Britain 120 The authors see this as a plausible vector for the spread of early Celtic languages into Britain 120 There was much less immigration during the Iron Age so it is likely that Celtic reached Britain before then 120 Cunliffe suggests that a branch of Celtic was already spoken in Britain and the Bronze Age migration introduced the Brittonic branch 122 Like many Celtic peoples on the mainland the Insular Celts followed an Ancient Celtic religion overseen by druids Some of the southern British tribes had strong links with Gaul and Belgica and minted their own coins During the Roman occupation of Britain a Romano British culture emerged in the southeast The Britons and Picts in the north and the Gaels of Ireland remained outside the empire During the end of Roman rule in Britain in the 400s AD there was significant Anglo Saxon settlement of eastern and southern Britain and some Gaelic settlement of its western coast During this time some Britons migrated to the Armorican peninsula where their culture became dominant Meanwhile much of northern Britain Scotland became Gaelic By the 10th century AD the Insular Celtic peoples had diversified into the Brittonic speaking Welsh in Wales Cornish in Cornwall Bretons in Brittany and Cumbrians in the Old North and the Gaelic speaking Irish in Ireland Scots in Scotland and Manx on the Isle of Man citation needed Classical writers did not call the inhabitants of Britain and Ireland Celtae or Keltoi Keltoi 5 8 9 leading some scholars to question the use of the term Celt for the Iron Age inhabitants of those islands 5 8 9 10 The first historical account of the islands was by the Greek geographer Pytheas who sailed around what he called the Pretannikai nesoi the Pretannic isles around 310 306 BC 123 In general classical writers referred to the Britons as Pretannoi in Greek or Britanni in Latin 124 Strabo writing in Roman times distinguished between the Celts and Britons 125 However Roman historian Tacitus says the Britons resembled the Celts of Gaul in customs and religion 11 Romanisation A Gallo Roman sculpture of the Celtic god Cernunnos middle flanked by the Roman gods Apollo and Mercury Main articles Gallo Roman culture and Romano British culture Under Caesar the Romans conquered Celtic Gaul and from Claudius onward the Roman empire absorbed parts of Britain Roman local government of these regions closely mirrored pre Roman tribal boundaries and archaeological finds suggest native involvement in local government citation needed The native peoples under Roman rule became Romanised and keen to adopt Roman ways Celtic art had already incorporated classical influences and surviving Gallo Roman pieces interpret classical subjects or keep faith with old traditions despite a Roman overlay citation needed The Roman occupation of Gaul and to a lesser extent of Britain led to Roman Celtic syncretism In the case of the continental Celts this eventually resulted in a language shift to Vulgar Latin while the Insular Celts retained their language citation needed There was also considerable cultural influence exerted by Gaul on Rome particularly in military matters and horsemanship as the Gauls often served in the Roman cavalry The Romans adopted the Celtic cavalry sword the spatha and Epona the Celtic horse goddess 126 127 Society The Ludovisi Gaul Roman copy of a Hellenistic sculpture of a dying Celtic couple Palazzo Massimo alle Terme To the extent that sources are available they depict a pre Christian Iron Age Celtic social structure based formally on class and kingship although this may only have been a particular late phase of organisation in Celtic societies Patron client relationships similar to those of Roman society are also described by Caesar and others in the Gaul of the 1st century BC citation needed In the main the evidence is of tribes being led by kings although some argue that there is also evidence of oligarchical republican forms of government eventually emerging in areas which had close contact with Rome Most descriptions of Celtic societies portray them as being divided into three groups a warrior aristocracy an intellectual class including professions such as druid poet and jurist and everyone else In historical times the offices of high and low kings in Ireland and Scotland were filled by election under the system of tanistry which eventually came into conflict with the feudal principle of primogeniture in which succession goes to the first born son citation needed The reverse side of a British bronze mirror with spiral and trumpet motifs typical of La Tene Celtic art in Britain A 4th century BC Celtic gold ring from southern Germany decorated with human and rams heads Little is known of family structure among the Celts Patterns of settlement varied from decentralised to urban The popular stereotype of non urbanised societies settled in hillforts and duns 128 drawn from Britain and Ireland there are about 3 000 hill forts known in Britain 129 contrasts with the urban settlements present in the core Hallstatt and La Tene areas with the many significant oppida of Gaul late in the first millennium BC and with the towns of Gallia Cisalpina citation needed Slavery as practised by the Celts was very likely similar to the better documented practice in ancient Greece and Rome 130 Slaves were acquired from war raids and penal and debt servitude 130 Slavery was hereditary 131 though manumission was possible The Old Irish and Welsh words for slave cacht and caeth respectively are cognate with Latin captus captive suggesting that the slave trade was an early means of contact between Latin and Celtic societies 130 In the Middle Ages slavery was especially prevalent in the Celtic countries 132 Manumissions were discouraged by law and the word for female slave cumal was used as a general unit of value in Ireland 133 There are only very limited records from pre Christian times written in Celtic languages These are mostly inscriptions in the Roman and sometimes Greek alphabets The Ogham script an Early Medieval alphabet was mostly used in early Christian times in Ireland and Scotland but also in Wales and England and was only used for ceremonial purposes such as inscriptions on gravestones The available evidence is of a strong oral tradition such as that preserved by bards in Ireland and eventually recorded by monasteries Celtic art also produced a great deal of intricate and beautiful metalwork examples of which have been preserved by their distinctive burial rites 134 In some regards the Atlantic Celts were conservative for example they still used chariots in combat long after they had been reduced to ceremonial roles by the Greeks and Romans However despite being outdated Celtic chariot tactics were able to repel the invasions of Britain attempted by Julius Caesar 135 According to Diodorus Siculus The Gauls are tall of body with rippling muscles and white of skin and their hair is blond and not only naturally so for they also make it their practice by artificial means to increase the distinguishing colour which nature has given it For they are always washing their hair in limewater and they pull it back from the forehead to the nape of the neck with the result that their appearance is like that of Satyrs and Pans since the treatment of their hair makes it so heavy and coarse that it differs in no respect from the mane of horses Some of them shave the beard but others let it grow a little and the nobles shave their cheeks but they let the moustache grow until it covers the mouth Clothing Celtic costumes in Przeworsk culture third century BC La Tene period Archaeological Museum of KrakowDuring the later Iron Age the Gauls generally wore long sleeved shirts or tunics and long trousers called braccae by the Romans 136 Clothes were made of wool or linen with some silk being used by the rich Cloaks were worn in the winter Brooches 137 and armlets were used but the most famous item of jewellery was the torc a neck collar of metal sometimes gold The horned Waterloo Helmet in the British Museum which long set the standard for modern images of Celtic warriors is in fact a unique