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Wikipedia

Galicians

Galicians (Galician: galegos [ɡaˈleɣʊs]; Spanish: gallegos [ɡaˈʎeɣos]) are a European ethnic group[7] from Spain; it is closely related to the Portuguese people[8] and has its historic homeland in Galicia, in the north-west of the Iberian Peninsula.[9] Two Romance languages are widely spoken and official in Galicia: the native Galician and Spanish.[10]

Galicians
Galegos
Galician bagpipers
Total population
c. 3.2 million[1]
Regions with significant populations
           Spain 2,752,676[2][3]
           Galicia 2,397,6132,397,613[2][3]
          Province of A Coruña991,588[2][3]
          Province of Pontevedra833,205[2][3]
          Province of Lugo300,419[2][3]
          Province of Ourense272,401[2][3]
 Spain (excluding Galicia)355,063[2][3]
 Argentina147,062[4]
 Venezuela38,440–46,882[4][5]
 Brazil38,554[4]
 Uruguay35,369[4]
 Cuba31,077[4]
  Switzerland30,737[4]
 France16,075[4]
 United States14,172[4]
 Germany13,305[4]
 United Kingdom10,755[4]
 Mexico9,895[4]
Galicians inscribed in the electoral census and living abroad combined (2013)414,650[4]
 Italy8,775[4]
 Greece8,000[4]
 Serbia5,000[4]
 Romania2,000[4]
 Turkey1,701[4]
Languages
Galician, Spanish
Religion
Roman Catholicism[6]
Related ethnic groups
Portuguese, Asturians, other Spaniards

Etymology Edit

 
Castro culture carved stones

The ethnonym of the Galicians (galegos) derives directly from the Latin Gallaeci or Callaeci, itself an adaptation of the name of a local Celtic tribe[11][12][13] known to the Greeks as Καλλαϊκoί (Kallaikoí). They lived in what is now Galicia and northern Portugal and were defeated by the Roman General Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus in the 2nd century BCE and later conquered by Augustus.[14] The Romans later applied that name to all the people who shared the same culture and language in the north-west, from the Douro River valley in the south to the Cantabrian Sea in the north and west to the Navia River. That encompassed such tribes as the Celtici, the Artabri, the Lemavi and the Albiones.

The oldest known inscription referring to the Gallaeci (reading Ἔθνο[υς] Καλλαικῶ[ν], "people of the Gallaeci") was found in 1981 in the Sebasteion of Aphrodisias, Turkey; a triumphal monument to Roman Emperor Augustus mentions them among other 15 nations that he conquered.[15]

The etymology of the name has been studied since the 7th century by authors such as Isidore of Seville, who wrote, "Galicians are called so because of their fair skin, as the Gauls" and related the name to the Greek word for "milk," γάλα (gála). However, modern scholars like J.J. Moralejo[14] and Carlos Búa[16] have derived the name of the ancient Callaeci either from Proto-Indo-European *kl̥(H)‑n‑ 'hill', through a local relational suffix -aik-, also attested in Celtiberian language and so meaning 'the highlanders'; or either from Proto-Celtic *kallī- 'forest' and so means 'the forest (people)'.[17]

Another recent proposal comes from the linguist Francesco Benozzo, who is not specialized in Celtic languages and identified the root gall- / kall- in a number of Celtic words with the meaning "stone" or "rock", as follows: gall (old Irish), gal (Middle Welsh), gailleichan (Scottish Gaelic), galagh (Manx) and gall (Gaulish). Hence, Benozzo explains the name Callaecia and its ethnonym Callaeci as being "the stone people" or "the people of the stone" ("those who work with stones"), in reference to the ancient megaliths and stone formations that are so common in Galicia and Portugal.[18] Specialists of the Celtic languages do not consider there is a hypothetical Gaulish root *gall meaning "stone" or "rock", but *galiā "strength" (> French gaill-ard "strong"), related to Old Irish gal "berserk rage, war fury", Welsh gallu and Breton galloud "power".[19] It is distinct from Gaulish *cal(l)io- "hoof" or "testicle",[20][21] related to Welsh caill, Breton kell "testicle" (> Gaulish *caliavo > Old French chaillou, French caillou),[20][22] all from the Proto-Indo-European root *kal- "hard hardness" (perhaps via suffixed zero-grade *kl̥H-no-(m)). For instance, in Latin callum "hard or thick substance" is also found and so both E. Rivas and Juan J. Moralejo relate the toponym Gallaecia / Callaecia with the Latin word callus.[23]

Languages Edit

Galician Edit

 
A comparative map of Galicia showing speakers of Galician as first language in 2001 and 2011, Galician Institute of Statistics.
 
La Romería (the pilgrimage), Sorolla, 1915

Galician is a Romance language belonging to the Western Ibero-Romance branch; as such, it derives from Latin. It has official status in Galicia. Galician is also spoken in the neighbouring autonomous communities of Asturias and Castile and León, near their borders with Galicia.[24]

Medieval or Old Galician, also known by linguists as Galician-Portuguese, developed locally in the Northwest of the Iberian Peninsula from Vulgar Latin, becoming the language spoken and written in the medieval kingdoms of Galicia (from 1230 united with the kingdoms of León and Castille under the same sovereign) and Portugal. The Galician-Portuguese language developed a rich literary tradition from the last years of the 12th century. During the 13th century it gradually replaced Latin as the language used in public and private charters, deeds, and legal documents, in Galicia, Portugal, and in the neighbouring regions in Asturias and Leon.[25]

Galician-Portuguese diverged into two linguistic varieties – Galician and Portuguese – from the 15th century on. Galician became a regional spoken language under the influence of Castilian Spanish, while Portuguese became the international one, as language of the Portuguese Empire. The two varieties are still close together, and in particular northern Portuguese dialects share an important number of similarities with Galician ones.[25]

The official institution regulating the Galician language, backed by the Galician government and universities, the Royal Galician Academy, claims that modern Galician must be considered an independent Romance language belonging to the group of Ibero-Romance languages and having strong ties with Portuguese and its northern dialects.

However, the Associaçom Galega da Língua (Galician Language Association) and Academia Galega da Língua Portuguesa (Galician Academy of the Portuguese Language), belonging to the Reintegrationist movement, support the idea that differences between Galician and Portuguese speech are not enough to justify considering them as separate languages: Galician is simply one variety of Galician-Portuguese, along with European Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese, African Portuguese, the Galician-Portuguese still spoken in Spanish Extremadura, (Fala), and other variations.

Nowadays, despite the positive effects of official recognition of the Galician language, Galicia's socio-linguistic development has experienced the growing influence of Spanish and persistent linguistic erosion of Galician due to the media as well as legal imposition of Spanish in learning.

Galicia also boasts a rich oral tradition, in the form of songs, tales, and sayings, which has made a vital contribution to the spread and development of the Galician language. Still flourishing today, this tradition shares much with that of Portugal.

Surnames Edit

Galician surnames,[26][27] as is the case in most European cultures, can be divided into patronymic (originally based on one's father's name), occupational, toponymic or cognominal. The first group, patronymic includes many of the most frequent surnames and became fixed during the Low Middle Ages; it includes surnames derived from etyma formed with or without the additions of the patronymical suffixes -az, -ez, -iz: Alberte (Albert); Afonso (Alfons); Anes, Oanes, Yanes (Iohannes); Arias; Bernárdez (Bernard); Bermúdez (Medieval Galician Uermues, cf. Wermuth); Cristobo (Christopher); Diz (from Didaci); Estévez (Stephan); Fernández; Fiz (from Felici); Froiz, Frois (From Froilaci, from the Gothic personal name Froila, "lord"); Giance (Latin Iulianici); González; Henríquez (Henry); Martís (Martin); Méndez (Menendici); Miguéns, Miguez (from Michaelici, equivalent to Michaels); Páez, Pais, Paz (from Pelagici, Pelagio); Ramírez; Reimúndez (Raymond); Rodríguez; Sánchez; Sueiro (from Suarius); Tomé (from Thomas); Viéitez, Vieites (Benedictici, Benedict), among many others.

Because of the settlement of Galician colonists in southern Spain during the Reconquista, some of the more frequent and distinctively Galician surnames also became popular in Spanish (which had its own related forms) and were taken later into the Americas, as a consequence of the expansion of the Spanish empire:

Some Galician patronymical surnames
English name Old Galician (13-15th c.) Modern Galician Spanish
John Eanes Anes, Oanes, Yanes Yáñez, Ibáñez
Stephen Esteuaes, Esteuaez, Esteueez Estévez Estévanez
- Froes, Froez Fróiz, Frois Flores, Flórez
Julian Giançe, Gianz, Gians Giance Juliánez
Ermengild Meendez, Meendes Méndez Menéndez, Meléndez
Martin Martiiz Martíns, Martís Martínez
Michael Migueez Miguéns, Míguez Miguélez
Pelagius Paaez, Paaz Páes, Paiz, Paz Peláez
- Veasques, Vaasquez Vázquez Velázquez, Blázquez
Benedict Beeytez, Beeytes Viéitez, Vieites Benítez
 
Mediaeval Galician inscription in a 14th-century house, in Noia: "ESTAS CASAS MANDOU FAZER VASCO DACOSTA, ERA DE MCCCLXXVII" These houses were ordered by Vasco Dacosta, era 1377 (1339 CE)

The largest surname group is the one derived from toponyms, which usually referred to the place of origin or residence of the bearer. These places can be European countries (as is the case in the surnames Bretaña, Franza, España, Portugal) or nations (Franco, "Frenchman"); Galician regions (Bergantiños, Carnota, Cavarcos, Sanlés); or cities, towns or villages, which gave origin to a few thousand surnames. Another related group is formed with the preposition de, usually contracted with the definite article as da or do, and a common appellative: Dacosta (or Da Costa), "of the slope", Dopazo or Do Pazo ("of the palace/manor house"); Doval, "of the valley" (cfr. French Duval), Daponte ("of the bridge"), Davila ("of the town", not to be confused with Spanish Dávila), Daporta ("of the gate"); Dasilva ("of the forest"), Dorrío ("of the river"), Datorre ("of the Tower"). Through rebracketing, some of these surnames gave origin to others such as Acosta or Acuña.

 
Aqui jaz Fernan Perez d'Andrade (here lies Fernán Pérez de Andrade), 1397 CE

A few of these toponymic surnames can be considered nobiliary, as they first appear as the name of some Galician noble houses,[28] later expanding when these nobles began to serve as officials of the Spanish Empire, in Spain or elsewhere, as a way of maintaining them both far from Galicia and useful to the Empire: Andrade (from the house of Andrade, itself from the name of a village), Mejía or Mexía (from the house of Mesía), Saavedra, Soutomaior (Hispanicized Sotomayor), Ulloa, Moscoso, Mariñas, Figueroa among others. Some of these families also served in Portugal, as the Andrade, Soutomaior or Lemos (who originated in Monforte de Lemos). As a result, these surnames are by now distributed all around the world.

 
Emilio Estévez and his father Martin Sheen (Ramón Estévez)
 
French-Spanish actor José Garcia, born Xosé García Doval of Galician parents

The third group of surnames are the occupational ones, derived from the job or legal status of the bearer: Ferreiro ("Smith"), Carpinteiro ("Carpenter"), Besteiro ("Crossbow bearer"), Crego ("Priest"), Freire ("Friar"), Faraldo ("Herald"), Pintor ("Painter"), Pedreiro ("Stonemason"), Gaiteiro ("Bagpiper"); and also Cabaleiro ("Knight"), Escudeiro ("Esquire"), Fidalgo ("Nobleman"), Juiz ("Judge").

The fourth group includes the surnames derived from nicknames, which can have very diverse motivations:

a) External appearance, as eye colour (Ruso, from Latin roscidus, grey-eyed; Garzo, blue-eyed), hair colour (Dourado, "Blonde"; Bermello, "Red"; Cerviño, literally "deer-like", "Tawny, Auburn"; Cao, "white"), complexion (Branco, "White"; Pardo, "Swarth"; Delgado, "Slender") or other characteristics: Formoso ("Handsome"), Tato ("Stutterer"), Forte ("Strong"), Calviño ("Bald"), Esquerdeiro ("Left-handed").

b) Temperament and personality: Bonome, Bonhome ("Goodman"), Fiúza ("Who can be trusted"), Guerreiro ("Warlike"), Cordo ("Judicious").

c) Tree names: Carballo ("Oak"); Amieiro, Ameneiro ("Alder"); Freijo ("Ash tree").

d) Animal names: Gerpe (from Serpe, "Serpent"); Falcón ("Falcon"); Baleato ("Young Whale"); Gato ("Cat"); Coello ("Rabbit"); Aguia ("Eagle")

e) Deeds: Romeu (a person who pilgrimaged to Rome or the Holy Land)

Many Galician surnames have become Castilianized over the centuries, most notably after the forced submission of the Galician nobility obtained by the Catholic Monarchs in the last years of the 15th century.[29] This reflected the gradual spread of the Spanish language through the cities, in Santiago de Compostela, Lugo, A Coruña, Vigo and Ferrol, in the last case due to the establishment of an important base of the Spanish navy there in the 18th century.[30] For example, surnames like Orxás, Veiga, Outeiro, became Orjales, Vega, Otero. Toponyms like Ourense, A Coruña, Fisterra became Orense, La Coruña, Finisterre. In many cases this linguistic assimilation created confusion, for example Niño da Aguia (Galician: Eagle's Nest) was translated into Spanish as Niño de la Guía (Spanish: the Guide's child) and Mesón do Bento (Galician: Benedict's house) was translated as Mesón del Viento (Spanish: House of Wind).

History Edit

Prehistory Edit

 
Neolithic dolmen of Dombate, roughly contemporary with Stonehenge. Originally it was under a tumulus covered by stones rich in mica

The oldest human occupation of Galicia dates to the Palaeolithic, when Galicia was covered by a dense oak temperate rain forest. The oldest human remains found, at Chan do Lindeiro, are from a woman who lived some 9,300 years ago and died because of a landslide, apparently while leading a pack of three aurochs; the genetic study of her remains revealed a woman that was an admixture of Western Hunter-Gatherer and Magdalenian people.[31] This type of admixture has been observed in France, also.[32]

Later on, some 6,500 years ago, a new population arrived from the Mediterranean, bringing agriculture and husbandry with them. Half of the woodland was razed to pasture and farmland, almost replacing all of the woodland some 5,000 years ago.[33] This new population also changed the landscape with the first permanent human structures, megaliths such as menhirs and barrows, cromlechs and menhirs. During the Neolithic Galicia was one of the foci of Atlantic European Megalithic Culture,[34] putting in contact the Mediterranean and south Iberia with the rest of Atlantic Europe.[35]

Some 4,500 years ago a new culture and population arrived and presumingly admixed with the local farmers, the Bell beaker people, coming ultimately from the Pontic steppe, who introduced copper metallurgy and weaponry, and probably also new cultivars and breeds. Some scholars consider that they were the first people to bring Indo-European languages into Western Europe.[36] They lived in open villages, only protected by fences or ditches; local archaeologists consider that they caused a very large culture impact, replacing collectivism with individualism, as exemplified by their burial in individual cists, along with the reuse of old Neolithic tombs.[37] From this period and later dates a rich tradition of petroglyphs, which find close similarities in the British Isles, Scandinavia or northern Italy.[38] Motives include cup and ring marks, labyrinths, Bronze Age weaponry, deer and deer hunting, warriors, riders and ships.

During the Late Bronze Age and until 800-600 BCE the contacts with both southern Spain to the south, and Armorica and the Atlantic Isles to the north, intensified, probably fuelled by the abundance of local gold and metals such as tin,[39] which allowed the production of high quality bronze. It is at this moment that began the deposition or hoarding of prestige items, frequently in aquatic context. Also, during the Late Bronze Age a new type of ceremonial henge-like ring structures, of some 50 metres in diameter, are built all along Galicia.[40]

This period and interchange network, usually known as Atlantic Bronze Age, which appears to have had its centre in modern-day Brittany, was proposed by John T. Koch and Sir Barry Cunliffe as the one that originated Celtic languages —as a product of pre-existing and closely related Indo-European languages— which could have expanded along with the elite ideology associated with this cultural complex (Celtic from the west theory). Alleged difficulties with this theory and with pre-existing theories ("Celtic from the east") have led Patrick Simms-Williams to propose an intermediate "Celtic from the centre" theory, with an expansion of Celtic languages from the Alps during the Bronze Age.[41] A recent study shows the large scale admixture of an earlier population from Britain with people arriving probably from France during the late Bronze Age. These people, in the opinion of the authors, constitute a plausible vector for the expansion of Celtic languages into Britain, as no further Iron Age people movement of relevant scale is shown in their data.[42]

The Bronze Age - Iron Age transition (locally 1000-600 BCE) coincides with the hoarding of large quantity of bronze axes, unused, both in Galicia, Brittany, and southern Britain.[43] During this same transitional period, some communities began to protect their villages, settling in very protected areas where they built hill-forts. Among the oldest of these are Chandebrito in Nigrán,[44] Penas do Castelo in A Pobra do Brollón[45] and O Cociñadoiro in Arteixo, on a sea cliff and protected by a 3-metre-tall wall, it was also a metal factory, perhaps[46] dedicated to the Atlantic commerce,[47] all of them founded some 2,900-2,700 years ago. These earlier fortified settlements seem to be placed to control metallurgical resources and commerce. This transitional period is also characterized by the apparition of longhouses of ultimately north European tradition[48][49][50] which were replaced later in much of Galicia by roundhouses. By the 4th century BCE hill-forts have expanded all along Galicia, also on lowlands, soon becoming the only type of settlements.

