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  1. May 17, 2018 · Celts. The ethnic origins of the Celts are somewhat complex, and often obscured by Celtic-influenced languages. Ancient writers referred to the Celts as tall, fair-haired people with blue or grey eyes, but they are more often considered to be the shorter, dark-complexioned Celtic-speaking peoples of France, Great Britain, and Ireland.

  2. The Celts were a warrior based society. They lived in clans that formed a part of a larger tribe. Often tribes would fight against each other. The Celts farmed the land to grow food to eat and to ...

  3. Celtic religion - Druids, Rituals, Gods: Little is known about the religious beliefs of the Celts of Gaul. They believed in a life after death, for they buried food, weapons, and ornaments with the dead. The druids, the early Celtic priesthood, taught the doctrine of transmigration of souls and discussed the nature and power of the gods. The Irish believed in an otherworld, imagined sometimes ...

  4. The Celts tore through the countryside and several battalions of Roman soilders to lay seige to the Capitol of the Roman Empire. Seven months of seige led to negotiations wherby the Celts promised to leave their seige for a tribute of one thousand pounds of gold, which the historian Pliny tells was very difficult for the entire city to muster ...

  5. Feb 26, 2023 · The Celts were a diverse group of tribes that shared certain cultural and linguistic characteristics. Theories about the origins of the Celts range from the idea that they were an indigenous people who developed their culture in situ, to the theory that they were migrants who came to Europe from Central Asia.

  6. Aug 7, 2022 · The Expansion Of The Celts. At the end of the Bronze Age, about 1000 BC, the Celts started expansion into western and central Europe. They reached the territory of present-day France, Benelux, Switzerland, Italy, the Iberian Peninsula, and the British Isles. In the 4th century BC, the Celts entered Rome and soon were driven from there.

  7. Fig. 1. Fig. 2. Celtic is a branch of the great Indo-European language family, as are the Teutonic, Romance and Balto-Slavonic languages of Europe, classical Greek and Latin, and many others. Indo-European languages, in fact, are found across a huge swath of the Old World, from northwestern Europe to the Indian sub-continent.

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