survival and may have been a piece for ceremonial rather than military wear citation needed Trade and coinage Archaeological evidence suggests that the pre Roman Celtic societies were linked to the network of overland trade routes that spanned Eurasia Archaeologists have discovered large prehistoric trackways crossing bogs in Ireland and Germany Due to their substantial nature these are believed to have been created for wheeled transport as part of an extensive roadway system that facilitated trade 138 The territory held by the Celts contained tin lead iron silver and gold 139 Celtic smiths and metalworkers created weapons and jewellery for international trade particularly with the Romans citation needed The myth that the Celtic monetary system consisted of wholly barter is a common one but is in part false The monetary system was complex and is still not understood much like the late Roman coinages and due to the absence of large numbers of coin items it is assumed that proto money was used This included bronze items made from the early La Tene period and onwards which were often in the shape of axeheads rings or bells Due to the large number of these present in some burials it is thought they had a relatively high monetary value and could be used for day to day purchases Low value coinages of potin a bronze alloy with high tin content were minted in most Celtic areas of the continent and in South East Britain prior to the Roman conquest of these lands Higher value coinages suitable for use in trade were minted in gold silver and high quality bronze Gold coinage was much more common than silver coinage despite being worth substantially more as while there were around 100 mines in Southern Britain and Central France silver was more rarely mined This was due partly to the relative sparsity of mines and the amount of effort needed for extraction compared to the profit gained As the Roman civilisation grew in importance and expanded its trade with the Celtic world silver and bronze coinage became more common This coincided with a major increase in gold production in Celtic areas to meet the Roman demand due to the high value Romans put on the metal The large number of gold mines in France is thought to be a major reason why Caesar invaded citation needed Gender and sexual norms Reconstruction of the dress and equipment of an Iron Age Celtic warrior from Biebertal Germany See also Ancient Celtic women Very few reliable sources exist regarding Celtic views on gender roles though some archaeological evidence suggests their views may have differed from those of the Greco Roman world which tended to be less egalitarian 140 141 Some Iron Age burials in northeastern Gaul suggest women may have had roles in warfare during the earlier La Tene period but the evidence is far from conclusive 142 Celtic individuals buried with both female jewellery and weaponry have been found such as the Vix Grave in northeastern Gaul and there are questions about the gender of some individuals buried with weaponry However it has been suggested that the weapons indicate high social rank rather than masculinity 143 Most written accounts of the Ancient Celts are from the Romans and Greeks though it is not clear how accurate these are Roman historians Ammianus Marcellinus and Tacitus mentioned Celtic women inciting participating in and leading battles 144 Plutarch reports that Celtic women acted as ambassadors to avoid a war among Celtic chiefdoms in the Po valley during the 4th century BC 145 Posidonius anthropological comments on the Celts had common themes primarily primitivism extreme ferocity cruel sacrificial practices and the strength and courage of their women 146 Cassius Dio suggests there was great sexual freedom among women in Celtic Britain a very witty remark is reported to have been made by the wife of Argentocoxus a Caledonian to Julia Augusta When the empress was jesting with her after the treaty about the free intercourse of her sex with men in Britain she replied We fulfill the demands of nature in a much better way than do you Roman women for we consort openly with the best men whereas you let yourselves be debauched in secret by the vilest Such was the retort of the British woman 147 Barry Cunliffe writes that such references are likely to be ill observed and meant to portray the Celts as outlandish barbarians 148 Historian Lisa Bitel argues the descriptions of Celtic women warriors are not credible She says some Roman and Greek writers wanted to show that the barbarian Celts lived in an upside down world and a standard ingredient in such a world was the manly warrior woman 149 The Greek philosopher Aristotle wrote in his Politics that the Celts of southeastern Europe approved of male homosexuality Greek historian Diodorus Siculus wrote in his Bibliotheca historica that although Gaulish women were beautiful the men had little to do with them and it was a custom for men to sleep on animal skins with two younger males He further claimed that the young men will offer themselves to strangers and are insulted if the offer is refused His claim was later repeated by Greco Roman writers Athenaeus and Ammianus 150 David Rankin in Celts and the Classical World suggests some of these claims refer to bonding rituals in warrior groups which required abstinence from women at certain times 151 and says it probably reflects the warlike character of early contacts between the Celts and the Greeks 152 Under Brehon Law which was written down in early Medieval Ireland after conversion to Christianity a woman had the right to divorce her husband and gain his property if he was unable to perform his marital duties due to impotence obesity homosexual inclination or preference for other women 153 failed verification Celtic art The Battersea Shield a ceremonial bronze shield dated 3rd 1st century BC is an example of La Tene Celtic art from Britain Main article Celtic art Celtic art is generally used by art historians to refer to art of the La Tene period across Europe while the Early Medieval art of Britain and Ireland that is what Celtic art evokes for much of the general public is called Insular art in art history Both styles absorbed considerable influences from non Celtic sources but retained a preference for geometrical decoration over figurative subjects which are often extremely stylised when they do appear narrative scenes only appear under outside influence Energetic circular forms triskeles and spirals are characteristic Much of the surviving material is in precious metal which no doubt gives a very unrepresentative picture but apart from Pictish stones and the Insular high crosses large monumental sculpture even with decorative carving is very rare possibly it was originally common in wood Celts were also able to create developed musical instruments such as the carnyces these famous war trumpets used before the battle to frighten the enemy as the best preserved found in Tintignac Gaul in 2004 and which were decorated with a boar head or a snake head 154 The interlace patterns that are often regarded as typical of Celtic art were characteristic of the whole of the British Isles a style referred to as Insular art or Hiberno Saxon art This artistic style incorporated elements of La Tene Late Roman and most importantly animal Style II of Germanic Migration Period art The style was taken up with great skill and enthusiasm by Celtic artists in metalwork and illuminated manuscripts Equally the forms used for the finest Insular art were all adopted from the Roman world Gospel books like the Book of Kells and Book of Lindisfarne chalices like the Ardagh Chalice and Derrynaflan Chalice and penannular brooches like the Tara Brooch and Roscrea Brooch These works are from the period of peak achievement of Insular art which lasted from the 7th to the 9th centuries before the Viking attacks sharply set back cultural life citation needed In contrast the less well known but often spectacular art of the richest earlier Continental Celts before they were conquered by the Romans often adopted elements of Roman Greek and other foreign styles and possibly