These hill-forts were delimited usually by one or more walls; the defences also include ditches, ramparts and towers, and could define several habitable spaces. The gates were also heavily fortified. Inside, houses were originally built with perishable materials, with or without a stone footing; later on they were entirely made with stone walls, having up to two storeys. Specially in the south, houses or public spaces were adorned with carved stones and warrior sculptures. Stone heads, mimicking severed heads, are found at several locations and were perhaps placed near the gates of the forts. A number of public installations are known, for example saunas of probable ritual use.[51] Of ritual use and great value were also items such as bronze cauldrons, richly figured sacrificial hatchets[52] and gold torcs, of which more than a hundred exemplars are known.[53]

This culture is now known as Castro Culture; another characteristic of this culture is the absence of known burials: just exceptionally urns with ashes have been found buried at foundational sites, acting probably as protectors.

Occasional contacts with Mediterranean navigators, since the last half of the second millennium BCE,[54] became common after the 6th century BCE[55] and the voyage of Himilco. Punic importations from southern Spain became frequent along the coast of southern Galicia, although they didn't penetrate very far to the north or to the interior; also, new decorative motives, as the six-petal rosettes, are popularized, together with new metallurgical techniques and pieces (ear pendants) and some other innovations as the round hand mill. In exchange, Punics obtained tin, abundant in the islands and peninsulas of western Galicia (probable origin of the Cassiterides island myth)[56] and probably also gold. Incidentally, Avienus' Ora Maritima says after Himilco that the Oestrymni (inhabitants of western Iberia) used hide boats to navigate, an assertion confirmed by Pliny the Elder for the Galicians.[57]

Roman conquest Edit

 
Guerreiros from northern Portugal, wearing torcs, viriae and caetra. Castro culture.

First recorded contact with Rome happened during the Second Punic War, when Gallaecians and Astures, together with Lusitanians, Cantabrians and Celtiberians —that is, the major Indo-European nations of Iberia— figured among the mercenary armies hired by Hannibal to go with him into Italy. According to Silus Italicus's Punica III:[58]

Fibrarum, et pennæ, divinarumque sagacem
Flammarum misit dives Callæcia pubem,
Barbara nunc patriis ululantem carmina linguis,
Nunc, pedis alterno percussa verbere terra,
Ad numerum resonas gaudentem plaudere cætras.
Hæc requies ludusque viris, ea sacra voluptas.
Cetera femineus peragit labor: addere sulco
Semina, et inpresso tellurem vertere aratro
Segne viris: quidquid duro sine Marte gerendum,
Callaici conjux obit inrequieta mariti.

 
Gallaecians vs. Romans. Reenactors in Xinzo de Limia, Festa do Esquecemento

"Opulent Galicia sent her youth, expert in divination through the entrails of beasts, the flight of birds and the divine lightnings; sometimes they delight to chant rude songs in their fatherland's tongues, other times they make the ground tremble with alternative foot while happily clashing their caetra at the same time. This leisure and diversion is a sacred delight for the men, the feminine laboriosity do the rest: adding the seed to the furrow and working the ground with the plough while the men idle. Everything which must be done, with the exception of the hard war, is made restlessly by the wife of the Galician." He later also mentions the Grovii of southern Galicia and northwestern Portugal, with their capital Tui, apart from the other Galicians; other authors also marked the distinctness of the Grovii: Pomponius Mela by addressing that they were non Celtic, unlike the rest of the inhabitants of the coasts of Galicia; Pliny by signalling their Greek origin.[58]

After ending victoriously the Lusitanian war with the assassination of Viriathus, consul Caepio tried to wage war, unsuccessfully, on Gallaecians and Vettones, for the help they lent to the Lusitanians. In 138 BCE, another consul, Decimus Junius Brutus, in command of two legions, passed de Douro river and later the Lethes or Oblivio (Limia, which frightened his troops because of its other name), in a successful campaign, managing to conquer many places of the Galicians. After reaching the Minho river, and in his way back, he attacked (again successfully) the Bracari, who had been harassing his supply chain: Appian describe the Bracari women fighting bravely side by side with their men; of the women who were taken prisoners, some killed themselves, and others killed their children, preferring death to servitude.[58] The spoils of war allowed Decimus Junius Brutus to celebrate a triumph back in Rome, receiving the name Callaicus. Recently a very large marching Roman camp was discovered at high altitude, in Lomba do Mouro, at the very frontier of Galicia with Portugal. In 2021 a C-14 dating showed that it was built during the 2nd century BCE; since it is north of the Limia, it probably belonged to this campaign.[59]

The Roman contact had a very large impact on the Castro Culture: an increase in commerce with the south and the Mediterranean; adoption or development of sculpture and stone carving; the warrior ethos appear to increase in social importance;[60] some hill-forts are built new or rebuilt as true urban centres, oppida, with streets and definite public spaces, as San Cibrao de Las (10 ha) or Santa Trega (20 ha).[61]

In 61 BCE Julius Caesar, commanding thirty cohorts, launched from Cádiz a maritime campaign along the Atlantic shores which ended in Brigantium. According to Cassius Dio, the locals, who had never seen a Roman fleet, surrendered in awe. Finally, in 29 BCE Augustus launched a campaign of conquest against Gallaecians, Asturians and Cantabrians. The most memorable episode of this war was the siege on the Mons Medullius, who Paulus Orosius placed near the Minho river: it was surrounded by a 15 mille trench before a simultaneous Roman advance; according to Anneus Florus the besieged decided to kill themselves, by fire, sword, or by the venon of the yew tree.[62] Tens of Roman camps have been found related to this war, most of them corresponding to the later stages of the war, against Asturians and Cantabrians, some tweenty of them in Galicia.[63] Augustus' victory over the Gallaecians is celebrated in the Sebasteion of Aphrodisias, Turkey, where a triumphal monument to Augustus mentions them[64] among other fifteen nations conquered by him. Also, the triumphal arch of Capentras probably represents a Gallaecian among other nations defeated by Augustus.[65]

Languages and ethnicity Edit

 
Geography and peoples of Galicia, after Mela, Pliny and local Latin epigraphy

Pomponius Mela (a geographer from Tingentera, modern day Algeciras in Andalusia) described, circa 43 CE, the coasts of northwestern Iberia:[66]

  Frons illa aliquamdiu rectam ripam habet, dein modico flexu accepto mox paululum eminet, tum reducta iterum iterumque recto margine iacens ad promunturium quod Celticum vocamus extenditur.
  Totam Celtici colunt, sed a Durio ad flexum Grovi, fluuntque per eos Avo, Celadus, Nebis, Minius et cui oblivionis cognomen est Limia. Flexus ipse Lambriacam urbem amplexus recipit fluvios Laeron et Ullam. Partem quae prominet Praesamarchi habitant, perque eos Tamaris et Sars flumina non longe orta decurrunt, Tamaris secundum Ebora portum, Sars iuxta turrem Augusti titulo memorabilem. Cetera super Tamarici Nerique incolunt in eo tractu ultimi. Hactenus enim ad occidentem versa litora pertinent.
  Deinde ad septentriones toto latere terra convertitur a Celtico promunturio ad Pyrenaeum usque. Perpetua eius ora, nisi ubi modici recessus ac parva promunturia sunt, ad Cantabros paene recta est.
  In ea primum Artabri sunt etiamnum Celticae gentis, deinde Astyres. In Artabris sinus ore angusto admissum mare non angusto ambitu excipiens Adrobricam urbem et quattuor amnium ostia incingit: duo etiam inter accolentis ignobilia sunt, per alia Ducanaris exit et Libyca

 
Iberia circa 300 BCE

"That ocean front for some distance has a straight bank, then, having taken a slight bend, soon protrudes a little bit and then it is drawn back, and again and again; then, lying on a straight line, the coast extends to the promontory which we call Celtic. All of it is inhabited by Celtics, except from the Durio until the bend, where the Grovi dwelt —and through them flow the rivers Avo, Celadus, Nebis, Minius and Limia, also called Oblivio—. On the bend there is the city of Lambriaca and the receding part receives the rivers Laeros and Ulia. The prominent part is inhabited by the Praestamarci, and through them flow the rivers Tamaris and Sars —which are born not afar— Tamaris by harbour Ebora, Sars by the tower of Augustus, of memorable title. For the rest, the Supertamarici and Neri inhabit in the last tract. Up to here what belongs to the western coast. From there all the coast is turned to the north, from the Celtic promontory to the Pyrenees. Its regular coast, except where there are small retreats and small headlands, is almost straight by the Cantabrians. On it first of all are the Artabri, still a Celtic people, then the Astures. Among the Artabri there is a bay which lets the sea through a narrow mouth, and encircles, not in a narrow circuit, the city of Adrobrica and the mouth of four rivers." The Atlantic and northern coast of today's Galicia was inhabited by Celtic peoples, with the exception of the southern extreme. Others geographers and authors (Pliny, Strabo), as well as the local Latin epigraphy, confirm the presence of Celtic peoples.

As for the language or languages spoken by the Galicians previously to their romanization, most scholars usually perceive a primitive Indo-European layer, another later one hardly distinguishable from Celtic and identifiable with Lusitanian, most notable in the south, the Gallaecia Bracarense (as a result, Lusitanian is sometimes called Lusitanian-Gallaecian) and finally Celtic proper; as stated by Alberto J. Lorrio:[67] "the presence of Celtic elements in the Northwest is indisputable, but there is no unanimity in considering whether there was an only Indo-European language in the West of Iberia, of Celtic kind, or either a number of languages derived from the arrival of non-Celtic Indo-Europeans first, and Celts later on". Some academic positions on this issue:

  • Francesco Benozzo, proponent of the Palaeolithic continuity theory, considers that Celtic language is autochthonous in Galicia.[68] Since recent genetic studios show that European and Iberian Palaeolithic population was assimilated by larger migrant populations proceeding first from the Balkans and Anatolia, and later from Central Europe and ultimately from the Pontic steppe, this theory is probably flawed.
  • For John T. Koch and Barry Cunliffe, proponent of the Celtic from the West theory, the Celtic language would have expanded during the late Bronze Age from the European Atlantic fringe, including Galicia, to the east.[69][70][71] For Patrick Simms-Williams, Celtic expanded from modern day France during the late Bronze Age.[41]
  • Joan Coromines, lexicographer and author of the Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico, considered that Galician language had a very important substrate attributable to at least two different Indo-European languages, an older non Celtic one who he derived from the Urnfield people and thought was present in most of northern Iberia, and another one he named Artabrian, the Celtic language of the Celts of Galicia.
  • Blanca M. Prósper[72] and Francisco Villar defend that Lusitanian is a non Celtic Indo-European language related to Italic languages[73] because, in their opinion, the Indo-European aspirated stops have evolved into /f/ and /h/. At the same time, all along the area of this language, and specially in modern-day Galicia, a Celtic language was spoken; this language, a q-Celtic language similar to Celtiberian, is the Western Hispano-Celtic.[74][75]
  • Joaquín Gorrochategui, José M. Vallejo,[76] Alberto J. Lorrio, García Alonso,[77] E. Luján[78] and others, consider that Lusitanian is not a Celtic language, but they don't consider it closer to Italic, neither, but part of a group of IE dialects which later evolved into Celtic, Italic and Lusitanian. On the other hand, Celtic speakers lived in close proximity to the Lusitanian. In this context, Gallaecia Bracarensis was clearly in communion with the Lusitania,[79] while Gallaecia Lucensis had its own Celtic profile.[80][81][82][83][84]
  • Jürgen Untermann, continued by his disciple Carlos Búa,[85] defended that along the westernmost part of Iberia there was essentially just one language or group of languages, Gallaecian-Lusitanian or Lusitanian and Gallaecian, which in their opinion was definitely Celtic and not Italoid, as shown by the ending of dative plural (-bo, -bor < PIE -*bhos) and the evolution of the syllabic consonants, in particular -r̥- > -ri-.
  • Local scholars and researchers of toponymy and lexicon of pre-Latin origin (J. J. Moralejo, Edelmiro Bascuas) saw at least two layers of Indo-Europeans: one early layer of a very primitive IE language which preserved p, most notable in river names, and a later Celtic layer.[86][87]

Roman period Edit

 
Conventi Iuridici (subprovincial divisions)

After the Roman conquest, the lands and people of northwestern Iberia were divided in three conventi (Gallaecia Lucensis, Gallaecia Bracarensis and Asturia) and annexed to the province of Hispania Tarraconensis.[88] Pliny wrote that the Lucenses comprised 16 populi and 166,000 free heads, and mentions the Lemavi, Albiones, Cibarci, Egivarri Namarini, Adovi, Arroni, Arrotrebae, Celtici Neri, Celtici Supertamarci, Copori, Celtici Praestamarci, Cileni among them (other authors mention also the Baedui, Artabri and Seurri); the Astures comprised 22 populi and 240,000, of whom the Lougei, Gigurri and Tiburi dwelt lands now in Galicia; finally the Bracarenses 24 civitates and 285,000, of whom the Grovi, Helleni, Querquerni, Coelerni, Bibali, Limici, Tamacani and Interamici dwelt, at least partially, in modern-day Galicia. The names of some of these peoples have been preserved as the names of regions, parishes and villages: Lemos < Lemavos, Cabarcos, Soneira < *Sub Nerii, Céltigos < Celticos, Valdeorras < Valle de Gigurris, Trives < Tiburis, Támagos < Tamacanos. Some other Galician regions derive from some populi or subdivision not listed by the classic authors, among them: Bergantiños < Brigantinos, from Briganti, Nendo < Nemetos, from Nemeton, Entíns < Gentinis ('the chieftains').[89]

A common characteristic of both Gallaecians and western Astures were their onomastic formula and social structure: while most of the other Indo-European peoples of Hispania used a formula such as:

Name + Patronimic (gen. s.) + Gens / Family (gen. pl.), as, for example,
Turaesius Letondicum Marsi f(ilius) : 'Turaesius son of Marsi, of the Letondi clan'
 
Roman works of Montefurado (Pierced Mountain), which diverted the course of the river Sil

Gallaecians and western Astures used, until the 2nd century of our era, the formula:[90]

Name + Patronimic (gen. s.) + [Populi/Civitas] (nom. s.) + [⊃] (abreviature of castellum) Origo (abl. s.) as:
Nicer Clvtosi ⊃ Cavriaca Principis Albionum : Nicer, son of Clutosios, from castle Cauria, prince of the Albion
Caeleo Cadroiolonis f(ilius) Cilenus ⊃ Berisamo : Cailio, son of Cadroilo, Cilenus from castle Berisamo
Fabia Eburi f(ilia) Lemava ⊃ Eritaeco : Fabia, daughter of Eburios, Lemava from castle Eritaico
Eburia Calueni f(ilia) Celtica Sup(ertamarca) ⊃ Lubri : Eburia, daughter of Calugenos, Celtica Supertamarca from castle Lubris
Anceitus Vacc[e]i f(ilius) limicus ⊃ Talabrig(a) : Anceitos, son of Vacceos, Limicus from castle Talabriga

The known personal names used by locals in northern Gallaecia were largely Celtic:[91] Aio, Alluquius, Ambatus, Ambollus, Andamus, Angetus, Arius, Artius, Atius, Atia, Boutius, Cadroiolo, Caeleo, Caluenus, Camalus, Cambauius, Celtiatus, Cloutaius, Cloutius, Clutamus, Clutosius, Coedus, Coemia, Coroturetis, Eburus, Eburia, Louesus, Medamus, Nantia, Nantius, Reburrus, Secoilia, Seguia, Talauius, Tridia, Vecius, Veroblius, Verotus, Vesuclotus, among others.

Three legions were stationed near the Cantabrian mountains after the war, later reduced to the Legio VII Gemina in León, with three auxiliary cohorts in Galicia (the Cohors I Celtiberorum in Ciadella, Sobrado dos Monxes, near Brigantium; other unity at Aquis Querquennis, and another one near Lucus Augusti) and others elsewhere. Soon Roma began to recruit auxiliary troops locally: five cohorts of Gallaecians from the conventus Lucenses, other five of bracarenses, two mixed ones of Galicians and Asturians, and an ala and cohort of Lemavi.[92][93]

Also, Gallaecia and Asturia became the most important producers of gold on the Empire: according to Pliny Lusitania, Gallaecia and, especially, Asturia, produced the equivalent to 6,700 kg per year. It has been stimated that the eight hundred Roman gold mines known in Galicia produced in total in between 190,000 and 2,000,000 kg.[94]


During the Diocletian reforms, late third century, Gallaecia was upgraded to province.