used imported craftsmen to decorate objects that were distinctively Celtic After the Roman conquests some Celtic elements remained in popular art especially Ancient Roman pottery of which Gaul was actually the largest producer mostly in Italian styles but also producing work in local taste including figurines of deities and wares painted with animals and other subjects in highly formalised styles Roman Britain also took more interest in enamel than most of the Empire and its development of champleve technique was probably important to the later Medieval art of the whole of Europe of which the energy and freedom of Insular decoration was an important element Rising nationalism brought Celtic revivals from the 19th century citation needed Gallic calendar The Coligny calendar which was found in 1897 in Coligny Ain was engraved on a bronze tablet preserved in 73 fragments that originally was 1 48 metres 4 feet 10 inches wide and 0 9 metres 2 feet 11 inches high Lambert p 111 Based on the style of lettering and the accompanying objects it probably dates to the end of the 2nd century 155 It is written in Latin inscriptional capitals and is in Gaulish The restored tablet contains 16 vertical columns with 62 months distributed over 5 years citation needed French archaeologist J Monard speculated that it was recorded by druids wishing to preserve their tradition of timekeeping in a time when the Julian calendar was imposed throughout the Roman Empire However the general form of the calendar suggests the public peg calendars or parapegmata found throughout the Greek and Roman world 156 Warfare and weaponsMain articles Celtic warfare and Celtic sword Celtic Warrior Represented in the Braganza Brooch Hellenistic art 250 200 BC Tribal warfare appears to have been a regular feature of Celtic societies While epic literature depicts this as more of a sport focused on raids and hunting rather than organised territorial conquest the historical record is more of tribes using warfare to exert political control and harass rivals for economic advantage and in some instances to conquer territory citation needed The Celts were described by classical writers such as Strabo Livy Pausanias and Florus as fighting like wild beasts and as hordes Dionysius said that their manner of fighting being in large measure that of wild beasts and frenzied was an erratic procedure quite lacking in military science Thus at one moment they would raise their swords aloft and smite after the manner of wild boars throwing the whole weight of their bodies into the blow like hewers of wood or men digging with mattocks and again they would deliver crosswise blows aimed at no target as if they intended to cut to pieces the entire bodies of their adversaries protective armour and all 157 Such descriptions have been challenged by contemporary historians 158 Polybius 2 33 indicates that the principal Celtic weapon was a long bladed sword which was used for hacking edgewise rather than stabbing Celtic warriors are described by Polybius and Plutarch as frequently having to cease fighting in order to straighten their sword blades This claim has been questioned by some archaeologists who note that Noric steel steel produced in Celtic Noricum was famous in the Roman Empire period and was used to equip the Roman military 159 160 However Radomir Pleiner in The Celtic Sword 1993 argues that the metallographic evidence shows that Polybius was right up to a point as around one third of surviving swords from the period might well have behaved as he describes 161 In addition to these long bladed slashing swords spears and specialized javelins were also used 162 Polybius also asserts that certain of the Celts fought naked The appearance of these naked warriors was a terrifying spectacle for they were all men of splendid physique and in the prime of life 163 According to Livy this was also true of the Celts of Asia Minor 164 Head hunting Stone head from Msecke Zehrovice Czech Republic wearing a torc late La Tene culture 150 50 BC Celts had a reputation as head hunters 165 Paul Jacobsthal says Amongst the Celts the human head was venerated above all else since the head was to the Celt the soul centre of the emotions as well as of life itself a symbol of divinity and of the powers of the other world 166 Writing in the first century BC Greek historians Posidonius and Diodorus Siculus said Celtic warriors cut off the heads of enemies slain in battle hung them from the necks of their horses then nailed them up outside their homes 165 Strabo wrote in the same century that Celts embalmed the heads of their most esteemed enemies in cedar oil and put them on display 165 Roman historian Livy wrote that the Boii beheaded a defeated Roman general after the Battle of Silva Litana covered his skull in gold and used it as a ritual cup 165 Archaeologists have found evidence that heads were embalmed and displayed by the southern Gauls 167 168 In another example at the southern Gaulish site of Entremont there stood a pillar carved with skulls within which were niches where human skulls were kept nailed into position 169 Roquepertuse nearby has similar carved heads and skull niches Many lone carved heads have been found in Celtic regions some with two or three faces 170 Examples include the Msecke Zehrovice Head and the Corleck Head Severed heads are a common motif in Insular Celtic myths and there are many tales in which living heads preside over feasts and or speak prophecies 165 170 The beheading game is a motif in Irish myth and Arthurian legend most famously in the tale Sir Gawain and the Green Knight where the Green Knight picks up his own severed head after Gawain has struck it off There are also many legends in Celtic regions of saints who carry their own severed heads In Irish myth the severed heads of warriors are called the mast or nuts of the goddess Macha 171 Religion and mythology The Celtic god Cernunnos on the Gundestrup cauldron Ancient Celtic religion Main articles Ancient Celtic religion Celtic mythology and Proto Celtic religion The Celtic Prince of Glauberg Germany with a leaf crown perhaps indicating a priest c 500 BC Like other European Iron Age societies the Celts practised a polytheistic religion 172 Celtic religion varied by region and over time but had broad structural similarities 172 and there was a basic religious homogeneity among the Celtic peoples 173 Because the ancient Celts did not have writing evidence about their religion is gleaned from archaeology Greco Roman accounts and literature from the early Christian period 174 The names of over two hundred Celtic deities have survived see list of Celtic deities although it is likely that many of these were alternative names regional names or titles for the same deity 172 Some deities were venerated only in one region but others were more widely known 172 According to Miranda Aldhouse Green the Celts were also animists believing that every part of the natural world had a spirit 174 The Celts seem to have had a father god who was often a god of the tribe and of the dead Toutatis probably being one name for him and a mother goddess who was associated with the land earth and fertility 175 Dea Matrona probably being one name for her The mother goddess could also take the form of a war goddess as protectress of her tribe and its land 175 There also seems to have been a male celestial god identified with Taranis associated with thunder the wheel and the bull 175 There were gods of skill and craft such as the pan regional god Lugus and the smith god Gobannos 175 Celtic healing deities were often associated with sacred springs 175 such as Sirona and Borvo Other pan regional deities include the horned god Cernunnos the horse and fertility goddess Epona the divine son Maponos as well as Belenos Ogmios and Sucellos 172 174 Caesar says the Gauls believed they all descended from a god of the dead and underworld 172 Triplicity is a common theme in Celtic cosmology and a number of deities were seen as threefold 176 for example the Three Mothers 177 Greco Roman writers say the Celts believed in reincarnation Diodorus says