Germanic era: 5th – 8th centuries Edit

In 409 the Vandals, Suebi and Alans, who had entered in the Roman Empire in 405 or 406 crossing the Rhin, passed into the Iberian Peninsula. After a year of war and plundering, they were pacified by the offering of lands where to settle. The Roman province of Gallaecia (including Gallaecia proper and the regions of Asturia and Cantabria) were assigned to the Suebi and the Hasding Vandals. Both groups clashed soon, in 419, and so the Vandals left to southern Iberia, where they incorporated the last remnants of Alans and Silingi Vandals, who had been crushed by Rome in previous years. In 429 the Vandals left for Africa.[95][96]

In 430 a long term conflict broke in between the Suebi and locals who chronicler Hydatius called gallaecos (i.e. galegos, the endonym of modern day Galicians) and, initially, plebs ("folk, common people"), in contrast with whom he called romani: the rural landowners in Lusitania and the inhabitants of the cities. Soon, among those Galicians, appear also local noblemen and churchmen. As the Britons in southern Great Britain, the Galician were forced to act autonomously from Rome, exercising home rule.[97] They reoccupied old Iron Age hill-forts and built new strongholds and fortification all along Galicia;[98] the largest known today are at Mt. Pindo,[99] Mt. Aloia[100] and at Castro Valente.[101] These fortresses were later used by locals against Visigoths, Arabs and Norsemen. In this conflict in between Galicians and Suebi, Rome and local bishops acted frequently rather as intermediaries than as a part, and peace our truce was obtained or warranted with the interchange of prisoners and hostages.[95][102]

In 438 both people attained a peace that would last for twenty years; by then old king Hermeric, who had lead their people at least since their arrival from Central Europe, ceded the crown to his son Rechila, who would expand the kingdom to the south and east, conquering Emerita Augusta, Mértola and Seville, and moving his troops into eastern Hispania, defeating both Roman and Visigoth armies along the way. His successor and son, Rechiar, converted from paganism to Catholicism upon being crowned, and married a Visigoth princess. He negotiated with Rome a new status for his kingdom and became the first post-Roman Germanic king to mint coins in his name.[103] Soon, he tried to expand into the last Roman province in Hispania, Tarraconense; eventually this led to open conflict with Rome and the Visigoths. In 456 a large army of foederati commanded by the kings of the Visigoths and the Burgundians entered Hispania and defeated the Suebi army near the city of León. Rechiar fled to Porto, but he was captured and later executed. Notwithstanding, the Visigoths left in a hurry the theatre of operation, returning to France. That allowed the Suebi to regroup. After a period of petty-kings rivalry, accompanied by devastation and pillage on Galicians, Remismund was recognized as only and legitimate king by the Suebi, and accepted by the Visigoths; he also promoted the Arianism among the Suebi. As result, the Suebi kingdom came to its limits, encompassing modern day Galicia, northern Portugal until Coimbra, and large parts of Asturias, León and Zamora.[103]

The chronicle of Hydatius also records naval raids of both Vandals and Heruli on the Galician coasts during the 5th century.[95]

Medieval era Edit

In 718 the area briefly came under the control of the Moors after their conquest and dismantling of the Visigothic Empire, but the Galicians successfully rebelled against Moorish rule in 739, establishing a renewed Kingdom of Galicia which would become totally stable after 813 with the medieval popularization of the "Way of St James".

Geography and demographics Edit

 
Galician bagpipers in New York.

Political and administrative divisions Edit

The autonomous community, a concept established in the Spanish constitution of 1978, that is known as (a) Comunidade Autónoma Galega in Galician, and as (la) Comunidad Autónoma Gallega in Spanish (in English: Galician Autonomous Community), is composed of the four Spanish provinces of A Coruña, Lugo, Ourense, and Pontevedra.

Population, main cities and languages Edit

The official statistical body of Galicia is the Instituto Galego de Estatística (IGE). According to the IGE, Galicia's total population in 2008 was 2,783,100 (1,138,474 in A Coruña,[104] 355.406 in Lugo,[105] 336.002 in Ourense,[106] and 953.218 in Pontevedra[107]). The most important cities in this region, which serve as the provinces' administrative centres, are Vigo (in Pontevedra), Pontevedra, Santiago de Compostela, A Coruña, Ferrol (in A Coruña), Lugo (in Lugo), and Ourense (in Ourense). The official languages are Galician and Spanish. Knowledge of Spanish is compulsory according to the Spanish constitution and virtually universal. Knowledge of Galician, after declining for many years owing to the pressure of Spanish and official persecution, is again on the rise due to favorable official language policies and popular support.[citation needed] Currently about 82% of Galicia's population can speak Galician[108] and about 61% have it as a mother tongue.[10]

Culture Edit

Celtic revival and Celtic identity Edit

 
Galician pipe band Dambara at the Festival Interceltique de Lorient, 2012

In the 19th century a group of Romantic and Nationalist writers and scholars, among them Eduardo Pondal and Manuel Murguía,[109] led a Celtic revival initially based on the historical testimonies of ancient Roman and Greek authors (Pomponius Mela, Pliny the Elder, Strabo and Ptolemy), who wrote about the Celtic peoples who inhabited Galicia;[110] but they also based this revival in linguistic and onomastic data,[111][112] and in the similarity of some aspects of the culture and the geography of Galicia with that of the Celtic countries as Ireland, Brittany and Britain, as well as in the Bronze and Iron Age archaeological cultures.[113][114] These similarities included legends and traditions,[115] and decorative and popular arts and music.[116] It also included the green hilly landscape and the ubiquity of Iron Age hill-forts, Neolithic megaliths and Bronze Age cup and ring marks, which were and are popularly seen as "Celtic", also among foreigners who travelled to Galicia.[117][118][119]

During the late 19th and early 20th century this revival permeated Galician society: in 1916 Os Pinos, a poem by Eduardo Pondal, was chosen as the lyrics for the new Galician hymn. One of the strophes of the poem says: Galicians, be strong / ready to great deeds / align your breast / for a glorious end / sons of the noble Celts / strong and traveller / fight for the fate / of the homeland of Breogán.[120] The Celtic past became an integral part of the self-perceived Galician identity:[121] as a result an important number of cultural association and sport clubs received names related to the Celts, among them Celta de Vigo, Céltiga FC, CB Breogán, etc.

 
Galician Celtic Revival: Homes de Brigantia ('Men of Brigantia'), by Camilo Díaz Baliño (1922)

From the 1970s on a series of Celtic music and cultural festivals were also popularized, the most notable being the Festival Internacional do Mundo Celta de Ortigueira, at the same time that Galician folk musical bands and interpreters became usual participants in Celtic festivals elsewhere, as in the Interceltic festival of Lorient, where Galicia sent its first delegation in 1976.[122]

Folklore and traditions Edit

 
Winged serpent of Gondomil. The Christian cross is a latter addition

Myths and legends Edit

 
Fornela dos Mouros ('Mouros' oven') dolmen
 
Pico Sagro, where a dragon dwelt
 
Maruxaina
 
1920's advertising and the Santa Compaña

Galician folklore is similar to that of the rest of western Europe, especially to that or northern Portugal, Asturias and Cantabria. Among its most notorious myths are the following:[123]

  • Before the world was inhabited by humans, animals could speak: many traditional tales about animals begin with the phrase aló cando os animais falaban, 'back then, when animals used to speak', which has become equivalent to English once upon a time.
  • Our world is connected to an underworld dwelt by the mouros ('the dark ones' or perhaps 'the dead ones', mistaken by Andalusian Moors in many tales), an ancient and sombre race who inhabited the upper world before ourselves and who dislike humans. They can still travel to our world to interact with us through the ruins of the places they built or inhabited, such as barrows, dolmens, stone circles, hill-forts, etc., which are still traditionally called with names such as Eira dos Mouros ('Mouros' threshing floor'), Casa dos Mouros ('Mouros' house'), Forno dos Mouros ('Mouros' oven'). This kind of place names are already attested in Latin documents dating to circa 900 CE and later. Humans can also travel to the underworld, either becoming very rich or suffering for their greed as a result. Some mouros or encantos can appear as tall and strong men riding large horses and there are specific spells to ask them for riches.
  • Fairies and nymphs (who also belong to the netherworld) receive many names, among them mouras, encantos ('apparition; spell'), damas ('ladies'), madamas ('miladies'), xás (from Latin dianas). They are frequently portrayed as women of incredible beauty and riches and long golden blonde hair that can be found by the aforementioned prehistoric ruins or at fountains and ponds, where they comb their hair. Other times, they are gigantic women of incredible strength, enough to move massive boulders, who can be found with a spinning distaff or a baby.[124] Under this appearance they are the same with the Vella ("the Old Lady"), who is somehow also responsible for the weather: the rainbow is called arco da vella in Galician ("Old Lady's bow"), a myth which is probably related to the Cailleach, 'Old Woman', 'Hag', of Ireland and Scotland.[125]
  • Lavandeiras (washerwomen) are eerie fairies that are found at a river of pond washing clothes, under the aspect of women, especially at night. They can ask a passer-by to help twits the clothes: if the passer-by mistakenly twists in the same direction, the clothes turn into blood.[123]
  • The trasnos, tardos or trasgos (goblins) are mischievous, household creatures, who like to annoy and confound people. They can cause nightmares by siting on the chest of the people, move things and cause other troubles. In Galician trasnada (~'goblin-ery') means 'trick, mischief'.
  • Other sign of the netherworld is the apparition of a golden hen followed by his golden chicks (a galiña dos pitos de ouro), which, no matter how hard one tries, can't be caught. There is a similar myth in Bulgaria.
  • Maruxaina was a vicious siren who lived near the town of San Cribrao and who eventually was captured and executed by the locals.
  • The barrows are also inhabited by other entities called ouvas ('elfs').
  • Other beings with control of the weather are the nubeiros ('cloud-ers'). George Borrow in his book The Bible in Spain narrates how he met a nubeiro while travelling Galicia circa 1835.[126] Other similar beings are the tronantes and escoleres.
  • Many lakes are believed to be the result of the drowning of ancient cities (frequently called Lucerna, Valverde, 'Green Valley', or Antiochia in tales and legends) when the inhabitants failed to give shelter to Jesus or a saint, or when a king of the mouros used his magic out of spit. Some nights the city's bells can still be heard.[123] This legend was first recorded in the 12th century Codex Calixtinus and in that version is Charlemagne who prays God and Saint James to drown a Moor city reluctant to commit to him.[127] This myth appear to be related to the Breton myth of Ys.
  • Another mythical being associated with drowned cities is the boi bruador, a bellowing ox which can be heard at night near lakes, a legend first recorded circa 1550.[123]
  • Olláparos are giants similar to cyclopes who sometimes have also an eye on the back of the head.[123] They are related to the Cantabrian Ojáncanu.
  • Bruxas and meigas (witches) can take the form of animals. In particular, the chuchonas ('suckers') can take the form of a blowfly to feed on the blood of babies and children, causing anaemia.
  • Lobishomes (werewolves) are humans who sometimes turn into wolves because of a curse.[128] Manuel Blanco Romasanta was a Galician serial killer sentenced to death in 1853 for thirteen assassinations. His legal defence was based in his condition of werewolf as consequence of a curse.[129]
  • Anciently, there were giant serpents (serpe, there's a mountain range called Cova da Serpe, 'Sepents' dem', so named since at least the 10th century), some of them winged, and dragons (dragón) which could feed on cattle. On the legend of the transfer of the body of Saint James from the Holy land to Galicia, recorded in the 12th century Codex Calixtinus, the local queen, Queen Lupa, commanded the disciples of Saint James to go grab a pair of meek oxen she had by the hill known as Pico Sacro ("Sacred Peak"), where a dragon dwelt, with the hope that either the dragon or the oxen (which were actually fierce bulls) would kill them.[127] There were also cocas (cockatrices), which were taken out in procession in certain dates, as attested since 1437.[123] In the town of Redondela this procession is still held each year.
 
Santa Compaña (modern graffiti)
  • The compaña ('retinue'), hoste ('army'), estantiga ( < hoste antiga, 'anciente army'), Santa Compaña ('holy retinue') is the local version of the wild hunt. In its modern form is a nocturne procession of the dead, who, porting candles or torches, and frequently a coffin, announce the imminent decease of a neighbour. This procession can "capture" a living person, who is then obliged to precede the Santa Compaña all night long, through forest, streams and brambles, or until another one takes his place. One can protect himself from being taken by the Compaña by tracing a circle and getting inside it, or by throwing oneself to the ground and ignoring the Compaña while it passes over. A solitary phantom related to the Compaña is the estadea. This myth is also related to the fairy host in Ireland, sluagh in Scotland and toili in Wales.[115]
  • The urco (güercu in Asturias) is a giant black dog who emerges from the sea or from a river to cause terror to the locals. They are also, per se, a bad omen.[130]

Traditions and beliefs Edit

While Galician was traditionally a profoundly Catholic society, in its beliefs there are many remnants of previous religious systems, in particular the belief on a pantheon of gods, now saints; in the reincarnation in form of an animal, when there are unfinished business; the evil eye and the sickness caused by curses; the holiness of crossroads and fountains, etcetera. The first attestation of the beliefs of the Galicians in a Christian context is offered by the Pannonian Martin of Braga who in his letter De Correctione Rusticorum condemns, among others, the belief in the Roman gods or in the lamias, nymphs and dianas, and also in practices as putting candles to trees, springs and crossroads.

  • Sanctuaries are socially important places for pilgrimage (romaría) and devotion, each one under the protection of a saint or virgin Mary. There are different beliefs associated with each one: the sanctuary of Santo André de Teixido in Cedeira is associated with reincarnation, as it is said that a Santo André de Teixido vai de morto o que non foi de vivo ('to Saint Andrew at Teixido —yew-tree-copse— goes as dead the ones that didn't went while alive'). It is advised not to kill lizards or any other animal while in the vicinity. The Corpiño sanctuary near Lalín and San Campío near Tomiño are associated with the treatment of mental illness and evil eye or meigallo. Virxe da Barca in Muxía is built by the place where it is said that Mary arrived aboard a stone boat, a recurring myth in Galicia also present in Ireland and Brittany.[131] Many of these places were probably built over pagan cult places.
  • High crosses and calvaries, locally named cruceiros or peto de ánimas, are usually placed at crossroads, before sacred places, or marking a pilgrimage road. Placing flowers or lit candles before that monuments are common practices. In 1996 the Galician community in Ushuaia, Argentine, the southernmost city on the world, built a cruceiro with the legent 'Galicia shines in this land's end'.
  • Traditional medicine was administered by menciñeiros and menciñeiras, who used both herbs and spells to treat illness. Also compoñedores and compoñedoras: healers specialized in mending bones and joints.

Popular feasts Edit

Aside from Catholic feasts and celebrations, there are other annual celebrations of pagan or mixed origin:

  • Entroido (Shrovetide, Carnival). The Entroido ('entering; prelude') is usually a period of indulgence and feasts, which contrast with the soberness of the Holy Week and Easter. Parades and festivals (which were prosecuted by the Catholic Church) are held all along Galicia and, specially in Ourense, masks such as the peliqueiros, cigarróns, boteiros, felos, pantallas, who can commit minor mischiefs to other attendants, are central to the celebrations.
  • Noite de San Xoán (Saint John's eve). Saint John's eve is celebrated around bonfires which are lit at dusk; young people jump over the fire three, seven or nine times. Other traditions associated to this night is the nine-waves bath in the beach, for having children,[132] and the preparation of the auga de San Xoán (Saint John's water) by letting a bowl with a mixture of selected herbs outdoors all night. This water is used to wash one's face in the morning.
  • Rapa das bestas.

Traditional costume Edit

Traditional Galician costume, as understood today, got conformed fundamentally during the second half of the 18th century. Notwithstanding, some very characteristic elements, as the monteira (an embroidered felt hat), breeches and jacket are already present in 16th century depictions.[133] Although there are some regional variance, males attire is generally composed of monteira and sometimes pano (headcloth), camisa (shirt), chaleco (vest), chaqueta (jacket), faixa (sash), calzón (breeches), cirolas (underwear), polainas (gaiters, spats) and zocas, zocos (clogs or boots).[133]

Female costume was composed of cofia (coif) or, later, pano (headcloth); dengue (short cape worn as a jacket) or corpiño (bodice); camisa (shirt), refaixo (petticoat), saia (skirt), mantelo (apron) and faltriqueira (pouch or bag).[133]

Traditional music Edit

Muiñeira
Marcha procesional
Muiñeira de Froxán

The most characteristic instruments in traditional music is probably the gaita (bagpipe). The gaita have a conical double-reed chanter, and usually have one to four drones.[134] The bag is usually inflated through a blowpipe, but in the gaita de barquín it is inflated by the operation of a bellows. In the past the gaita was usually accompanied just by tamboril (snare drum) and bombo or caixa (bass drum), but since the middle of the twentieth century the groups and bands have become very popular. Pieces which are usually interpreted with gaita are the muiñeira, often in 6
8
time and very similar to Irish jigs;[135] the alborada, played during the early mornings of holydays; the marcha (march) which accompanies processions and retinues. Some renowned compositions are the 19th century Muiñeira de Chantada and the traditional Aires de Pontevedra (an alborada) and Marcha do Antigo Reino de Galicia (March of the Old Kingdom of Galicia).

Another very representative instrument is the pandeireta (tambourine), which along or together with other drums as the pandeiro, castanets, etc., usually accompanied the songs and celebrations of the working women and men during the seráns (evenings), foliadas or fiadas.

Other genres include de alalá, which can be sung a cappella, or the cancións de cego (blindman's songs), interpreted with violin of zanfoña.

Literature Edit

Painting, plastic arts and architecture Edit

Science Edit

Music Edit

Sport Edit

Cinema and TV Edit

People of Galician origin Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Sum of the inhabitants of Spain born in Galicia (c. 2.8 million), plus Spaniards living abroad and inscribed in the electoral census (CERA) as electors in one of the four Galician constituencies.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Not including Galicians born outside Galicia
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  9. ^ Recalde, Montserrat (1997). La vitalidad etnolingüística gallega. València: Centro de Estudios sobre Comunicación Interlingüistíca e Intercultural. ISBN 978-84-370-2895-8.
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  13. ^ Luján, Eugenio (2009). "Pueblos celtas y no celtas de la Galicia antigua: fuentes literarias frente a fuentes epigráficas". Real Académia de Cultura Valenciana: Sección de estudios ibéricos "D. Fletcher Valls". Estudios de lenguas y epigrafía antiguas - ELEA (9): 219–250. ISSN 1135-5026. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
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  15. ^ "9.17. Title for image of people of the Callaeci". IAph. from the original on 18 June 2016. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
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  75. ^ "Anyway, nothing of what I am going to say precludes the existence of Celtic speakers all along the Atlantic coast of Spain and Portugal. As a matter of fact, a great deal of evidence, mostly from place names and personal names, points to their presence there. By means of an increasingly refined scrutiny we are able to come up with much Celtic vocabulary never attested in Celtiberian, as well as archaisms in word formation, like the preservation of the simple superlative suffix in —amo-, as well as phonetic changes that Celtiberian never shared, like for instance the loss of/g/ in contact with front vowels." Prósper, Blanca María (2008). "Lusitanian. A Non-Celtic Indo-European Language of Western Hispania". Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe, 2008, págs. 53-64. Servicio de Publicaciones. pp. 53–64. ISBN 978-84-7800-335-8. from the original on 13 February 2022. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
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  111. ^ Luján, Eugenio (2008). "Galician Place-Names Attested Epigraphically". Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe, 2008, págs. 65-82. Servicio de Publicaciones. pp. 65–82. ISBN 978-84-7800-335-8. from the original on 11 February 2022. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
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  120. ^ "Galegos, sede fortes / prontos a grandes feitos / aparellade os peitos / a glorioso afán / fillos dos nobres celtas / fortes e peregrinos / luitade plos destinos / dos eidos de Breogán" Cf. "Himno Gallego". from the original on 14 March 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  121. ^ González García, F. J. (coord.) (2007). Los pueblos de la Galicia céltica. Madrid: Ediciones Akal. p. 9. ISBN 978-84-460-2260-2.
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  126. ^ "—Ha, ha! I know him. He ran with me to this fountain, where he has just left me. That man, Sir Cavalier, is no thief. If he is any thing at all, he is a Nuveiro,—a fellow who rides upon the clouds, and is occasionally whisked away by a gust of wind. Should you ever travel with that man again, never allow him more than one glass of anise at a time, or he will infallibly mount into the clouds and leave you, and then he will ride and run till he comes to a water brook, or knocks his head against a fountain—then one draught, and he is himself again." George Borrow (1923). The Bible In Spain. John Murray. p. 420. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  127. ^ a b Códice Calixtino: o liber Sancti Iacobi en Galego (in Galician). Translated by Xosé López Díaz (2nd ed.). [Galicia]. 2013. pp. 442–443. ISBN 978-84-453-5104-8. OCLC 867868161.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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External links Edit

  • Galician Portal
  • Galician language portal
  • Galician Music, Culture and History
  • Galician Government
  • Galician History and Language
  • Santiago Tourism
  • Page about The Way of St James
  • Official page about The Way of St James
  • Arquivo do Galego Oral – An archive of records of Galician speakers.
  • A Nosa Fala – Sound recordings of the different dialects of the Galician language.