they believed souls were reincarnated after a certain number of years probably after spending time in an afterlife and noted they buried grave goods with the dead 178 Celtic religious ceremonies were overseen by priests known as druids who also served as judges teachers and lore keepers Other classes of druids performed sacrifices for the perceived benefit of the community 179 There is evidence that ancient Celtic peoples sacrificed animals almost always livestock or working animals It appears some were offered wholly to the gods by burying or burning while some were shared between gods and humans part eaten and part offered 180 There is also some evidence that ancient Celts sacrificed humans and some Greco Roman sources claim the Gauls sacrificed criminals by burning them in a wicker man 181 The Romans said the Celts held ceremonies in sacred groves and other natural shrines called nemetons 172 Some Celtic peoples built temples or ritual enclosures of varying shapes such as the Romano Celtic temple and viereckschanze though they also maintained shrines at natural sites 172 Celtic peoples often made votive offerings treasured items deposited in water and wetlands or in ritual shafts and wells often in the same place over generations 172 Modern clootie wells might be a continuation of this 182 Insular Celtic mythology Most surviving Celtic mythology belongs to the Insular Celtic peoples Irish mythology has the largest written body of myths followed by Welsh mythology These were written down in the early Middle Ages mainly by Christian scribes The supernatural race called the Tuatha De Danann are believed to represent the main Celtic gods of Ireland Their traditional rivals are the Fomoire whom they defeat in the Battle of Mag Tuired 183 Barry Cunliffe says the underlying structure in Irish myth was a dualism between the male tribal god and the female goddess of the land 172 The Dagda seems to have been the chief god and the Morrigan his consort each of whom had other names 172 One common motif is the sovereignty goddess who represents the land and bestows sovereignty on a king by marrying him The goddess Brigid was linked with nature as well as poetry healing and smithing 176 Some figures in medieval Insular Celtic myth have ancient continental parallels Irish Lugh and Welsh Lleu are cognate with Lugus Goibniu and Gofannon with Gobannos Macan and Mabon with Maponos while Macha and Rhiannon may be counterparts of Epona 184 In Insular Celtic myth the Otherworld is a parallel realm where the gods dwell Some mythical heroes visit it by entering ancient burial mounds or caves by going under water or across the western sea or after being offered a silver apple branch by an Otherworld resident 185 Irish myth says that the spirits of the dead travel to the house of Donn Tech Duinn a legendary ancestor this echoes Caesar s comment that the Gauls believed they all descended from a god of the dead and underworld 172 Insular Celtic peoples celebrated four seasonal festivals known to the Gaels as Beltaine 1 May Lughnasa 1 August Samhain 1 November and Imbolc 1 February 172 Roman influence Further information Gallo Roman culture The Roman invasion of Gaul brought a great deal of Celtic peoples into the Roman Empire Roman culture had a profound effect on the Celtic tribes which came under the empire s control Roman influence led to many changes in Celtic religion the most noticeable of which was the weakening of the druid class especially religiously the druids were to eventually disappear altogether Romano Celtic deities also began to appear these deities often had both Roman and Celtic attributes combined the names of Roman and Celtic deities and or included couples with one Roman and one Celtic deity Other changes included the adaptation of the Jupiter Column a sacred column set up in many Celtic regions of the empire primarily in northern and eastern Gaul Another major change in religious practice was the use of stone monuments to represent gods and goddesses The Celts had probably only created wooden cult images including monuments carved into trees which were known as sacred poles before the Roman conquest 177 Celtic Christianity Main article Celtic Christianity While the regions under Roman rule adopted Christianity along with the rest of the Roman empire unconquered areas of Ireland and Scotland began to move from Celtic polytheism to Christianity in the 5th century Ireland was converted by missionaries from Britain such as Saint Patrick Later missionaries from Ireland were a major source of missionary work in Scotland Anglo Saxon parts of Britain and central Europe see Hiberno Scottish mission Celtic Christianity the forms of Christianity that took hold in Britain and Ireland at this time had for some centuries only limited and intermittent contact with Rome and continental Christianity as well as some contacts with Coptic Christianity Some elements of Celtic Christianity developed or retained features that made them distinct from the rest of Western Christianity most famously their conservative method of calculating the date of Easter In 664 the Synod of Whitby began to resolve these differences mostly by adopting the current Roman practices which the Gregorian Mission from Rome had introduced to Anglo Saxon England citation needed GeneticsSee also Bell Beaker culture Genetics Hallstatt culture Genetics La Tene culture Genetics Gauls Genetics Celtic Britons Genetics Celtiberians Genetics and Italic peoples Genetics Distribution of Y chromosomal Haplogroup R M269 in Europe The majority of ancient Celtic males have been found to be carriers of this lineage 186 187 188 Genetic studies on the limited amount of material available suggest continuity between Iron Age people from areas considered Celtic and the earlier Bell Beaker culture of Bronze Age Western Europe 189 190 191 Like the Bell Beakers ancient Celts carried a substantial amount of steppe ancestry which is derived from Yamnaya pastoralists who expanded westwards from the Pontic Caspian steppe during late Neolithic and early Bronze Age 192 This ancestry was particularly prevalent among Celts of Northwest Europe 191 Examined individuals overwhelmingly carry types of the paternal haplogroup R M269 186 187 188 while the maternal haplogroups H and U are frequent 193 194 These lineages are associated with steppe ancestry 186 193 The spread of Celts into Iberia and the emergence of the Celtiberians is associated with an increase in north central European ancestry in Iberia and may be connected to the expansion of the Urnfield culture 195 The paternal haplogroup haplogroup I2a1a1a has been detected among Celtiberians 196 There appears to have been significant gene flow among Celtic peoples of Western Europe during the Iron Age 197 191 While the Gauls of southern France display genetic links with the Celtiberians the Gauls of northern France display links with Great Britain and Sweden 198 Modern populations of Western Europe particularly those who still speak Celtic languages display substantial genetic continuity with the Iron Age populations of the same areas 199 200 201 See alsoList of ancient Celtic peoples and tribes Ethnic groups in Europe Celtic F C soccer club in GlasgowReferencesCitations Mac Cana amp Dillon The Celts an ancient Indo European people reached the apogee of their influence and territorial expansion during the 4th century bc extending across the length of Europe from Britain to Asia Minor Puhvel Fee amp Leeming 2003 p 67 T he Celts were Indo Europeans a fact that explains a certain compatibility between Celtic Roman and Germanic mythology Riche 2005 p 150 The Celts and Germans were two Indo European groups whose civilizations had some common characteristics Todd 1975 p 42 Celts and Germans were of course derived from the same Indo European stock Encyclopedia Britannica Celt Celt also spelled Kelt Latin Celta plural Celtae a member of an early Indo European people who from the 2nd millennium bce to the 1st century bce spread over much of Europe a b Drinkwater 2012 p 295 Celts a name applied by ancient writers to a population group occupying lands