galicians, confused, with, people, eastern, european, region, galicia, galician, galegos, ɡaˈleɣʊs, spanish, gallegos, ɡaˈʎeɣos, european, ethnic, group, from, spain, closely, related, portuguese, people, historic, homeland, galicia, north, west, iberian, peni. Not to be confused with the people of the eastern European region of Galicia Galicians Galician galegos ɡaˈleɣʊs Spanish gallegos ɡaˈʎeɣos are a European ethnic group 7 from Spain it is closely related to the Portuguese people 8 and has its historic homeland in Galicia in the north west of the Iberian Peninsula 9 Two Romance languages are widely spoken and official in Galicia the native Galician and Spanish 10 GaliciansGalegosGalician bagpipersTotal populationc 3 2 million 1 Regions with significant populations Spain 2 752 676 2 3 Galicia 2 397 6132 397 613 2 3 Province of A Coruna991 588 2 3 Province of Pontevedra833 205 2 3 Province of Lugo300 419 2 3 Province of Ourense272 401 2 3 Spain excluding Galicia 355 063 2 3 Argentina147 062 4 Venezuela38 440 46 882 4 5 Brazil38 554 4 Uruguay35 369 4 Cuba31 077 4 Switzerland30 737 4 France16 075 4 United States14 172 4 Germany13 305 4 United Kingdom10 755 4 Mexico9 895 4 Galicians inscribed in the electoral census and living abroad combined 2013 414 650 4 Italy8 775 4 Greece8 000 4 Serbia5 000 4 Romania2 000 4 Turkey1 701 4 LanguagesGalician SpanishReligionRoman Catholicism 6 Related ethnic groupsPortuguese Asturians other Spaniards Contents 1 Etymology 2 Languages 2 1 Galician 2 2 Surnames 3 History 3 1 Prehistory 3 2 Roman conquest 3 2 1 Languages and ethnicity 3 3 Roman period 3 4 Germanic era 5th 8th centuries 3 5 Medieval era 4 Geography and demographics 4 1 Political and administrative divisions 4 2 Population main cities and languages 5 Culture 5 1 Celtic revival and Celtic identity 5 2 Folklore and traditions 5 2 1 Myths and legends 5 2 2 Traditions and beliefs 5 2 3 Popular feasts 5 2 4 Traditional costume 5 2 5 Traditional music 5 3 Literature 5 4 Painting plastic arts and architecture 5 5 Science 5 6 Music 5 7 Sport 5 8 Cinema and TV 6 People of Galician origin 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEtymology Edit nbsp Castro culture carved stonesThe ethnonym of the Galicians galegos derives directly from the Latin Gallaeci or Callaeci itself an adaptation of the name of a local Celtic tribe 11 12 13 known to the Greeks as Kallaikoi Kallaikoi They lived in what is now Galicia and northern Portugal and were defeated by the Roman General Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus in the 2nd century BCE and later conquered by Augustus 14 The Romans later applied that name to all the people who shared the same culture and language in the north west from the Douro River valley in the south to the Cantabrian Sea in the north and west to the Navia River That encompassed such tribes as the Celtici the Artabri the Lemavi and the Albiones The oldest known inscription referring to the Gallaeci reading Ἔ8no ys Kallaikῶ n people of the Gallaeci was found in 1981 in the Sebasteion of Aphrodisias Turkey a triumphal monument to Roman Emperor Augustus mentions them among other 15 nations that he conquered 15 The etymology of the name has been studied since the 7th century by authors such as Isidore of Seville who wrote Galicians are called so because of their fair skin as the Gauls and related the name to the Greek word for milk gala gala However modern scholars like J J Moralejo 14 and Carlos Bua 16 have derived the name of the ancient Callaeci either from Proto Indo European kl H n hill through a local relational suffix aik also attested in Celtiberian language and so meaning the highlanders or either from Proto Celtic kalli forest and so means the forest people 17 Another recent proposal comes from the linguist Francesco Benozzo who is not specialized in Celtic languages and identified the root gall kall in a number of Celtic words with the meaning stone or rock as follows gall old Irish gal Middle Welsh gailleichan Scottish Gaelic galagh Manx and gall Gaulish Hence Benozzo explains the name Callaecia and its ethnonym Callaeci as being the stone people or the people of the stone those who work with stones in reference to the ancient megaliths and stone formations that are so common in Galicia and Portugal 18 Specialists of the Celtic languages do not consider there is a hypothetical Gaulish root gall meaning stone or rock but galia strength gt French gaill ard strong related to Old Irish gal berserk rage war fury Welsh gallu and Breton galloud power 19 It is distinct from Gaulish cal l io hoof or testicle 20 21 related to Welsh caill Breton kell testicle gt Gaulish caliavo gt Old French chaillou French caillou 20 22 all from the Proto Indo European root kal hard hardness perhaps via suffixed zero grade kl H no m For instance in Latin callum hard or thick substance is also found and so both E Rivas and Juan J Moralejo relate the toponym Gallaecia Callaecia with the Latin word callus 23 Languages EditGalician Edit Main article Galician language nbsp A comparative map of Galicia showing speakers of Galician as first language in 2001 and 2011 Galician Institute of Statistics nbsp La Romeria the pilgrimage Sorolla 1915Galician is a Romance language belonging to the Western Ibero Romance branch as such it derives from Latin It has official status in Galicia Galician is also spoken in the neighbouring autonomous communities of Asturias and Castile and Leon near their borders with Galicia 24 Medieval or Old Galician also known by linguists as Galician Portuguese developed locally in the Northwest of the Iberian Peninsula from Vulgar Latin becoming the language spoken and written in the medieval kingdoms of Galicia from 1230 united with the kingdoms of Leon and Castille under the same sovereign and Portugal The Galician Portuguese language developed a rich literary tradition from the last years of the 12th century During the 13th century it gradually replaced Latin as the language used in public and private charters deeds and legal documents in Galicia Portugal and in the neighbouring regions in Asturias and Leon 25 Galician Portuguese diverged into two linguistic varieties Galician and Portuguese from the 15th century on Galician became a regional spoken language under the influence of Castilian Spanish while Portuguese became the international one as language of the Portuguese Empire The two varieties are still close together and in particular northern Portuguese dialects share an important number of similarities with Galician ones 25 The official institution regulating the Galician language backed by the Galician government and universities the Royal Galician Academy claims that modern Galician must be considered an independent Romance language belonging to the group of Ibero Romance languages and having strong ties with Portuguese and its northern dialects However the Associacom Galega da Lingua Galician Language Association and Academia Galega da Lingua Portuguesa Galician Academy of the Portuguese Language belonging to the Reintegrationist movement support the idea that differences between Galician and Portuguese speech are not enough to justify considering them as separate languages Galician is simply one variety of Galician Portuguese along with European Portuguese Brazilian Portuguese African Portuguese the Galician Portuguese still spoken in Spanish Extremadura Fala and other variations Nowadays despite the positive effects of official recognition of the Galician language Galicia s socio linguistic development has experienced the growing influence of Spanish and persistent linguistic erosion of Galician due to the media as well as legal imposition of Spanish in learning Galicia also boasts a rich oral tradition in the form of songs tales and sayings which has made a vital contribution to the spread and development of the Galician language Still flourishing today this tradition shares much with that of Portugal Surnames Edit See also Castilianization and Surname Galician surnames 26 27 as is the case in most European cultures can be divided into patronymic originally based on one s father s name occupational toponymic or cognominal The first group patronymic includes many of the most frequent surnames and became fixed during the Low Middle Ages it includes surnames derived from etyma formed with or without the additions of the patronymical suffixes az ez iz Alberte Albert Afonso Alfons Anes Oanes Yanes Iohannes Arias Bernardez Bernard Bermudez Medieval Galician Uermues cf Wermuth Cristobo Christopher Diz from Didaci Estevez Stephan Fernandez Fiz from Felici Froiz Frois From Froilaci from the Gothic personal name Froila lord Giance Latin Iulianici Gonzalez Henriquez Henry Martis Martin Mendez Menendici Miguens Miguez from Michaelici equivalent to Michaels Paez Pais Paz from Pelagici Pelagio Ramirez Reimundez Raymond Rodriguez Sanchez Sueiro from Suarius Tome from Thomas Vieitez Vieites Benedictici Benedict among many others Because of the settlement of Galician colonists in southern Spain during the Reconquista some of the more frequent and distinctively Galician surnames also became popular in Spanish which had its own related forms and were taken later into the Americas as a consequence of the expansion of the Spanish empire Some Galician patronymical surnames English name Old Galician 13 15th c Modern Galician SpanishJohn Eanes Anes Oanes Yanes Yanez IbanezStephen Esteuaes Esteuaez Esteueez Estevez Estevanez Froes Froez Froiz Frois Flores FlorezJulian Giance Gianz Gians Giance JulianezErmengild Meendez Meendes Mendez Menendez MelendezMartin Martiiz Martins Martis MartinezMichael Migueez Miguens Miguez MiguelezPelagius Paaez Paaz Paes Paiz Paz Pelaez Veasques Vaasquez Vazquez Velazquez BlazquezBenedict Beeytez Beeytes Vieitez Vieites Benitez nbsp Mediaeval Galician inscription in a 14th century house in Noia ESTAS CASAS MANDOU FAZER VASCO DACOSTA ERA DE MCCCLXXVII These houses were ordered by Vasco Dacosta era 1377 1339 CE The largest surname group is the one derived from toponyms which usually referred to the place of origin or residence of the bearer These places can be European countries as is the case in the surnames Bretana Franza Espana Portugal or nations Franco Frenchman Galician regions Bergantinos Carnota Cavarcos Sanles or cities towns or villages which gave origin to a few thousand surnames Another related group is formed with the preposition de usually contracted with the definite article as da or do and a common appellative Dacosta or Da Costa of the slope Dopazo or Do Pazo of the palace manor house Doval of the valley cfr French Duval Daponte of the bridge Davila of the town not to be confused with Spanish Davila Daporta of the gate Dasilva of the forest Dorrio of the river Datorre of the Tower Through rebracketing some of these surnames gave origin to others such as Acosta or Acuna nbsp Aqui jaz Fernan Perez d Andrade here lies Fernan Perez de Andrade 1397 CEA few of these toponymic surnames can be considered nobiliary as they first appear as the name of some Galician noble houses 28 later expanding when these nobles began to serve as officials of the Spanish Empire in Spain or elsewhere as a way of maintaining them both far from Galicia and useful to the Empire Andrade from the house of Andrade itself from the name of a village Mejia or Mexia from the house of Mesia Saavedra Soutomaior Hispanicized Sotomayor Ulloa Moscoso Marinas Figueroa among others Some of these families also served in Portugal as the Andrade Soutomaior or Lemos who originated in Monforte de Lemos As a result these surnames are by now distributed all around the world nbsp Emilio Estevez and his father Martin Sheen Ramon Estevez nbsp French Spanish actor Jose Garcia born Xose Garcia Doval of Galician parentsThe third group of surnames are the occupational ones derived from the job or legal status of the bearer Ferreiro Smith Carpinteiro Carpenter Besteiro Crossbow bearer Crego Priest Freire Friar Faraldo Herald Pintor Painter Pedreiro Stonemason Gaiteiro Bagpiper and also Cabaleiro Knight Escudeiro Esquire Fidalgo Nobleman Juiz Judge The fourth group includes the surnames derived from nicknames which can have very diverse motivations a External appearance as eye colour Ruso from Latin roscidus grey eyed Garzo blue eyed hair colour Dourado Blonde Bermello Red Cervino literally deer like Tawny Auburn Cao white complexion Branco White Pardo Swarth Delgado Slender or other characteristics Formoso Handsome Tato Stutterer Forte Strong Calvino Bald Esquerdeiro Left handed b Temperament and personality Bonome Bonhome Goodman Fiuza Who can be trusted Guerreiro Warlike Cordo Judicious c Tree names Carballo Oak Amieiro Ameneiro Alder Freijo Ash tree d Animal names Gerpe from Serpe Serpent Falcon Falcon Baleato Young Whale Gato Cat Coello Rabbit Aguia Eagle e Deeds Romeu a person who pilgrimaged to Rome or the Holy Land Many Galician surnames have become Castilianized over the centuries most notably after the forced submission of the Galician nobility obtained by the Catholic Monarchs in the last years of the 15th century 29 This reflected the gradual spread of the Spanish language through the cities in Santiago de Compostela Lugo A Coruna Vigo and Ferrol in the last case due to the establishment of an important base of the Spanish navy there in the 18th century 30 For example surnames like Orxas Veiga Outeiro became Orjales Vega Otero Toponyms like Ourense A Coruna Fisterra became Orense La Coruna Finisterre In many cases this linguistic assimilation created confusion for example Nino da Aguia Galician Eagle s Nest was translated into Spanish as Nino de la Guia Spanish the Guide s child and Meson do Bento Galician Benedict s house was translated as Meson del Viento Spanish House of Wind History EditPrehistory Edit See also Castro Culture Gallaeci and List of Celtic place names in Galicia nbsp Neolithic dolmen of Dombate roughly contemporary with Stonehenge Originally it was under a tumulus covered by stones rich in micaThe oldest human occupation of Galicia dates to the Palaeolithic when Galicia was covered by a dense oak temperate rain forest The oldest human remains found at Chan do Lindeiro are from a woman who lived some 9 300 years ago and died because of a landslide apparently while leading a pack of three aurochs the genetic study of her remains revealed a woman that was an admixture of Western Hunter Gatherer and Magdalenian people 31 This type of admixture has been observed in France also 32 Later on some 6 500 years ago a new population arrived from the Mediterranean bringing agriculture and husbandry with them Half of the woodland was razed to pasture and farmland almost replacing all of the woodland some 5 000 years ago 33 This new population also changed the landscape with the first permanent human structures megaliths such as menhirs and barrows cromlechs and menhirs During the Neolithic Galicia was one of the foci of Atlantic European Megalithic Culture 34 putting in contact the Mediterranean and south Iberia with the rest of Atlantic Europe 35 Some 4 500 years ago a new culture and population arrived and presumingly admixed with the local farmers the Bell beaker people coming ultimately from the Pontic steppe who introduced copper metallurgy and weaponry and probably also new cultivars and breeds Some scholars consider that they were the first people to bring Indo European languages into Western Europe 36 They lived in open villages only protected by fences or ditches local archaeologists consider that they caused a very large culture impact replacing collectivism with individualism as exemplified by their burial in individual cists along with the reuse of old Neolithic tombs 37 From this period and later dates a rich tradition of petroglyphs which find close similarities in the British Isles Scandinavia or northern Italy 38 Motives include cup and ring marks labyrinths Bronze Age weaponry deer and deer hunting warriors riders and ships Early Bronze Age nbsp Outeiro do cribo sieve s hill labyrinth nbsp Castrino de Conxo Bronze Age weaponry nbsp Laxe dos Carballos deer hunting with leaf shaped spears and cup and ring marks nbsp Casota de Freans Vimianzo a Bronze Age megalith with no corridor or tumulus nbsp Caldas de Reis hoard one of the largest in Western Europe circa 1 800 BCE nbsp Interior of a Bronze Age cabin recreation Campo LameiroDuring the Late Bronze Age and until 800 600 BCE the contacts with both southern Spain to the south and Armorica and the Atlantic Isles to the north intensified probably fuelled by the abundance of local gold and metals such as tin 39 which allowed the production of high quality bronze It is at this moment that began the deposition or hoarding of prestige items frequently in aquatic context Also during the Late Bronze Age a new type of ceremonial henge like ring structures of some 50 metres in diameter are built all along Galicia 40 This period and interchange network usually known as Atlantic Bronze Age which appears to have had its centre in modern day Brittany was proposed by John T Koch and Sir Barry Cunliffe as the one that originated Celtic languages as a product of pre existing and closely related Indo European languages which could have expanded along with the elite ideology associated with this cultural complex Celtic from the west theory Alleged difficulties with this theory and with pre existing theories Celtic from the east have led Patrick Simms Williams to propose an intermediate Celtic from the centre theory with an expansion of Celtic languages from the Alps during the Bronze Age 41 A recent study shows the large scale admixture of an earlier population from Britain with people arriving probably from France during the late Bronze Age These people in the opinion of the authors constitute a plausible vector for the expansion of Celtic languages into Britain as no further Iron Age people movement of relevant scale is shown in their data 42 Late Bronze Age nbsp Late Bronze Age hoard of Samieira unearthed in 1948 at some 50 metres from the seashore and initially consisting of 152 palstaves nbsp Bronze Age Galician swords Museo de Pontevedra nbsp Casco de Leiro nbsp Pedra Alta warrior stelle Castrelo do Val nbsp 1 sword and girdle 3 v notch shield 4 cart with horses nbsp Horned helmet figures nbsp A riderThe Bronze Age Iron Age transition locally 1000 600 BCE coincides with the hoarding of large quantity of bronze axes unused both in Galicia Brittany and southern Britain 43 During this same transitional period some communities began to protect their villages settling in very protected areas where they built hill forts Among the oldest of these are Chandebrito in Nigran 44 Penas do Castelo in A Pobra do Brollon 45 and O Cocinadoiro in Arteixo on a sea cliff and protected by a 3 metre tall wall it was also a metal factory perhaps 46 dedicated to the Atlantic commerce 47 all of them founded some 2 900 2 700 years ago These earlier fortified settlements seem to be placed to control metallurgical resources and commerce This transitional period is also characterized by the apparition of longhouses of ultimately north European tradition 48 49 50 which were replaced later in much of Galicia by roundhouses By the 4th century BCE hill forts have expanded all along Galicia also on lowlands soon becoming the only type of settlements These hill forts were delimited usually by one or more walls the defences also include ditches ramparts and towers and could define several habitable spaces The gates were also heavily fortified Inside houses were originally built with perishable materials with or without a stone footing later on they were entirely made with stone walls having up to two storeys Specially in the south houses or public spaces were adorned with carved stones and warrior sculptures Stone heads mimicking severed heads are found at several locations and were perhaps placed near the gates of the forts A number of public installations are known for example saunas of probable ritual use 51 Of ritual use and great value were also items such as bronze cauldrons richly figured sacrificial hatchets 52 and gold torcs of which more than a hundred exemplars are known 53 This culture is now known as Castro Culture another characteristic of this culture is the absence of known burials just exceptionally urns with ashes have been found buried at foundational sites acting probably as protectors Iron Age nbsp Castromaior Portomarin Lugo nbsp Castromaior s relief nbsp Sauna of Punta dos Prados Ortigueira nbsp Gold torcs from Xanceda Mesia nbsp Sacrificial hatchet showing an ox cauldron and torc nbsp Short swords nbsp Local ear pendants of ultimate Mediterranean originOccasional contacts with Mediterranean navigators since the last half of the second millennium BCE 54 became common after the 6th century BCE 55 and the voyage of Himilco Punic importations from southern Spain became frequent along the coast of southern Galicia although they didn t penetrate very far to the north or to the interior also new decorative motives as the six petal rosettes are popularized together with new metallurgical techniques and pieces ear pendants and some other innovations as the round hand mill In exchange Punics obtained tin abundant in the islands and peninsulas of western Galicia probable origin of the Cassiterides island myth 56 and probably also gold Incidentally Avienus Ora Maritima says after Himilco that the Oestrymni inhabitants of western Iberia used hide boats to navigate an assertion confirmed by Pliny the Elder for the Galicians 57 Roman conquest Edit nbsp Guerreiros from northern Portugal wearing torcs viriae and caetra Castro culture First recorded contact with Rome happened during the Second Punic War when Gallaecians and Astures together with Lusitanians Cantabrians and Celtiberians that is the major Indo European nations of Iberia figured among the mercenary armies hired by Hannibal to go with him into Italy According to Silus Italicus s Punica III 58 Fibrarum et pennae divinarumque sagacem Flammarum misit dives Callaecia pubem Barbara nunc patriis ululantem carmina linguis Nunc pedis alterno percussa verbere terra Ad numerum resonas gaudentem plaudere caetras Haec requies ludusque viris ea sacra voluptas Cetera femineus peragit labor addere sulco Semina et inpresso tellurem vertere aratro Segne viris quidquid duro sine Marte gerendum Callaici conjux obit inrequieta mariti nbsp Gallaecians vs Romans Reenactors in Xinzo de Limia Festa do Esquecemento Opulent Galicia sent her youth expert in divination through the entrails of beasts the flight of birds and the divine lightnings sometimes they delight to chant rude songs in their fatherland s tongues other times they make the ground tremble with alternative foot while happily clashing their caetra at the same time This leisure and diversion is a sacred delight for the men the feminine laboriosity do the rest adding the seed to the furrow and working the ground with the plough while the men idle Everything which must be done with the exception of the hard war is made restlessly by the wife of the Galician He later also mentions the Grovii of southern Galicia and northwestern Portugal with their capital Tui apart from the other Galicians other authors also marked the distinctness of the Grovii Pomponius Mela by addressing that they were non Celtic unlike the rest of the inhabitants of the coasts of Galicia Pliny by signalling their Greek origin 58 After ending victoriously the Lusitanian war with the assassination of Viriathus consul Caepio tried to wage war unsuccessfully on Gallaecians and Vettones for the help they lent to the Lusitanians In 138 BCE another consul Decimus Junius Brutus in command of two legions passed de Douro river and later the Lethes or Oblivio Limia which frightened his troops because of its other name in a successful campaign managing to conquer many places of the Galicians After reaching the Minho river and in his way back he attacked again successfully the Bracari who had been harassing his supply chain Appian describe the Bracari women fighting bravely side by side with their men of the women who were taken prisoners some killed themselves and others killed their children preferring death to servitude 58 The spoils of war allowed Decimus Junius Brutus to celebrate a triumph back in Rome receiving the name Callaicus Recently a very large marching Roman camp was discovered at high altitude in Lomba do Mouro at the very frontier of Galicia with Portugal In 2021 a C 14 dating showed that it was built during the 2nd century BCE since it is north of the Limia it probably belonged to this campaign 59 The Roman contact had a very large impact on the Castro Culture an increase in commerce with the south and the Mediterranean adoption or development of sculpture and stone carving the warrior ethos appear to increase in social importance 60 some hill forts are built new or rebuilt as true urban centres oppida with streets and definite public spaces as San Cibrao de Las 10 ha or Santa Trega 20 ha 61 Oppida and Roman conquest nbsp Gates of the oppidum of Saint Cibrao de Las nbsp Aerial photo of San Cibrao de Las nbsp Santa Tregra A Guarda nbsp Santa Trega with the Minho in the background nbsp As minted circa 20 BCE during the conquest of Galicia Asturia and Cantabria nbsp Arms of the Gallaeci knife javelins falcata and caetra nbsp Equitation scene Formigueiro AmoeiroIn 61 BCE Julius Caesar commanding thirty cohorts launched from Cadiz a maritime campaign along the Atlantic shores which ended in Brigantium According to Cassius Dio the locals who had never seen a Roman fleet surrendered in awe Finally in 29 BCE Augustus launched a campaign of conquest against Gallaecians Asturians and Cantabrians The most memorable episode of this war was the siege on the Mons Medullius who Paulus Orosius placed near the Minho river it was surrounded by a 15 mille trench before a simultaneous Roman advance according to Anneus Florus the besieged decided to kill themselves by fire sword or by the venon of the yew tree 62 Tens of Roman camps have been found related to this war most of them corresponding to the later stages of the war against Asturians and Cantabrians some tweenty of them in Galicia 63 Augustus victory over the Gallaecians is celebrated in the Sebasteion of Aphrodisias Turkey where a triumphal monument to Augustus mentions them 64 among other fifteen nations conquered by him Also the triumphal arch of Capentras probably represents a Gallaecian among other nations defeated by Augustus 65 Languages and ethnicity Edit nbsp Geography and peoples of Galicia after Mela Pliny and local Latin epigraphySee also Gallaecian language Lusitanian language and Celtiberian languagePomponius Mela a geographer from Tingentera modern day Algeciras in Andalusia described circa 43 CE the coasts of northwestern Iberia 66 Frons illa aliquamdiu rectam ripam habet dein modico flexu accepto mox paululum eminet tum reducta iterum iterumque recto margine iacens ad promunturium quod Celticum vocamus extenditur Totam Celtici colunt sed a Durio ad flexum Grovi fluuntque per eos Avo Celadus Nebis Minius et cui oblivionis cognomen est Limia Flexus ipse Lambriacam urbem amplexus recipit fluvios Laeron et Ullam Partem quae prominet Praesamarchi habitant perque eos Tamaris et Sars flumina non longe orta decurrunt Tamaris secundum Ebora portum Sars iuxta turrem Augusti titulo memorabilem Cetera super Tamarici Nerique incolunt in eo tractu ultimi Hactenus enim ad occidentem versa litora pertinent Deinde ad septentriones toto latere terra convertitur a Celtico promunturio ad Pyrenaeum usque Perpetua eius ora nisi ubi modici recessus ac parva promunturia sunt ad Cantabros paene recta est In ea primum Artabri sunt etiamnum Celticae gentis deinde Astyres In Artabris sinus ore angusto admissum mare non angusto ambitu excipiens Adrobricam urbem et quattuor amnium ostia incingit duo etiam inter accolentis ignobilia sunt per alia Ducanaris exit et Libyca nbsp Iberia circa 300 BCE That ocean front for some distance has a straight bank then having taken a slight bend soon protrudes a little bit and then it is drawn back and again and again then lying on a straight line the coast extends to the promontory which we call Celtic All of it is inhabited by Celtics except from the Durio until the bend where the Grovi dwelt and through them flow the rivers Avo Celadus Nebis Minius and Limia also called Oblivio On the bend there is the city of Lambriaca and the receding part receives the rivers Laeros and Ulia The prominent part is inhabited by the Praestamarci and through them flow the rivers Tamaris and Sars which are born not afar Tamaris by harbour Ebora Sars by the tower of Augustus of memorable title For the rest the Supertamarici and Neri inhabit in the last tract Up to here what belongs to the western coast From there all the coast is turned to the north from the Celtic promontory to the Pyrenees Its regular coast except where there are small retreats and small headlands is almost straight by the Cantabrians On it first of all are the Artabri still a Celtic people then the Astures Among the Artabri there is a bay which lets the sea through a narrow mouth and encircles not in a narrow circuit the city of Adrobrica and the mouth of four rivers The Atlantic and northern coast of today s Galicia was inhabited by Celtic peoples with the exception of the southern extreme Others geographers and authors Pliny Strabo as well as the local Latin epigraphy confirm the presence of Celtic peoples As for the language or languages spoken by the Galicians previously to their romanization most scholars usually perceive a primitive Indo European layer another later one hardly distinguishable from Celtic and identifiable with Lusitanian most notable in the south the Gallaecia Bracarense as a result Lusitanian is sometimes called Lusitanian Gallaecian and finally Celtic proper as stated by Alberto J Lorrio 67 the presence of Celtic elements in the Northwest is indisputable but there is no unanimity in considering whether there was an only Indo European language in the West of Iberia of Celtic kind or either a number of languages derived from the arrival of non Celtic Indo Europeans first and Celts later on Some academic positions on this issue Francesco Benozzo proponent of the Palaeolithic continuity theory considers that Celtic language is autochthonous in Galicia 68 Since recent genetic studios show that European and Iberian Palaeolithic population was assimilated by larger migrant populations proceeding first from the Balkans and Anatolia and later from Central Europe and ultimately from the Pontic steppe this theory is probably flawed For John T Koch and Barry Cunliffe proponent of the Celtic from the West theory the Celtic language would have expanded during the late Bronze Age from the European Atlantic fringe including Galicia to the east 69 70 71 For Patrick Simms Williams Celtic expanded from modern day France during the late Bronze Age 41 Joan Coromines lexicographer and author of the Diccionario critico etimologico castellano e hispanico considered that Galician language had a very important substrate attributable to at least two different Indo European languages an older non Celtic one who he derived from the Urnfield people and thought was present in most of northern Iberia and another one he named Artabrian the Celtic language of the Celts of Galicia Blanca M Prosper 72 and Francisco Villar defend that Lusitanian is a non Celtic Indo European language related to Italic languages 73 because in their opinion the Indo European aspirated stops have evolved into f and h At the same time all along the area of this language and specially in modern day Galicia a Celtic language was spoken this language a q Celtic language similar to Celtiberian is the Western Hispano Celtic 74 75 Joaquin Gorrochategui Jose M Vallejo 76 Alberto J Lorrio Garcia Alonso 77 E Lujan 78 and others consider that Lusitanian is not a Celtic language but they don t consider it closer to Italic neither but part of a group of IE dialects which later evolved into Celtic Italic and Lusitanian On the other hand Celtic speakers lived in close proximity to the Lusitanian In this context Gallaecia Bracarensis was clearly in communion with the Lusitania 79 while Gallaecia Lucensis had its own Celtic profile 80 81 82 83 84 Jurgen Untermann continued by his disciple Carlos Bua 85 defended that along the westernmost part of Iberia there was essentially just one language or group of languages Gallaecian Lusitanian or Lusitanian and Gallaecian which in their opinion was definitely Celtic and not Italoid as shown by the ending of dative plural bo bor lt PIE bhos and the evolution of the syllabic consonants in particular r gt ri Local scholars and researchers of toponymy and lexicon of pre Latin origin J J Moralejo Edelmiro Bascuas saw at least two layers of Indo Europeans one early layer of a very primitive IE language which preserved p most notable in river names and a later Celtic layer 86 87 Roman period Edit See also Roman era records of Gallaecian names and words nbsp Conventi Iuridici subprovincial divisions After the Roman conquest the lands and people of northwestern Iberia were divided in three conventi Gallaecia Lucensis Gallaecia Bracarensis and Asturia and annexed to the province of Hispania Tarraconensis 88 Pliny wrote that the Lucenses comprised 16 populi and 166 000 free heads and mentions the Lemavi Albiones Cibarci Egivarri Namarini Adovi Arroni Arrotrebae Celtici Neri Celtici Supertamarci Copori Celtici Praestamarci Cileni among them other authors mention also the Baedui Artabri and Seurri the Astures comprised 22 populi and 240 000 of whom the Lougei Gigurri and Tiburi dwelt lands now in Galicia finally the Bracarenses 24 civitates and 285 000 of whom the Grovi Helleni Querquerni Coelerni Bibali Limici Tamacani and Interamici dwelt at least partially in modern day Galicia The names of some of these peoples have been preserved as the names of regions parishes and villages Lemos lt Lemavos Cabarcos Soneira lt Sub Nerii Celtigos lt Celticos Valdeorras lt Valle de Gigurris Trives lt Tiburis Tamagos lt Tamacanos Some other Galician regions derive from some populi or subdivision not listed by the classic authors among them Bergantinos lt Brigantinos from Briganti Nendo lt Nemetos from Nemeton Entins lt Gentinis the chieftains 89 A common characteristic of both Gallaecians and western Astures were their onomastic formula and social structure while most of the other Indo European peoples of Hispania used a formula such as Name Patronimic gen s Gens Family gen pl as for example Turaesius Letondicum Marsi f ilius Turaesius son of Marsi of the Letondi clan dd nbsp Roman works of Montefurado Pierced Mountain which diverted the course of the river SilGallaecians and western Astures used until the 2nd century of our era the formula 90 Name Patronimic gen s Populi Civitas nom s abreviature of castellum Origo abl s as Nicer Clvtosi Cavriaca Principis Albionum Nicer son of Clutosios from castle Cauria prince of the Albion Caeleo Cadroiolonis f ilius Cilenus Berisamo Cailio son of Cadroilo Cilenus from castle Berisamo Fabia Eburi f ilia Lemava Eritaeco Fabia daughter of Eburios Lemava from castle Eritaico Eburia Calueni f ilia Celtica Sup ertamarca Lubri Eburia daughter of Calugenos Celtica Supertamarca from castle Lubris Anceitus Vacc e i f ilius limicus Talabrig a Anceitos son of Vacceos Limicus from castle Talabriga dd The known personal names used by locals in northern Gallaecia were largely Celtic 91 Aio Alluquius Ambatus Ambollus Andamus Angetus Arius Artius Atius Atia Boutius Cadroiolo Caeleo Caluenus Camalus Cambauius Celtiatus Cloutaius Cloutius Clutamus Clutosius Coedus Coemia Coroturetis Eburus Eburia Louesus Medamus Nantia Nantius Reburrus Secoilia Seguia Talauius Tridia Vecius Veroblius Verotus Vesuclotus among others Three legions were stationed near the Cantabrian mountains after the war later reduced to the Legio VII Gemina in Leon with three auxiliary cohorts in Galicia the Cohors I Celtiberorum in Ciadella Sobrado dos Monxes near Brigantium other unity at Aquis Querquennis and another one near Lucus Augusti and others elsewhere Soon Roma began to recruit auxiliary troops locally five cohorts of Gallaecians from the conventus Lucenses other five of bracarenses two mixed ones of Galicians and Asturians and an ala and cohort of Lemavi 92 93 Also Gallaecia and Asturia became the most important producers of gold on the Empire according to Pliny Lusitania Gallaecia and especially Asturia produced the equivalent to 6 700 kg per year It has been stimated that the eight hundred Roman gold mines known in Galicia produced in total in between 190 000 and 2 000 000 kg 94 nbsp Reenactors at Lugo s Arde Lucus nbsp Roman camp of Aquis Querquennis nbsp Nicer Clutosi s stelle nbsp Apana Amboli s stele nbsp Tabula hospitalis from Carbedo nbsp Romanized hill fort of Viladonga Castro de ReiDuring the Diocletian reforms late third century Gallaecia was upgraded to province Germanic era 5th 8th centuries Edit See also Germanic personal names in Galicia In 409 the Vandals Suebi and Alans who had entered in the Roman Empire in 405 or 406 crossing the Rhin passed into the Iberian Peninsula After a year of war and plundering they were pacified by the offering of lands where to settle The Roman province of Gallaecia including Gallaecia proper and the regions of Asturia and Cantabria were assigned to the Suebi and the Hasding Vandals Both groups clashed soon in 419 and so the Vandals left to southern Iberia where they incorporated the last remnants of Alans and Silingi Vandals who had been crushed by Rome in previous years In 429 the Vandals left for Africa 95 96 In 430 a long term conflict broke in between the Suebi and locals who chronicler Hydatius called gallaecos i e galegos the endonym of modern day Galicians and initially plebs folk common people in contrast with whom he called romani the rural landowners in Lusitania and the inhabitants of the cities Soon among those Galicians appear also local noblemen and churchmen As the Britons in southern Great Britain the Galician were forced to act autonomously from Rome exercising home rule 97 They reoccupied old Iron Age hill forts and built new strongholds and fortification all along Galicia 98 the largest known today are at Mt Pindo 99 Mt Aloia 100 and at Castro Valente 101 These fortresses were later used by locals against Visigoths Arabs and Norsemen In this conflict in between Galicians and Suebi Rome and local bishops acted frequently rather as intermediaries than as a part and peace our truce was obtained or warranted with the interchange of prisoners and hostages 95 102 In 438 both people attained a peace that would last for twenty years by then old king Hermeric who had lead their people at least since their arrival from Central Europe ceded the crown to his son Rechila who would expand the kingdom to the south and east conquering Emerita Augusta Mertola and Seville and moving his troops into eastern Hispania defeating both Roman and Visigoth armies along the way His successor and son Rechiar converted from paganism to Catholicism upon being crowned and married a Visigoth princess He negotiated with Rome a new status for his kingdom and became the first post Roman Germanic king to mint coins in his name 103 Soon he tried to expand into the last Roman province in Hispania Tarraconense eventually this led to open conflict with Rome and the Visigoths In 456 a large army of foederati commanded by the kings of the Visigoths and the Burgundians entered Hispania and defeated the Suebi army near the city of Leon Rechiar fled to Porto but he was captured and later executed Notwithstanding the Visigoths left in a hurry the theatre of operation returning to France That allowed the Suebi to regroup After a period of petty kings rivalry accompanied by devastation and pillage on Galicians Remismund was recognized as only and legitimate king by the Suebi and accepted by the Visigoths he also promoted the Arianism among the Suebi As result the Suebi kingdom came to its limits encompassing modern day Galicia northern Portugal until Coimbra and large parts of Asturias Leon and Zamora 103 The chronicle of Hydatius also records naval raids of both Vandals and Heruli on the Galician coasts during the 5th century 95 Medieval era Edit See also Gallaeci Gallaecia and Kingdom of Galicia In 718 the area briefly came under the control of the Moors after their conquest and dismantling of the Visigothic Empire but the Galicians successfully rebelled against Moorish rule in 739 establishing a renewed Kingdom of Galicia which would become totally stable after 813 with the medieval popularization of the Way of St James Geography and demographics Edit nbsp Galician bagpipers in New York See also Galicians in Argentina Political and administrative divisions Edit The autonomous community a concept established in the Spanish constitution of 1978 that is known as a Comunidade Autonoma Galega in Galician and as la Comunidad Autonoma Gallega in Spanish in English Galician Autonomous Community is composed of the four Spanish provinces of A Coruna Lugo Ourense and Pontevedra Population main cities and languages Edit The official statistical body of Galicia is the Instituto Galego de Estatistica IGE According to the IGE Galicia s total population in 2008 was 2 783 100 1 138 474 in A Coruna 104 355 406 in Lugo 105 336 002 in Ourense 106 and 953 218 in Pontevedra 107 The most important cities in this region which serve as the provinces administrative centres are Vigo in Pontevedra Pontevedra Santiago de Compostela A Coruna Ferrol in A Coruna Lugo in Lugo and Ourense in Ourense The official languages are Galician and Spanish Knowledge of Spanish is compulsory according to the Spanish constitution and virtually universal Knowledge of Galician after declining for many years owing to the pressure of Spanish and official persecution is again on the rise due to favorable official language policies and popular support citation needed Currently about 82 of Galicia s population can speak Galician 108 and about 61 have it as a mother tongue 10 Culture EditCeltic revival and Celtic identity Edit See also Castro culture Gallaecian language Celtic place names in Galicia List of Galician words of Celtic origin and Celtic revival nbsp Galician pipe band Dambara at the Festival Interceltique de Lorient 2012In the 19th century a group of Romantic and Nationalist writers and scholars among them Eduardo Pondal and Manuel Murguia 109 led a Celtic revival initially based on the historical testimonies of ancient Roman and Greek authors Pomponius Mela Pliny the Elder Strabo and Ptolemy who wrote about the Celtic peoples who inhabited Galicia 110 but they also based this revival in linguistic and onomastic data 111 112 and in the similarity of some aspects of the culture and the geography of Galicia with that of the Celtic countries as Ireland Brittany and Britain as well as in the Bronze and Iron Age archaeological cultures 113 114 These similarities included legends and traditions 115 and decorative and popular arts and music 116 It also included the green hilly landscape and the ubiquity of Iron Age hill forts Neolithic megaliths and Bronze Age cup and ring marks which were and are popularly seen as Celtic also among foreigners who travelled to Galicia 117 118 119 During the late 19th and early 20th century this revival permeated Galician society in 1916 Os Pinos a poem by Eduardo Pondal was chosen as the lyrics for the new Galician hymn One of the strophes of the poem says Galicians be strong ready to great deeds align your breast for a glorious end sons of the noble Celts strong and traveller fight for the fate of the homeland of Breogan 120 The