mainly north of the Mediterranean region from Galicia in the west to Galatia in the east Its application to the Welsh the Scots and the Irish is modern Their unity is recognizable by common speech and common artistic traditions Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 144 Celts in its modern usage is an encompassing term referring to all Celtic speaking peoples Encyclopedia Britannica Celt Celt also spelled Kelt Latin Celta plural Celtae a member of an early Indo European people who from the 2nd millennium bce to the 1st century bce spread over much of Europe Their tribes and groups eventually ranged from the British Isles and northern Spain to as far east as Transylvania the Black Sea coasts and Galatia in Anatolia and were in part absorbed into the Roman Empire as Britons Gauls Boii Galatians and Celtiberians Linguistically they survive in the modern Celtic speakers of Ireland Highland Scotland the Isle of Man Wales and Brittany a b c d e f g Koch John 2005 Celtic Culture a historical encyclopedia Santa Barbara ABC CLIO p xix xxi ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Retrieved 9 June 2010 This Encyclopedia is designed for the use of everyone interested in Celtic studies and also for those interested in many related and subsidiary fields including the individual CELTIC COUNTRIES and their languages literatures archaeology folklore and mythology In its chronological scope the Encyclopedia covers subjects from the HALLSTATT and LA TENE periods of the later pre Roman Iron Age to the beginning of the 21st century Lujan E R 2006 PUEBLOS CELTAS Y NO CELTAS DE LA GALICIA ANTIGUA FUENTES LITERARIAS FRENTE A FUENTES EPIGRAFICAS PDF Xxii seminario de lenguas y epigrafia antigua Archived PDF from the original on 25 December 2009 Retrieved 16 July 2021 If as is the first criterion of this Encyclopedia one bases the concept of Celticity on language one can apply the term Celtic to ancient Galicia Koch John T ed 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 790 ISBN 1 85109 440 7 a b c d e f James Simon 1999 The Atlantic Celts Ancient People or Modern Invention University of Wisconsin Press a b c d e Collis John 2003 The Celts Origins Myths and Inventions Stroud Tempus Publishing ISBN 978 0 7524 2913 7 a b c Pryor Francis 2004 Britain BC Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 00 712693 4 a b c d e f g h i j Sims Williams August 2020 An Alternative to Celtic from the East and Celtic from the West Cambridge Archaeological Journal 30 3 511 529 doi 10 1017 S0959774320000098 Louwen A J 2021 Breaking and making the ancestors Piecing together the urnfield mortuary process in the Lower Rhine Basin ca 1300 400 BC PhD Leiden University Probst 1996 pp 258 a b c d Chadwick Nora Corcoran J X W P 1970 The Celts Penguin Books pp 28 33 Cunliffe Barry 1997 The Ancient Celts Penguin Books pp 39 67 Koch John T 2010 Celtic from the West Chapter 9 Paradigm Shift Interpreting Tartessian as Celtic see map 9 3 The Ancient Celtic Languages c 440 430 BC see third map in PDF at URL provided which is essentially the same map PDF Oxbow Books Oxford UK p 193 ISBN 978 1 84217 410 4 Archived PDF from the original on 9 July 2012 Koch John T 2010 Celtic from the West Chapter 9 Paradigm Shift Interpreting Tartessian as Celtic see map 9 2 Celtic expansion from Hallstatt La Tene central Europe see second map in PDF at URL provided which is essentially the same map PDF Oxbow Books Oxford UK p 190 ISBN 978 1 84217 410 4 Archived PDF from the original on 9 July 2012 Stifter David 2008 Old Celtic Languages PDF pp 24 37 Archived PDF from the original on 30 June 2011 Cunliffe Barry 2003 The Celts a very short introduction Oxford University Press p 109 ISBN 978 0 19 280418 1 Minahan James 2000 One Europe Many Nations A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups Greenwood Publishing Group p 179 ISBN 978 0 313 30984 7 The Cornish are related to the other Celtic peoples of Europe the Bretons Irish Scots Manx Welsh and the Galicians of northwestern Spain Minahan James 2000 One Europe Many Nations A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups Greenwood Publishing Group p 766 ISBN 978 0 313 30984 7 Celts 257 278 523 533 555 643 Bretons 129 33 Cornish 178 81 Galicians 277 80 Irish 330 37 Manx 452 55 Scots 607 12 Welsh Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 144 CELTS location Greater Europe time period Second millennium B C E to present ancestry Celtic McKevitt Kerry Ann 2006 Mythologizing Identity and History a look at the Celtic past of Galicia PDF E Keltoi 6 651 73 Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2011 Retrieved 8 April 2011 Sarunas Milisauskas European prehistory a survey Springer 2002 p 363 ISBN 978 0 306 47257 2 Retrieved 7 June 2010 H D Rankin Celts and the classical world Routledge 1998 pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 415 15090 3 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Herodotus The Histories 2 33 4 49 John T Koch ed Celtic Culture a historical encyclopedia 5 vols 2006 Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 371 a b McCone Kim 2013 The Celts questions of nomenclature and identity in Ireland and its Contacts University of Lausanne pp 21 27 P De Bernardo Stempel 2008 Linguistically Celtic ethnonyms towards a classification in Celtic and Other Languages in Ancient Europe J L Garcia Alonso ed 101 18 Ediciones Universidad Salamanca Julius Caesar Commentarii de Bello Gallico 1 1 All Gaul is divided into three parts one of which the Belgae live another in which the Aquitani live and the third are those who in their own tongue are called Celtae in our language Galli Strabo Geography 3 1 3 3 1 6 3 2 2 3 2 15 4 4 2 Pliny the Elder The Natural History 21 the Mirobrigenses surnamed Celtici Mirobrigenses qui Celtici cognominantur Espana PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2010 Retrieved 9 June 2013 Fernando De Almeida Breve noticia sobre o santuario campestre romano de Mirobriga dos Celticos Portugal D IS M ANIBUS S ACRUM C AIUS PORCIUS SEVE RUS MIROBRIGEN SIS CELT ICUS ANN ORUM LX H IC S ITUS E ST S IT T IBI T ERRA L EVIS Koch John Thomas 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 794 95 ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Spencer and Zwicky Andrew and Arnold M 1998 The handbook of morphology Blackwell Publishers p 148 ISBN 978 0 631 18544 4 Who were the Celts It s complicated Irish Times Denis Staunton October 20 2015 accessed April 17 2023 Lhuyd E Archaeologia Britannica An account of the languages histories and customs of the original inhabitants of Great Britain reprint ed Irish University Press 1971 p 290 ISBN 0 7165 0031 0 Koch John Thomas 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 532 ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Mountain Harry 1998 The Celtic Encyclopedia Volume 1 uPublish com p 252 ISBN 978 1 58112 889 5 Kruta Venceslas et al 1991 The Celts Thames and Hudson pp 95 102 Paul Graves Brown Sian Jones Clive Gamble Cultural identity and archaeology the construction of European communities pp 242 244 Routledge 1996 ISBN 978 0 415 10676 4 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Carl McColman The Complete Idiot s Guide to Celtic Wisdom Alpha Books 2003 pp 31 34 ISBN 978 0 02 864417 2 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Monaghan Patricia 2008 The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore Facts on File Inc ISBN 978 0 8160 7556 0 Chadwick Nora 1970 The Celts with an introductory chapter by J X W P Corcoran Penguin Books p 81 Celtic language Branch Origins amp Classification MustGo MustGo com Retrieved 25 August 2022 John T Koch 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO pp 34 365 366 529 973 1053 ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 OCLC 62381207 Chadwick Nora 1970 The Celts p 30 Kruta Venceslas 1991 The Celts Thames and Hudson pp 89 102 Stifter David 2008 Old Celtic Languages Addenda p 25 a b c Koch John 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 386 Oppenheimer Stephen 2007 The Origins of the British Robinson pp 21 56 Myles Dillon and Nora Kershaw Chadwick