Celtic past became an integral part of the self perceived Galician identity 121 as a result an important number of cultural association and sport clubs received names related to the Celts among them Celta de Vigo Celtiga FC CB Breogan etc nbsp Galician Celtic Revival Homes de Brigantia Men of Brigantia by Camilo Diaz Balino 1922 From the 1970s on a series of Celtic music and cultural festivals were also popularized the most notable being the Festival Internacional do Mundo Celta de Ortigueira at the same time that Galician folk musical bands and interpreters became usual participants in Celtic festivals elsewhere as in the Interceltic festival of Lorient where Galicia sent its first delegation in 1976 122 Celtic and non Celtic elements common along the western Atlantic coast of Europe which are popularly perceived as Celtic nbsp A castro hill fort at Barona Porto do Son nbsp Dolmen at Axeitos Ribeira nbsp Medieval interlaced cross Santiago de Compostela nbsp Massive gold torc of Burela nbsp Triskelion from the Museo de Ourense nbsp View of the hillfort at San Cibrao de Las Ourense nbsp Galician Neolithic or Bronze Age cup and ring marks nbsp The rocky and misty coast of Cabo Silleiro BaionaFolklore and traditions Edit nbsp Winged serpent of Gondomil The Christian cross is a latter additionMyths and legends Edit nbsp Fornela dos Mouros Mouros oven dolmen nbsp Pico Sagro where a dragon dwelt nbsp Maruxaina nbsp 1920 s advertising and the Santa CompanaGalician folklore is similar to that of the rest of western Europe especially to that or northern Portugal Asturias and Cantabria Among its most notorious myths are the following 123 Before the world was inhabited by humans animals could speak many traditional tales about animals begin with the phrase alo cando os animais falaban back then when animals used to speak which has become equivalent to English once upon a time Our world is connected to an underworld dwelt by the mouros the dark ones or perhaps the dead ones mistaken by Andalusian Moors in many tales an ancient and sombre race who inhabited the upper world before ourselves and who dislike humans They can still travel to our world to interact with us through the ruins of the places they built or inhabited such as barrows dolmens stone circles hill forts etc which are still traditionally called with names such as Eira dos Mouros Mouros threshing floor Casa dos Mouros Mouros house Forno dos Mouros Mouros oven This kind of place names are already attested in Latin documents dating to circa 900 CE and later Humans can also travel to the underworld either becoming very rich or suffering for their greed as a result Some mouros or encantos can appear as tall and strong men riding large horses and there are specific spells to ask them for riches Fairies and nymphs who also belong to the netherworld receive many names among them mouras encantos apparition spell damas ladies madamas miladies xas from Latin dianas They are frequently portrayed as women of incredible beauty and riches and long golden blonde hair that can be found by the aforementioned prehistoric ruins or at fountains and ponds where they comb their hair Other times they are gigantic women of incredible strength enough to move massive boulders who can be found with a spinning distaff or a baby 124 Under this appearance they are the same with the Vella the Old Lady who is somehow also responsible for the weather the rainbow is called arco da vella in Galician Old Lady s bow a myth which is probably related to the Cailleach Old Woman Hag of Ireland and Scotland 125 Lavandeiras washerwomen are eerie fairies that are found at a river of pond washing clothes under the aspect of women especially at night They can ask a passer by to help twits the clothes if the passer by mistakenly twists in the same direction the clothes turn into blood 123 The trasnos tardos or trasgos goblins are mischievous household creatures who like to annoy and confound people They can cause nightmares by siting on the chest of the people move things and cause other troubles In Galician trasnada goblin ery means trick mischief Other sign of the netherworld is the apparition of a golden hen followed by his golden chicks a galina dos pitos de ouro which no matter how hard one tries can t be caught There is a similar myth in Bulgaria Maruxaina was a vicious siren who lived near the town of San Cribrao and who eventually was captured and executed by the locals The barrows are also inhabited by other entities called ouvas elfs Other beings with control of the weather are the nubeiros cloud ers George Borrow in his book The Bible in Spain narrates how he met a nubeiro while travelling Galicia circa 1835 126 Other similar beings are the tronantes and escoleres Many lakes are believed to be the result of the drowning of ancient cities frequently called Lucerna Valverde Green Valley or Antiochia in tales and legends when the inhabitants failed to give shelter to Jesus or a saint or when a king of the mouros used his magic out of spit Some nights the city s bells can still be heard 123 This legend was first recorded in the 12th century Codex Calixtinus and in that version is Charlemagne who prays God and Saint James to drown a Moor city reluctant to commit to him 127 This myth appear to be related to the Breton myth of Ys Another mythical being associated with drowned cities is the boi bruador a bellowing ox which can be heard at night near lakes a legend first recorded circa 1550 123 Ollaparos are giants similar to cyclopes who sometimes have also an eye on the back of the head 123 They are related to the Cantabrian Ojancanu Bruxas and meigas witches can take the form of animals In particular the chuchonas suckers can take the form of a blowfly to feed on the blood of babies and children causing anaemia Lobishomes werewolves are humans who sometimes turn into wolves because of a curse 128 Manuel Blanco Romasanta was a Galician serial killer sentenced to death in 1853 for thirteen assassinations His legal defence was based in his condition of werewolf as consequence of a curse 129 Anciently there were giant serpents serpe there s a mountain range called Cova da Serpe Sepents dem so named since at least the 10th century some of them winged and dragons dragon which could feed on cattle On the legend of the transfer of the body of Saint James from the Holy land to Galicia recorded in the 12th century Codex Calixtinus the local queen Queen Lupa commanded the disciples of Saint James to go grab a pair of meek oxen she had by the hill known as Pico Sacro Sacred Peak where a dragon dwelt with the hope that either the dragon or the oxen which were actually fierce bulls would kill them 127 There were also cocas cockatrices which were taken out in procession in certain dates as attested since 1437 123 In the town of Redondela this procession is still held each year nbsp Santa Compana modern graffiti The compana retinue hoste army estantiga lt hoste antiga anciente army Santa Compana holy retinue is the local version of the wild hunt In its modern form is a nocturne procession of the dead who porting candles or torches and frequently a coffin announce the imminent decease of a neighbour This procession can capture a living person who is then obliged to precede the Santa Compana all night long through forest streams and brambles or until another one takes his place One can protect himself from being taken by the Compana by tracing a circle and getting inside it or by throwing oneself to the ground and ignoring the Compana while it passes over A solitary phantom related to the Compana is the estadea This myth is also related to the fairy host in Ireland sluagh in Scotland and toili in Wales 115 The urco guercu in Asturias is a giant black dog who emerges from the sea or from a river to cause terror to the locals They are also per se a bad omen 130 Traditions and beliefs Edit While Galician was traditionally a profoundly Catholic society in its beliefs there are many remnants of previous religious systems in particular the belief on a pantheon of gods now saints in the reincarnation in form of an animal when there are unfinished business the evil eye and the sickness caused by curses the holiness of crossroads and fountains etcetera The first attestation of the beliefs of the Galicians in a Christian context is offered by the Pannonian Martin of Braga who in his letter De Correctione Rusticorum condemns among others the belief in the Roman gods or in the lamias nymphs and dianas and also in practices as putting candles to trees springs and crossroads Sanctuaries are socially important places for pilgrimage romaria and devotion each one under the protection of a saint or virgin Mary There are different beliefs associated with each one the sanctuary of Santo Andre de Teixido in Cedeira is associated with reincarnation as it is said that a Santo Andre de Teixido vai de morto o que non foi de vivo to Saint Andrew at Teixido yew tree copse goes as dead the ones that didn t went while alive It is advised not to kill lizards or any other animal while in the vicinity The Corpino sanctuary near Lalin and San Campio near Tomino are associated with the treatment of mental illness and evil eye or meigallo Virxe da Barca in Muxia is built by the place where it is said that Mary arrived aboard a stone boat a recurring myth in Galicia also present in Ireland and Brittany 131 Many of these places were probably built over pagan cult places High crosses and calvaries locally named cruceiros or peto de animas are usually placed at crossroads before sacred places or marking a pilgrimage road Placing flowers or lit candles before that monuments are common practices In 1996 the Galician community in Ushuaia Argentine the southernmost city on the world built a cruceiro with the legent Galicia shines in this land s end Sanctuaries cruceiros and petos de animas nbsp Virxe da Barca Muxia nbsp Santo Andre de Teixido Cedeira nbsp Peto de animas crossroad of Moldes Pobra do Caraminal nbsp Crurceiro in Ushuaia Argentina nbsp Calvario at Castro Barbudo Ponte Caldelas nbsp Cruceiro do Hio Cangas do Morrazo nbsp Cruceiro at MurosTraditional medicine was administered by mencineiros and mencineiras who used both herbs and spells to treat illness Also componedores and componedoras healers specialized in mending bones and joints Popular feasts Edit Aside from Catholic feasts and celebrations there are other annual celebrations of pagan or mixed origin Entroido Shrovetide Carnival The Entroido entering prelude is usually a period of indulgence and feasts which contrast with the soberness of the Holy Week and Easter Parades and festivals which were prosecuted by the Catholic Church are held all along Galicia and specially in Ourense masks such as the peliqueiros cigarrons boteiros felos pantallas who can commit minor mischiefs to other attendants are central to the celebrations Noite de San Xoan Saint John s eve Saint John s eve is celebrated around bonfires which are lit at dusk young people jump over the fire three seven or nine times Other traditions associated to this night is the nine waves bath in the beach for having children 132 and the preparation of the auga de San Xoan Saint John s water by letting a bowl with a mixture of selected herbs outdoors all night This water is used to wash one s face in the morning Rapa das bestas Feasts nbsp Entroido Peliqueiros of Laza Ourense nbsp Boteiros Viana do Bolo nbsp Traditional filloas crepe like pancakes nbsp Pantallas from Xinzo de Limia nbsp Carantonas Chantada nbsp San Xoan nbsp Aloitadores Rapa das bestasTraditional costume Edit Traditional Galician costume as understood today got conformed fundamentally during the second half of the 18th century Notwithstanding some very characteristic elements as the monteira an embroidered felt hat breeches and jacket are already present in 16th century depictions 133 Although there are some regional variance males attire is generally composed of monteira and sometimes pano headcloth camisa shirt chaleco vest chaqueta jacket faixa sash calzon breeches cirolas underwear polainas gaiters spats andzocas zocos clogs or boots 133 Men s traditional costume nbsp Musicians c 1900 nbsp A Galician 1874 nbsp A bagpiper with monteira hat nbsp An old man in traditional attire nbsp Zocas nbsp PolainasFemale costume was composed of cofia coif or later pano headcloth dengue short cape worn as a jacket or corpino bodice camisa shirt refaixo petticoat saia skirt mantelo apron and faltriqueira pouch or bag 133 Women s traditional costume nbsp Old lady with cofia nbsp Galician woman with embroidered mantelo and saffron faldriqueira nbsp Galician woman by Serafin Avendano 1891 She s wearing a dengue nbsp Dancing nbsp Zocos nbsp At Pontevedra nbsp Going to the fountain by Alfredo Souto Cuero 1893 Traditional music Edit source source Muineira source source Marcha procesional source source Muineira de FroxanThe most characteristic instruments in traditional music is probably the gaita bagpipe The gaita have a conical double reed chanter and usually have one to four drones 134 The bag is usually inflated through a blowpipe but in the gaita de barquin it is inflated by the operation of a bellows In the past the gaita was usually accompanied just by tamboril snare drum and bombo or caixa bass drum but since the middle of the twentieth century the groups and bands have become very popular Pieces which are usually interpreted with gaita are the muineira often in 68 time and very similar to Irish jigs 135 the alborada played during the early mornings of holydays the marcha march which accompanies processions and retinues Some renowned compositions are the 19th century Muineira de Chantada and the traditional Aires de Pontevedra an alborada and Marcha do Antigo Reino de Galicia March of the Old Kingdom of Galicia Another very representative instrument is the pandeireta tambourine which along or together with other drums as the pandeiro castanets etc usually accompanied the songs and celebrations of the working women and men during the serans evenings foliadas or fiadas Other genres include de alala which can be sung a cappella or the cancions de cego blindman s songs interpreted with violin of zanfona Galician musics and dancers nbsp Bagpiper with a gaita de barquin and musicians with a pandeireta and tamboril nbsp circa 1900 famous piper O Rilo nbsp Bagpiper 13th century Cantigas de Santa Maria nbsp Dancing a muineira nbsp 1927 Os gaiteiros de Soutelo nbsp Musician Faustino Santalices nbsp Pandereiteiras de MensLiterature Edit Main article Galician literature nbsp Rosalia de Castro was one of the most representatives authors of the Rexurdimento revival of the Galician language nbsp Eduardo Pondal considered himself a bard of freedom he imagined a Celtic past of freedom and independence which he tried to recover for Galicia with his poetry 136 nbsp Manuel Curros Enriquez a Galician journalist and writer who was famous for his compromise with the Republicanism against the Spanish Monarchy as well nbsp Manuel Rivas was born in A Coruna A famous Galician journalist writer and poet whose work is the most widely translated in the history of Galician literature Painting plastic arts and architecture Edit nbsp painter Luis Seoane nbsp Sculptor Francisco Asorey nbsp Architect Antonio PalaciosScience Edit nbsp Benito Jeronimo Feijoo y Montenegro was a monk and scholar who wrote a great collection of essays that cover a range of subjects from natural history and the then known sciences nbsp Martin Sarmiento He wrote on a wide variety of subjects including Literature Medicine Botany Ethnography History Theology Linguistics etc Music Edit nbsp Tanxugueiras are a Galician folk trio formed in 2016 The group aim to bring a modern sound to traditional Galician music by merging folk sounds with pop and world music influences Their music focuses on themes such as the understanding between peoples the defence of the Galician language and culture and women s empowerment nbsp Carlos Nunez is currently one of the most famous Galician bagpipers who has collaborated with Ry Cooder Sharon Shannon Sinead O Connor The Chieftains Altan among others nbsp Susana Seivane is a Galician bagpiper She was born into a family of well known Galician luthiers and musicians The Seivane nbsp Carlos Jean is a DJ and record producer He was born in Ferrol of Haitian and Galician heritage Sport Edit nbsp Francisco Javier Gomez Noya 1983 former triathlete Silver in 2012 Summer Olympics nbsp oscar Pereiro is a professional road bicycle racer Pereiro won the 2006 Tour de France nbsp David Cal Figueroa is a Galician sprint canoer who has competed since 1999 he became the athlete with the most Olympic medals of all time in Spain nbsp Ana Peleteiro is a triple jumper and the current national record holder She won the gold medal in the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships 137 Cinema and TV Edit nbsp Maria Castro 1981 is a well known Galician actress who performed in several Spanish TV series and movies nbsp Luis Tosar has starred in some successful Spanish movies such as Celda 211 or Te doy mis ojos nbsp Oliver Laxe is a French born Galician director whose third film Fire Will Come became the most watched and most successful Galician film in history nbsp Maria Casares was one of the most distinguished stars of the French stage and cinemaPeople of Galician origin Edit nbsp Cuban former leader Fidel Castro nbsp Caudillo and dictator of Spain Francisco Franco nbsp Portuguese explorer Joao da Nova nbsp American actor Martin Sheen born Ramon Estevez nbsp Brazilian writer Nelida Pinon nbsp Argentinian ex president Raul Alfonsin nbsp Jose Alonso y Trelles Uruguayan poet nbsp Laurentino Cortizo Cohen president of Panama nbsp Tabare Vazquez ex president of Uruguay nbsp Mariano Rajoy former Prime Minister of Spain nbsp Santiago Casares Quiroga ORGA s founder and former Prime Minister of SpainSee also Edit nbsp Spain portalList of Galician people Galician nationalism Fillos de Galicia 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Marieke S Posth Cosimo Mora Rafael Martinez Moreno Jorge Rojo Guerra Manuel Salazar Garcia Domingo C Royo Guillen Jose I Kunst Michael Rougier Helene Crevecoeur Isabelle Arcusa Magallon Hector Tejedor Rodriguez Cristina Garcia Martinez de Lagran Inigo Garrido Pena Rafael Alt Kurt W Jeong Choongwon Schiffels Stephan Utrilla Pilar Krause Johannes Haak Wolfgang 2019 Survival of Late Pleistocene Hunter Gatherer Ancestry in the Iberian Peninsula Current Biology 29 7 1169 1177 e7 doi 10 1016 j cub 2019 02 006 ISSN 0960 9822 PMID 30880015 S2CID 76663708 Brunel Samantha Bennett E Andrew Cardin Laurent Garraud Damien Barrand Emam Helene Beylier Alexandre Boulestin Bruno Chenal Fanny Ciesielski Elsa Convertini Fabien Dedet Bernard Desbrosse Degobertiere Stephanie Desenne Sophie Dubouloz Jerome Duday Henri Escalon Gilles Fabre Veronique Gailledrat Eric Gandelin Muriel Gleize Yves Goepfert Sebastien Guilaine Jean Hachem Lamys Ilett Michael Lambach Francois Maziere Florent Perrin Bertrand Plouin Suzanne Pinard Estelle Praud Ivan Richard Isabelle Riquier Vincent Roure Rejane Sendra Benoit Thevenet Corinne Thiol Sandrine Vauquelin Elisabeth Vergnaud Luc Grange Thierry Geigl Eva Maria Pruvost Melanie 9 June 2020 Ancient genomes from present day France unveil 7 000 years of its demographic history Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 23 12791 12798 Bibcode 2020PNAS 11712791B doi 10 1073 pnas 1918034117 eISSN 1091 6490 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 7293694 PMID 32457149 Criado Boado Felipe Parcero Oubina Cesar Otero Vilarino Carlos Aboal Fernandez Roberto Ayan Vila Xurxo Barreiro David Ballesteros Arias Paula Cabrejas Elena Costa Casais Manuela Fabrega Alvarez Pastor Fonte Joao Gianotti Camila Gonzalez Garcia A Cesar Guimil Farina Alejandro Lima Oliveira Elena Lopez Noia Raquel Manana Borrazas Patricia Martinez Cortizas Antonio Millan Lence Matilde Rodriguez Paz Anxo Santos Estevez Manuel 2016 Atlas arqueoloxico da paisaxe galega Xerais p 48 hdl 10261 132739 ISBN 978 84 9121 048 1 Archived from the original on 12 February 2022 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Benozzo F 2018 Uma paisagem atlantica pre historica Etnogenese e etno filologia paleo mesolitica das tradicoes galega e portuguesa in proceedings of Jornadas das Letras Galego Portugesas 2015 2017 Universita de Bologna DTS and Academia Galega da Lingua Portuguesa pp 159 170 Cunliffe Barry W 2008 Europe between the oceans themes and variations 9000 BC AD 1000 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11923 7 John T Koch Barry W Cunliffe eds 2013 Celtic from the West 2 rethinking the Bronze Age and the arrival of Indo European in Atlantic Europe Celtic studies publications Oxford UK Oakville CT Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 84217 529 3 de la Pena Santos Antonio 1 July 2003 Galicia Prehistoria Castrexo e primeira romanizacion Vigo pp 61ss ISBN 978 84 96203 29 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bradley Mr Richard Bradley Richard 2002 Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe Signing the Land Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 44699 7 Retrieved 16 January 2022 Cunliffe Barry 1999 Atlantic Sea ways Revista de Guimaraes especial Actas do Congresso de Proto Historia Europeia 93 105 Archived from the original on 12 February 2022 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Rodriguez Ana 26 December 2021 Henges circulos invisibles de la Edad de Bronce Faro de Vigo Archived from the original on 15 February 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2022 a b An Alternative to Celtic from the East and Celtic from the West Patrick Sims Williams Cambridge University Press 2020 2 Archived January 12 2022 at the Wayback Machine Patterson Nick et al January 2022 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 