The Celtic Realms 1967 18 19 Cunliffe Barry 2010 Celtic from the West Chapter 1 Celticization from the West The Contribution of Archaeology Oxbow Books Oxford UK p 14 ISBN 978 1 84217 410 4 2001 p 95 La lengua de los Celtas y otros pueblos indoeuropeos de la peninsula iberica In Almagro Gorbea M Marine M and Alvarez Sanchis J R eds Celtas y Vettones pp 115 21 Avila Diputacion Provincial de Avila Lorrio and Ruiz Zapatero Alberto J and Gonzalo 2005 The Celts in Iberia An Overview E Keltoi 6 The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula 167 254 Archived from the original on 24 June 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Koch John 2009 Tartessian Celtic from the Southwest at the Dawn of History in Acta Palaeohispanica X Palaeohispanica 9 PDF Palaeohispanica Revista Sobre Lenguas y Culturas de la Hispania Antigua Palaeohispanica 339 51 ISSN 1578 5386 Archived PDF from the original on 23 June 2010 Retrieved 17 May 2010 Cunliffe Barry 2008 A Race Apart Insularity and Connectivity in Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 75 The Prehistoric Society pp 55 64 61 Sims Williams Patrick 2 April 2020 An Alternative to Celtic from the East and Celtic from the West Cambridge Archaeological Journal 30 3 511 529 doi 10 1017 s0959774320000098 ISSN 0959 7743 S2CID 216484936 Hoz J de 28 February 2019 Method and methods Palaeohispanic Languages and Epigraphies Oxford University Press pp 1 24 doi 10 1093 oso 9780198790822 003 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 879082 2 retrieved 29 May 2021 e g Patrick Sims Williams Ancient Celtic Placenames in Europe and Asia Minor Publications of the Philological Society No 39 2006 Bethany Fox The P Celtic Place Names of North East England and South East Scotland The Heroic Age 10 2007 Fox The P Celtic Place Names of North East England and South East Scotland Archived from the original on 11 January 2018 Retrieved 9 January 2018 also available at Fox P Celtic Place Names permanent dead link See also List of Celtic place names in Portugal International Journal of Modern Anthropology Int J Mod Anthrop 2017 10 50 72 HLA Genes in Atlantic Celtic populations Are Celts Iberians Available online at www ata org tn Olalde I et al May 2017 The Beaker Phenomenon and the Genomic Transformation of Northwest Europe bioRxiv 10 1101 135962 Novembre J et al November 2008 Genes mirror geography within Europe Nature 456 7218 98 101 Bibcode 2008Natur 456 98N doi 10 1038 nature07331 PMC 2735096 PMID 18758442 Lao O Lu TT Nothnagel M et al August 2008 Correlation between genetic and geographic structure in Europe Curr Biol 18 16 1241 48 doi 10 1016 j cub 2008 07 049 PMID 18691889 S2CID 16945780 Murray Tim 2007 Milestones in Archaeology A Chronological Encyclopedia p 346 ISBN 978 1 57607 186 1 Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Jones Andrew 2008 Prehistoric Europe Theory and Practice p 48 ISBN 978 1 4051 2597 0 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Harding Dennis William 2007 pg5 ISBN 978 0 415 35177 5 Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Celtic Culture A Celti 2006 p 386 ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Center for Celtic Studies UW Milwaukee Archived from the original on 19 August 2006 Retrieved 27 April 2006 The Celts in Iberia An Overview Alberto J Lorrio Universidad de Alicante amp Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero Universidad Complutense de Madrid Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic studies Volume 6 167 254 The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula 1 February 2005 Otto Hermann Frey A new approach to early Celtic art Setting the Glauberg finds in context of shifting iconography Royal Irish Academy 2004 Arrival of Celts France SpottingHistory com www spottinghistory com Retrieved 14 October 2022 Dietler Michael 2010 Archaeologies of Colonialism Consumption Entanglement and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 26551 6 Dietler Michael 2005 Consumption and Colonial Encounters in the Rhone Basin of France A Study of Early Iron Age Political Economy Monographies d Archeologie Mediterraneenne 21 CNRS France ISBN 978 2 912369 10 9 Vercingetorix Gallic chieftain Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 22 October 2022 Cunliffe Barry 2003 The Celts Oxford Press p 75 ISBN 978 0 19 280418 1 Cunliffe Barry 2003 The Celts Oxford Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 19 280418 1 Dietler Michael 2010 Archaeologies of Colonialism Consumption Entanglement and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France University of California Press pp 75 94 ISBN 978 0 520 26551 6 Chambers William Chambers Robert 1842 Chambers s information for the people p 50 Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Brownson Orestes Augustus 1859 Brownson s Quarterly Review p 505 Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Quintela Marco V Garcia 2005 Celtic Elements in Northwestern Spain in Pre Roman times E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies Center for Celtic Studies University of Wisconsin Milwaukee 6 1 Archived from the original on 6 January 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2010 Pedreno Juan Carlos Olivares 2005 Celtic Gods of the Iberian Peninsula E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 1 Archived from the original on 24 September 2009 Retrieved 12 May 2010 Prichard James Cowles 1841 Researches into the Physical History of Mankind Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Alberto J Lorrio Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero 2005 The Celts in Iberia An Overview E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 167 254 Archived from the original on 24 June 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Burillo Mozota Francisco 2005 Celtiberians Problems and Debates E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 411 80 Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Retrieved 18 May 2009 a b Jordan Colera Carlos 2005 Celtiberian PDF E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 749 850 Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2011 Retrieved 29 March 2017 Alberro Manuel 2005 Celtic Legacy in Galicia E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 1005 35 Archived from the original on 17 April 2009 Retrieved 18 May 2009 Berrocal Rangel Luis 2005 The Celts of the Southwestern Iberian Peninsula E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 481 96 Archived from the original on 16 April 2009 R Lujan Martinez Eugenio 2005 The Language s of the Callaeci E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 715 48 Archived from the original on 17 April 2009 Retrieved 18 May 2009 Coutinhas Jose Manuel 2006 Aproximacao a identidade etno cultural dos Callaici Bracari Porto Archeological site of Tavira Archived 23 February 2011 at Wikiwix official website John T Koch Tartessian Celtic From the South west at the Dawn of History Celtic Studies Publications 2009 Celtic City Staatliche Schlosser und Garten Baden Wurttemberg Kinder Hermann 1988 Penguin Atlas of World History vol I London Penguin p 108 Alfons Semler Uberlingen Bilder aus der Geschichte einer kleinen Reichsstadt Oberbadische Verlag Singen 1949 pp 11 17 specifically 15 Venceslas Kruta La grande storia dei celti La nascita l affermazione e la decadenza Newton amp Compton 2003 ISBN 88 8289 851 2 978 88 8289 851 9 The Golasecca civilization is therefore the expression of the oldest Celts of Italy and included several groups that had the name of Insubres Laevi Lepontii Oromobii o Orumbovii Raffaele C De Marinis Vitali Daniele 1996 Manufatti in ferro di tipo La Tene in area italiana le potenzialita non sfruttate Melanges de l Ecole Francaise de Rome Antiquite 108 2 575 605 doi 10 3406 mefr 1996 1954 Piggott Stuart 2008 Early Celtic Art From Its Origins to its Aftermath Transaction Publishers p 3 ISBN 978 0 202 36186 4 Archived from the original on 19 February 2017 Retrieved 18 February 2017 Schumacher Stefan Schulze Thulin Britta aan de Wiel Caroline 2004 Die keltischen Primarverben Ein vergleichendes etymologisches und morphologisches Lexikon in German Innsbruck Institut fur Sprachen und Kulturen der Universitat Innsbruck pp 84 87 ISBN 978 3 85124 692 6 Percivaldi Elena 2003 I Celti una civilta europea Giunti Editore p 82 Kruta Venceslas 1991 The Celts Thames and Hudson p 55 Stifter David 2008 Old Celtic Languages PDF p 12 Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2012 Retrieved 25 April 2016 Morandi 2004 pp 702 03 n 277 Peter Schrijver Gaulish in Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe ed Glanville Price Oxford Blackwell 1998 192 Landolfi Maurizio 2000 Adriatico tra 4 e 3 sec a C L Erma di Bretschneider p 43 Cunliffe Barry 2003 The Celts A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 19 280418 1 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Senones Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 647 648 Battle of Telamon 225 BC www historyofwar org Retrieved 1 December 2022 The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 3 Part 2 The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and Other States of the Near East from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries BC by John Boardman I E S Edwards E Sollberger and N G L Hammond ISBN 0 521 22717 8 1992 p 600 In the place of the vanished Treres and Tilataei we find the Serdi for whom there is no evidence before the first century BC It has for long being supposed on convincing linguistic and archeological grounds that this tribe was of Celtic origin Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 SE RDICA perseus tufts edu M B Shchukin Rome and the Barbarians in Central and Eastern Europe 1st Century B C 1st Century A D Britannica Cunliffe Barry 2003 The Celts A Very Short Introduction Oxford p 71 ISBN 978 0 19 280418 1 Cartwright Mark 1 April 2021 Ancient Celts World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 6 August 2022 Ball Martin Muller Nicole eds The Celtic Languages Routledge 2003 pp 67ff Koch J T 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 1 85109 440 7 p 973 Cunliffe Barry Koch John T eds Celtic from the West David Brown Co 2012 Cunliffe Barry Facing the Ocean Oxford University Press 2004 a b c d e Patterson N Isakov M Booth T 2021 Large scale migration into Britain during the Middle to Late Bronze Age Nature 601 7894 588 594 Bibcode 2022Natur 601 588P doi 10 1038 s41586 021 04287 4 PMC 8889665 PMID 34937049 S2CID 245509501 Ancient DNA study reveals large scale migrations into Bronze Age Britain University of York 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 January 2022 Ancient mass migration transformed Britons DNA BBC News 22 December 2021 Retrieved 21 January 2022 Collis John 2003 The Celts Origins Myths and Inventions Stroud Tempus Publishing p 125 ISBN 978 0 7524 2913 7 Collis John 2003 The Celts Origins Myths and Inventions Stroud Tempus Publishing p 180 ISBN 978 0 7524 2913 7 Collis John 2003 The Celts Origins Myths and Inventions Stroud Tempus Publishing p 27 ISBN 978 0 7524 2913 7 Tristram Hildegard L C 2007 The Celtic languages in contact Potsdam University Press p 5 ISBN 978 3 940793 07 2 Ni Dhoireann Kym The Horse Amongst the Celts Archived from the original on 14 May 2010 The Iron Age Smr herefordshire gov uk Archived 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Landscape of Britain Michael Reed 1997 CRC Press p 56 ISBN 0 203 44411 6 a b c Simmons Victoria 2006 John T Koch ed Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia Vol I ABC CLIO p 1615 ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Holy Spirit Gifts of the Holy Spirit Sacramentum Mundi Online doi 10 1163 2468 483x smuo com 001832 Retrieved 22 October 2021 Simmons op cit citing Wendy Davies Wales in the Early Middle Ages 64 Simmons op cit at 1616 citing Kelly Guide to Early Irish Law 96 Cunliffe Barry W 2018 The ancient Celts 2nd ed Oxford United Kingdom pp 49 192 200 ISBN 978 0 19 875293 6 OCLC 1034807416 Caesar Julius 1982 The conquest of Gaul S A Handford Jane F Gardner London pp Section 3 33 ISBN 0 14 044433 5 OCLC 21116188 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica BBC Wales Education Iron Age Celts Factfile www bbc co uk Retrieved 22 February 2023 Casparie Wil A Moloney Aonghus January 1994 Neolithic wooden trackways and bog hydrology Journal of Paleolimnology Springer Netherlands 12 1 49 64 Bibcode 1994JPall 12 49C doi 10 1007 BF00677989 S2CID 129780014 Regional Reviews Wales PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2011 369 KB Beatrice Cauuet Universite Toulouse Le Mirail UTAH France J A MacCulloch 1911 The Religion of the Ancient Celts Morrison amp Gibb pp 4 5 Evans Thomas L 2004 Quantified Identities A Statistical Summary and Analysis of Iron Age Cemeteries in North Eastern France 600 130 BC BAR International Series 1226 Archaeopress pp 34 40 158 88 Evans Thomas L 2004 Quantified Identities A Statistical Summary and Analysis of Iron Age Cemeteries in North Eastern France 600 130 BC BAR International Series 1226 Archaeopress pp 34 37 Nelson Sarah M 2004 Gender in archaeology analyzing power and prestige Volume 9 of Gender and archaeology series Rowman Altamira p 119 Tierney J J 1960 The Celtic Ethnography of Posidonius PRIA 60 C Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy pp 1 89 275 Ellis Peter Berresford 1998 The Celts A History Caroll amp Graf pp 49 50 ISBN 978 0 7867 1211 3 Rankin David 1996 Celts and the Classical World Routledge p 80 ISBN 978 0 415 15090 3 Roman History Volume IX Books 71 80 Dio Cassiuss and Earnest Carry translator 1927 Loeb Classical Library ISBN 0 674 99196 6 Cunliffe Barry 2018 The Ancient Celts Oxford University Press p 236 Bitel Lisa M 1996 Land of Women Tales of Sex and Gender from Early Ireland Cornell University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 8014 8544 2 Percy William A 1996 Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece University of Illinois Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 252 06740 2 Retrieved 18 September 2009 Rankin H D Celts and the Classical World p 55 Rankin p 78 Rankin p 55 University College Cork Cain Lanamna Couples Law 2005 Cain Lanamna Archived from the original on 16 December 2008 Retrieved 20 November 2007 Access date 7 March 2006 Accueil Home in French Site archeologique de Tintignac Naves Archived from the original on 1 August 2015 Lambert Pierre Yves 2003 La langue gauloise Paris Editions Errance 2nd edition ISBN 2 87772 224 4 Chapter 9 is titled Un calandrier gaulois Lehoux D R Parapegmata or Astrology Weather and Calendars in the Ancient World pp 63 65 PhD Dissertation University of Toronto 2000 Archived 23 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities p 259 Excerpts from Book XIV Ellis Peter Berresford 1998 The Celts A History Caroll amp Graf pp 60 63 ISBN 978 0 7867 1211 3 Noricus ensis Horace Odes i 16 9 Vagn Fabritius Buchwald Iron and steel in ancient times 2005 p 127 Radomir Pleiner in The Celtic Sword Oxford Clarendon Press 1993 p 159 Kevin F Kiley 2013 Uniforms of the Roman world full citation needed Polybius Histories II 28 Livy History XXII 46 and XXXVIII 21 a b c d e Koch John 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 897 898 Paul Jacobsthal Early Celtic Art Salma Ghezal Elsa Ciesielski Benjamin Girard Aurelien Creuzieux Peter Gosnell Carole Mathe Cathy Vieillescazes Rejane Roure 2019 Embalmed heads of the Celtic Iron Age in the south of France Journal of Archaeological Science Volume 101 pp 181 188 doi 10 1016 j jas 2018 09 011 The Gauls really did embalm the severed heads of enemies research shows The Guardian 7 November 2018 Cunliffe Barry 1997 The Ancient Celts Oxford UK New York NY Oxford University Press p 202 ISBN 978 0 19 815010 7 a b Davidson Hilda Ellis 1988 Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions Syracuse University Press pp 72 75 Egeler Matthias 2013 Celtic Influences in Germanic Religion Utz p 112 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cunliffe Barry 2018 1997 Chapter 11 Religious systems The Ancient Celts 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 275 277 286 291 296 Ross Anne 1986 The Pagan Celts London B T Batsford