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 8889665 PMID 34937049 Armada Xose Lois August 2020 Massive metalwork deposition in Atlantic Europe during the Late Bronze Age 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Brais X Curras Ines Sastre eds Alternative Iron Ages Social Theory from Archaeological Analysis Taylor amp Francis doi 10 4324 9781351012119 hdl 10261 208907 ISBN 9781351012119 S2CID 240654014 Raso Iciar Moreno 2014 Longhouses del Bronce Final Hierro I en la Peninsula Iberica Arqueologia y Territorio 11 25 37 ISSN 1698 5664 Archived from the original on 15 February 2022 Retrieved 15 February 2022 Fokkens H Bourgeois J Bourgeois I Charette B 2003 The longhouse as a central element in Bronze Age daily life Universiteit Leiden S2CID 162779452 Archived from the original on 15 February 2022 Retrieved 15 February 2022 Garcia Quintela Marco V 14 July 2016 Sobre las saunas de la Edad del Hierro en la Peninsula iberica novedades tipologias e interpretaciones Complutum 27 1 109 130 doi 10 5209 CMPL 53219 ISSN 1988 2327 Archived from the original on 2 March 2022 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Armada Xose Lois Garcia Vuelta oscar 2006 Symbolic Forms from the Iron Age in the North West of the Iberian Peninsula Sacrificial Bronzes and their Problems In Marco Virgilio Garcia Quintela ed Anthropology of the Indo European world and material culture Proceedings of the 5th International Colloquium of Anthropology of the Indo European World and Comparative Mythology Maior Budapest Archaeolingua pp 163 178 hdl 10261 34316 ISBN 978 963 8046 72 7 Archived from the original on 2 March 2022 Retrieved 2 March 2022 Prieto Molina Susana 1996 Los torques castrenos del noroeste de la Peninsula Iberica Complutum 7 195 224 ISSN 1131 6993 Archived from the original on 2 March 2022 Retrieved 2 March 2022 Mederos Martin Alfredo 20 December 2019 Auga dos Cebros Pontevedra Galicia Un barco del Bronce Final II en la fachada atlantica de la Penincula Iberica 1325 1050 a C SAGVNTVM Papeles del Laboratorio de Arqueologia de Valencia 51 23 doi 10 7203 SAGVNTVM 51 11476 S2CID 214517194 Gonzalez Ruibal Alfredo Rodriguez Martinez Rafael Ayan Vila Xurxo 2010 Buscando a los punicos en el noroeste Mainake XXXII 24 ISSN 0212 078X Meunier Emmanuelle 1 December 2019 El estano del Noroeste iberico desde la Edad del Bronce hasta la epoca romana Por una primera sintesis La ruta de las Estrimnides Universidad de Alcala Servicio de Publicaciones pp 279 320 ISBN 978 84 17729 31 8 Alonso Romero Fernando 1995 Las embarcaciones y navegaciones en el mundo celta de la Edad Antigua a la Alta Edad Media Guerra exploraciones y navegacion del mundo antiguo a la edad moderna curso de verano U I M P Universidade de A Coruna Ferrol 18 a 21 de julio de 1994 Servizo de Publicacions pp 111 146 ISBN 978 84 88301 13 0 Archived from the original on 17 February 2022 Retrieved 17 February 2022 a b c Romero Masia Ana Maria Pose Mesura Xose Manuel 1988 Galicia nos textos clasicos in Galician Galiza Edicions do Padroado do Museu Arqueoloxico Provincial Concello de A Coruna pp 55 71 86 ISBN 84 505 7380 7 OCLC 28499276 The dating of the Lomba do Mouro site makes it the largest and oldest Roman camp in Galicia and northern Portugal The Roman Army in the NW of Hispania Archived from the original on 20 February 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2022 Rodriguez Corral Javier 2009 A Galicia castrexa in Galician Santiago de Compostela Lostrego p 214 ISBN 978 84 936613 3 5 OCLC 758056842 Alvarez Gonzalez Yolanda Lopez Gonzalez Luis Fernandez Gotz Manuel Garcia Quintela Marco V 2017 El oppidum de San Cibran de Las y el papel de la religion en los procesos de centralizacion en la Edad del Hierro Cuadernos de Prehistoria y Arqueologia 43 doi 10 15366 cupauam2017 43 008 ISSN 0211 1608 Archived from the original on 21 February 2022 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Romero Masia Ana Pose Mesura Xose Manuel 1988 Galicia nos textos clasicos in Galician Galiza Edicions do Padroado do Museu Arqueoloxico Provincial Concello de A Coruna pp 95 146 ISBN 84 505 7380 7 OCLC 28499276 Fonte Joao Costa Garcia Jose Manuel Gago Manuel 20 September 2021 O Penedo dos Lobos Roman military activity in the uplands of the Galician Massif Northwest Iberia Journal of Conflict Archaeology 17 5 29 doi 10 1080 15740773 2021 1980757 ISSN 1574 0773 S2CID 240599598 Smith R R R 1988 Simulacra Gentium the Ethne from the Sebasteion at Aphrodisias Journal of Roman Studies 78 50 77 doi 10 2307 301450 ISSN 0075 4358 JSTOR 301450 S2CID 162542146 Retrieved 18 January 2022 culturagalega org 11 December 2017 Un arco de triunfo en Francia pode gardar a primeira representacion dun guerreiro galaico vencido culturagalega org Retrieved 20 February 2022 De Chorographia III cf Romero Masia Ana Pose Mesura Xose Manuel 1988 Galicia nos textos clasicos in Galician Edicions do Padroado do Museu Arqueoloxico Provincial Concello de A Coruna pp 55 59 ISBN 978 84 505 7380 0 Archived from the original on 28 February 2022 Lorrio Alberto J 2011 Los celtas en el occidente de Iberia In Gonzalo Ruiz Zapatero Jesus R Alvarez Sanchis ed Castros y verracos las gentes de la Edad del Hierro en el occidente de Iberia Avila Institucion Gran Duque de Alba p 70 ISBN 978 84 15038 26 9 Galicia and North Portugal are the origin of European celticity Archived August 9 2018 at the Wayback Machine interview with Prof Francesco Benozzo 13 03 2016 Cunliffe Barry W Koch John T 2012 Celtic from the West Alternative Perspectives from Archaeology Genetics Language and Literature Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 84217 475 3 John T Koch Barry W Cunliffe eds 2013 Celtic from the West 2 rethinking the Bronze Age and the arrival of Indo European in Atlantic Europe Celtic studies publications Oxford UK Oakville CT Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 84217 529 3 John T Koch Barry W Cunliffe eds 2016 Celtic from the West 3 Atlantic Europe in the Metal Ages questions of shared language Celtic Studies Publications Oxford Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 78570 227 3 Prosper Blanca Maria 2008 Lusitanian A Non Celtic Indo European Language of Western Hispania Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe 2008 pags 53 64 Servicio de Publicaciones pp 53 64 ISBN 978 84 7800 335 8 Archived from the original on 13 February 2022 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Prosper Blanca Maria 2002 Lenguas y religiones prerromanas del occidente de la Peninsula Iberica Universidad de Salamanca ISBN 978 84 7800 818 6 Prosper Blanca Maria 2002 Lenguas y religiones prerromanas del occidente de la Peninsula Iberica Universidad de Salamanca pp 357 382 ISBN 978 84 7800 818 6 Anyway nothing of what I am going to say precludes the existence of Celtic speakers all along the Atlantic coast of Spain and Portugal As a matter of fact a great deal of evidence mostly from place names and personal names points to their presence there By means of an increasingly refined scrutiny we are able to come up with much Celtic vocabulary never attested in Celtiberian as well as archaisms in word formation like the preservation of the simple superlative suffix in amo as well as phonetic changes that Celtiberian never shared like for instance the loss of g in contact with front vowels Prosper Blanca Maria 2008 Lusitanian A Non Celtic Indo European Language of Western Hispania Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe 2008 pags 53 64 Servicio de Publicaciones pp 53 64 ISBN 978 84 7800 335 8 Archived from the original on 13 February 2022 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Vallejo Jose M ª 2013 Hacia una definicion del lusitano Palaeohispanica Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania Antigua 13 273 291 ISSN 1578 5386 Archived from the original on 1 March 2022 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Garcia Alonso Juan Luis 1 January 2011 Oclusivas aspiradas celtas y lusitanos A Greek Man in the Iberian Street Festschrift Javier de Hoz Juan Luis Garcia Alonso y Eugenio Lujan Martinez eds Innsbruck pp 175 190 Archived from the original on 11 May 2022 Retrieved 25 February 2022 Lujan Eugenio 28 February 2019 Language and writing among the Lusitanians Palaeohispanic Languages and Epigraphies Oxford University Press pp 304 334 doi 10 1093 oso 9780198790822 003 0011 ISBN 978 0 19 879082 2 Archived from the original on 25 January 2022 Retrieved 23 January 2022 Hesperia Banco de datos de Lenguas paleohispanicas read online Archived from the original on 28 November 2021 Retrieved 21 January 2022 we cannot ignore the evidence for the Celtic presence in northern Gallaecia which is confirmed by ancient authors Celtici cognomine Neri et Supertamarci Pliny 4 111 ad promunturium quod Celticum vocamus Mela 3 9 Artabri Celticae gentis Mela 3 14 and by epigraphy with mention of certain peoples and individuals who call themselves Celtici for instance Fusca Coedi f Celtica Supertamarica 53 For his part Strabo 3 3 5 mentions moreover the close connection of some of these Gallaeci with the Celtici from Baeturia in the Guadiana area to the south of Lusitania This relationship of the Gallaeci to the south western Celtici as well as that with Celtiberia Pliny 3 13 can be demonstrated by some onomastic indicators such as the special Celtiberian tendency to use duo nomina formulae with a name in iko on the basis of nomen gentilicium a fact noted amongst the south western Celtici C Pagusicus Lucianus and the Gallaeci Apanicus Capito Nor should one forget that in northern Gallaecia there are toponyms and ethnonyms which are well justified by Celtic Nerion Arotrebae Albiones cf Welsh elfydd world Gaulish Albiorix as well as dedications to Lugu Map 12 2 which link it with Celtiberia in particular Gorrochategui J Vallejo J M 28 February 2019 The parts of Hispania without epigraphy Palaeohispanic Languages and Epigraphies Oxford University Press pp 335 364 doi 10 1093 oso 9780198790822 003 0012 ISBN 978 0 19 879082 2 Archived from the original on 14 February 2022 Retrieved 23 January 2022 The analysis of Galician place names attested epigraphically shows that many of them can be considered Celtic Lujan Eugenio 2008 Galician Place Names Attested Epigraphically Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe 2008 pags 65 82 Servicio de Publicaciones pp 65 82 ISBN 978 84 7800 335 8 Archived from the original on 11 February 2022 Retrieved 18 January 2022 People of this area is divided in three groups the ones called Celts in old sources others don t considered Celts and they that haven t ethnic ascription It is examined each people s ethnic names place names and onomastics General conclusions are general admission of these people are Celts separating Seurri and with doubts over the Grovi In Ancient Galicia would be Celts superposed to another no celtic Indoeuropeans strata Lujan Eugenio 2009 Pueblos celtas y no celtas de la Galicia antigua fuentes literarias frente a fuentes epigraficas Real Academia de Cultura Valenciana Seccion de estudios ibericos D Fletcher Valls Estudios de lenguas y epigrafia antiguas ELEA 9 219 250 ISSN 1135 5026 Archived from the original on 30 January 2022 Retrieved 18 January 2022 Alonso Juan Luis Garcia 2009 Lenguas indoeuropeas prerromanas en el Noroeste Peninsular Palaeohispanica Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania Antigua 9 163 174 ISSN 1578 5386 Archived from the original on 1 March 2022 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Lujan Eugenio R 3 May 2006 The language s of the Callaeci E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 715 748 ISSN 1540 4889 Bua Carballo Juan Carlos 14 January 2019 Toponimia prelatina de Galicia Universidade de Santiago de Compostela Servizo de Publicacions e Intercambio Cientifico ISBN 978 84 17595 07 4 Archived from the original on 1 March 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Bascuas Edelmiro 2008 la hidronimia de galicia Tres estratos paleoeuropeo celta y latino PDF Estudios Mindonienses 24 521 550 Archived PDF from the original on 3 January 2022 Retrieved 18 January 2022 Moralejo Juan Jose 2008 Callaica nomina estudios de onomastica gallega Fundacion Pedro Barrie de la Maza ISBN 978 84 95892 68 3 Santos Yanguas Narciso 2017 Origen y consolidacion de los conventus iuridici en el noroeste peninsular Gerion Revista de Historia Antigua 35 1 229 255 doi 10 5209 GERI 56964 eISSN 1988 3080 ISSN 0213 0181 Archived from the original on 2 March 2022 Retrieved 2 March 2022 Bua Carballo Juan Carlos 14 January 2019 Toponimia prelatina de Galicia Verba Anexo Santiago de Compostela Universidade de Santiago de Compostela Servizo de Publicacions e Intercambio Cientifico ISBN 978 84 17595 07 4 Archived from the original on 1 March 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Santos Yanguas Juan 2009 De nuevo sobre los Castella naturaleza territorio e integracion en la Ciuitas In Kremer Dieter ed Onomastica galega II onimia e onomastica prerromana e a situacion linguistica do noroeste peninsular actas do segundo coloquio Leipzig 17 3 18 de outubro de 2008 Universidade de Santiago de Compostela pp 169 183 ISBN 978 84 9750 794 3 Delamarre Xavier 2007 Nomina celtica antiqua inscriptionum selecta Paris Ed Errance pp passim ISBN 978 2 87772 350 3 Santos Yanguas Narciso Vicente 2016 Militares galaicos en el ejercito romano Ediciones de la Universidad de Oviedo ISBN 978 84 16343 39 3 Meyer Alexander 2013 The Creation Composition Service and Settlement of Roman Auxiliary Units Raised on the Iberian Peninsula Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press hdl 2027 fulcrum kk91fn34t ISBN 978 1 4073 1121 0 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Descubren en un municipio de Pontevedra la mina de oro subterranea romana mas grande de Galicia Publico A Coruna 3 September 2021 Archived from the original on 24 February 2022 Retrieved 24 February 2022 a b c Lopez Silva Jose Antonio 2004 A Cronica de Idacio de Limia in Galician Ourense Deputacion de Ourense ISBN 978 84 96011 32 8 In tempore sueborum el tiempo de los suevos en la Gallaecia 411 585 el primer reino medieval de Occidente Jorge Lopez Quiroga A M Martinez Tejera eds Ourense Deputacion Provincial de Ourense 2017 ISBN 978 84 16643 11 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Isla Frez Amancio 1992 La sociedad gallega en la alta edad media Madrid Consejo superior de investigaciones cientificas p 14 ISBN 84 00 07215 4 Fernandez Pereiro Mario 2019 Recintos Fortificados en Altura na costa atlantica galega Estudo Arqueoloxico Doctoral thesis in Galician Universidade de Santiago de Compostela hdl 10347 18729 Retrieved 19 January 2022 No corazon do xigante e III a Terceira Fortaleza do Pindo Capitulo 0 in Galician Retrieved 25 July 2023 Pereiro Mario Fernandez 23 October 2019 O recinto fortificado do Monte Aloia Un xigante altomedieval esquecido Lucentum 38 379 395 doi 10 14198 LVCENTVM2019 38 18 hdl 10045 97729 ISSN 1989 9904 S2CID 213442091 Retrieved 17 November 2022 Fernandez Pereiro Mario Sanchez Pardo Jose Carlos 13 December 2022 Buscando un castillo altomedieval entre la vegetacion El caso de Castro Valente Padron Galicia Cuadernos de Arqueologia de la Universidad de Navarra 55 72 doi 10 15581 012 30 2 004 ISSN 2387 1814 S2CID 254711145 Retrieved 25 July 2023 Arias Jorge C 2007 Identity and interaction The Suevi and the Hispano Romans University of Virginia a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Diaz Martinez Pablo de la Cruz 2011 El reino suevo 411 585 Tres Cantos Madrid Espagne Akal ISBN 9788446028505 IGE Principais resultados Ige eu Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 IGE Principais resultados Ige eu Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 IGE Principais resultados Ige eu Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 IGE Principais resultados Ige eu Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 Persoas segundo o grao de entendemento do galego falado Distribucion segundo o sexo Ano 2003 Ige eu Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 Gonzalez Garcia F J coord 2007 Los pueblos de la Galicia celtica Madrid Ediciones Akal pp 19 49 ISBN 978 84 460 2260 2 Garcia Quintela Marco V 2005 Celtic Elements in Northwestern Spain in Pre Roman times E Keltoi Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies 6 74 Lujan Eugenio 2008 Galician Place Names Attested Epigraphically Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe 2008 pags 65 82 Servicio de Publicaciones pp 65 82 ISBN 978 84 7800 335 8 Archived from the original on 11 February 2022 Retrieved 18 January 2022 Koch John T 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO pp 788 791 ISBN 1 85109 445 8 Gonzalez Ruibal Alfredo 20 December 2004 Artistic Expression and Material Culture in Celtic Gallaecia E Keltoi 6 113 166 Garcia Quintela Marco V 10 August 2005 Celtic Elements in Northwestern Spain in Pre Roman times PDF E Keltoi 6 497 569 Archived from the original PDF on 31 January 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2014 a b Alberro Manuel 2008 La Santa Compana en el NO de la Peninsula Iberica y en otros paises celticos como Irlanda Escocia y Gales Revista de folklore 336 183 187 ISSN 0211 1810 Archived from the original on 15 February 2022 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Alberro Manuel 6 January 2008 Celtic Legacy in Galicia PDF E Keltoi 6 1005 1034 Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2011 Retrieved 10 May 2014 Wood Walter Mason Frank H Frank Henry 1910 A corner of Spain London E Nash Retrieved 16 February 2022 Bell Aubrey F G Aubrey Fitz Gerald 1922 Spanish Galicia London John Lane Retrieved 16 February 2022 Meakin Annette M B 1909 Galicia The Switzerland of Spain London Methuen amp Co Retrieved 16 February 2022 Galegos sede fortes prontos a grandes feitos aparellade os peitos a glorioso afan fillos dos nobres celtas fortes e peregrinos luitade plos destinos dos eidos de Breogan Cf Himno Gallego Archived from the original on 14 March 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2014 Gonzalez Garcia F J coord 2007 Los pueblos de la Galicia celtica Madrid Ediciones Akal p 9 ISBN 978 84 460 2260 2 Cabon Alain 2010 Le Festival Interceltique de Lorient quarante ans au coeur du monde celte Rennes Editions Ouest France p 28 ISBN 978 2 7373 5223 2 a b c d e f Vaqueiro Vitor 2010 Mitoloxia de Galiza lendas tradicions maxias santos e milagres Vigo Galaxia ISBN 978 84 9865 387 8 O PAIS DA MOURA YouTube Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Cuba Xoan Ramiro in Galician Reigosa Antonio in Galician Ruiz Xose Miranda in Galician 1999 Diccionario dos seres miticos galegos Xerais de Galicia ISBN 978 84 8302 363 1 Archived from the original on 18 February 2022 Retrieved 18 February 2022 Ha ha I know him He ran with me to this fountain where he has just left me That man Sir Cavalier is no thief If he is any thing at all he is a Nuveiro a fellow who rides upon the clouds and is occasionally whisked away by a gust of wind Should you ever travel with that man again never allow him more than one glass of anise at a time or he will infallibly mount into the clouds and leave you and then he will ride and run till he comes to a water brook or knocks his head against a fountain then one draught and he is himself again George Borrow 1923 The Bible In Spain John Murray p 420 Retrieved 18 February 2022 a b Codice Calixtino o liber Sancti Iacobi en Galego in Galician Translated by Xose Lopez Diaz 2nd ed Galicia 2013 pp 442 443 ISBN 978 84 453 5104 8 OCLC 867868161 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Alonso Romero Fernando 2020 El Lobishome o Vakner del limite de la tierra y el mar pp 87 136 ISSN 1130 7625 Archived from the original on 27 February 2022 Retrieved 27 February 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Ferro Veiga Jose Manuel 2020 El Hombre Lobo de Allariz Manual Operativo de investigacion de asesinos en serie Jose Manuel Ferro Veiga Urco el terrorifico perro de Cortegada La Voz de Galicia 15 June 2014 Archived from the original on 18 February 2022 Retrieved 18 February 2022 Alonso Romero Fernando 1992 Galician legends about miraculous sea voyages in stone boats Some Irish and Breton parallels Etudes celtiques 29 1 89 95 doi 10 3406 ecelt 1992 1993 Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Alberro Manuel 2005 El paradigma celtico de las nueve olas Anuario Brigantino 28 47 64 ISSN 1130 7625 Archived from the original on 20 February 2022 Retrieved 19 January 2022 a b c Gonzalez Perez Clodio 2014 O traxe tradicional galego Baiona NIGRA TREA ISBN 978 84 15078 36 4 Os Instrumentos Musicais na Tradicion Galega Gaita de fol sinxela Archived from the original on 17 April 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2022 Williams Sean 2013 Focus Irish Traditional Music Routledge p 101 ISBN 978 1 135 20414 3 Cf Brenan Gerald 1976 The literature of the Spanish people from Roman times to the present day 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 359 361 ISBN 0 521 04313 1 Kangaroo girl Peleteiro bounds out to European indoor triple jump title European Athletics 3 March 2019 Archived from the original on 31 May 2019 Retrieved 11 March 2021 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to People of Galicia Spain Galician Portal A collaborative study of the EDNAP group regarding Y chromosome binary polymorphism analysis Galician language portal Galician Music Culture and History Galician Government Galician History and Language Santiago Tourism Page about The Way of St James Official page about The Way of St James Arquivo do Galego Oral An archive of records of Galician speakers A Nosa Fala Sound recordings of the different dialects of the Galician language Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Galicians amp oldid 1179765001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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