p 103 a b c Green Miranda 2012 Chapter 25 The Gods and the supernatural The Celtic World Routledge pp 465 485 a b c d e Koch John 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 1488 1491 a b Sjoestedt Marie Louise originally published in French 1940 reissued 1982 Gods and Heroes of the Celts Translated by Myles Dillon Turtle Island Foundation ISBN 0 913666 52 1 pp 16 24 46 a b Inse Jones Prudence and Nigel Pennick History of pagan Europe London Routledge 1995 Print Koch 2006 p 850 Sjoestedt 1982 pp xxvi xix Green Miranda 2002 Animals in Celtic Life and Myth Routledge pp 94 96 Koch John 2012 The Celts History Life and Culture ABC CLIO pp 687 690 ISBN 978 1598849646 It s upset a lot of people outrage after tidy up of Scottish sacred well The Guardian 30 January 2022 Koch John 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 1326 Sjoestedt 1940 pp xiv xvi Koch John 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 1671 a b c Fischer et al 2019 pp 4 6 a b Schiffels et al 2016 p 3 Table 1 a b Martiniano et al 2018 p 3 Table 1 Fischer et al 2018 pp 1 14 15 Brunel et al 2020 pp 5 6 a b c Fischer et al 2022 Fischer et al 2019 pp 1 4 6 14 15 a b Fischer et al 2018 p 7 Fischer et al 2022 pp 5 6 Olalde et al 2019 p 3 Olalde et al 2019 Supplementary Tables Table 4 Row 91 Fischer et al 2018 p 1 Fischer et al 2022 p 8 Martiniano et al 2018 pp 1 Fischer et al 2018 pp 14 15 Fischer et al 2022 p 4 Sources Alberro Manuel and Arnold Bettina eds e Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies Volume 6 The Celts in the Iberian Peninsula University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Center for Celtic Studies 2005 Celt Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 12 June 2020 Brunel Samantha et al 9 June 2020 Ancient genomes from present day France unveil 7 000 years of its demographic history Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America National Academy of Sciences 117 23 12791 12798 Bibcode 2020PNAS 11712791B doi 10 1073 pnas 1918034117 PMC 7293694 PMID 32457149 Collis John The Celts Origins Myths and Inventions Stroud Tempus Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 7524 2913 2 Historiography of Celtic studies Cunliffe Barry The Ancient Celts Oxford Oxford University Press 1997 ISBN 0 19 815010 5 Cunliffe Barry Iron Age Britain London Batsford 2004 ISBN 0 7134 8839 5 Cunliffe Barry The Celts A Very Short Introduction 2003 Drinkwater John Frederick 2012 Celts In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony Eidinow Esther eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary 4 ed Oxford University Press p 295 doi 10 1093 acref 9780199545568 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 173525 7 Fischer Claire Elise et al 6 December 2018 The multiple maternal legacy of the Late Iron Age group of Urville Nacqueville France Normandy documents a long standing genetic contact zone in northwestern France PLOS One PLOS 13 12 e0207459 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1307459F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0207459 PMC 6283558 PMID 30521562 Fischer Claire Elise et al October 2019 Multi scale archaeogenetic study of two French Iron Age communities From internal social to broad scale population dynamics Journal of Archaeological Science Elsevier 27 101942 101942 doi 10 1016 j jasrep 2019 101942 Fischer Claire Elise et al 2022 Origin and mobility of Iron Age Gaulish groups in present day France revealed through archaeogenomics iScience Cell Press 25 4 104094 Bibcode 2022iSci 25j4094F doi 10 1016 j isci 2022 104094 PMC 8983337 PMID 35402880 Freeman Philip Mitchell The Earliest Classical Sources on the Celts A Linguistic and Historical Study Diss Harvard University 1994 link Gamito Teresa J The Celts in Portugal Archived 24 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 2005 Haywood John Historical Atlas of the Celtic World 2001 Herm Gerhard The Celts The People who Came out of the Darkness New York St Martin s Press 1977 James Simon The World of the Celts New York Thames amp Hudson 1993 3rd edn 2005 James Simon The Atlantic Celts Ancient People Or Modern Invention Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1999 ISBN 0 299 16674 0 James Simon amp Rigby Valerie Britain and the Celtic Iron Age London British Museum Press 1997 ISBN 0 7141 2306 4 Kruta Venceslas Otto Hermann Frey Barry Raftery and M Szabo eds The Celts New York Thames amp Hudson 1991 ISBN 0 8478 2193 5 A translation of Les Celtes Histoire et dictionnaire 2000 Laing Lloyd The Archaeology of Late Celtic Britain and Ireland c 400 1200 AD London Methuen 1975 ISBN 0 416 82360 2 Laing Lloyd and Jenifer Laing Art of the Celts London Thames and Hudson 1992 ISBN 0 500 20256 7 MacKillop James A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0 19 280120 1 Maier Bernhard Celts A History from Earliest Times to the Present University of Notre Dame Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 268 02361 4 Martiniano Rui et al 19 January 2016 Genomic signals of migration and continuity in Britain before the Anglo Saxons Nature Communications Nature Research 7 10326 10326 Bibcode 2016NatCo 710326M doi 10 1038 ncomms10326 PMC 4735653 PMID 26783717 McEvedy Colin The Penguin Atlas of Ancient History New York Penguin 1985 ISBN 0 14 070832 4 Mallory J P In Search of the Indo Europeans Language Archaeology and Myth London Thames and Hudson 1991 ISBN 0 500 27616 1 O Rahilly T F Early Irish History Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1946 Olalde Inigo et al 15 March 2019 The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 363 6432 1230 1234 Bibcode 2019Sci 363 1230O doi 10 1126 science aav4040 PMC 6436108 PMID 30872528 Powell T G E The Celts New York Thames amp Hudson 1980 3rd edn 1997 ISBN 0 500 27275 1 Probst Ernst 1996 Deutschland in der Bronzezeit Bauern Bronzegiesser und Burgherren zwischen Nordsee und Alpen Munchen C Bertelsmann ISBN 9783570022375 Mac Cana Proinsias Dillon Myles Celtic religion Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 12 June 2020 Puhvel Jaan Fee Christopher R Leeming David Adams 2003 Celtic mythology In Leeming David Adams ed The Oxford Companion to World Mythology Oxford University Press pp 65 67 doi 10 1093 acref 9780195156690 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 991648 1 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Raftery Barry Pagan Celtic Ireland The Enigma of the Irish Iron Age London Thames amp Hudson 1994 ISBN 0 500 27983 7 Riche Pierre 2005 Barbarians In Vauchez Andre ed Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages James Clarke amp Co p 150 doi 10 1093 acref 9780227679319 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 518817 2 Schiffels Stephan et al 19 January 2016 Iron Age and Anglo Saxon genomes from East England reveal British migration history Nature Communications Nature Research 7 10408 10408 Bibcode 2016NatCo 710408S doi 10 1038 ncomms10408 PMC 4735688 PMID 26783965 Todd Malcolm 1975 The Northern Barbarians Hutchinson Vol 13 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 09 122220 8 Retrieved 10 March 2020 Waldman Carl Mason Catherine 2006 Celts Encyclopedia of European Peoples Infobase Publishing pp 144 169 ISBN 1 4381 2918 1 External links Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Celts Wikimedia Commons has media related to Celts Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Celt Ancient Celtic music in the Citizendium Essays on Celtiberian topics in e Keltoi University of Wisconsin Madison Ancient Celtic Warriors in History Celts descended from Spanish fishermen study finds Discussion with academic Barry Cunliffe on BBC Radio 4 s In Our Time 21 February 2002 Streaming RealPlayer format Geography An interactive map showing the lands of the Celts between 800 BC and 305 AD Detailed map of the Pre Roman Peoples of Iberia around 200 BC showing the Celtic territories Map of Celtic landsOrganisations newworldcelts org XIII International Congress of Celtic Studies in Bonn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Celts amp oldid 1150371251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.