642 results on '"celts"'
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2. THE COLLECTION OF LATE BRONZE AGE CELTS FROM THE NOVOSIBIRSK STATE MUSEUM OF LOCAL HISTORY
- Author
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С.С. Тихонов
- Subjects
celts ,late bronze age ,v. baturino ,upper priobye ,museum collections ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The author introduces into scientific circulation a collection of bronze celts kept in the Novosibirsk State Local Lore Museum. Found almost a hundred years ago, they have not yet become the subject of scientific research, and only two brief mentions in the press in 1941 and 1974 do not allow us to completely forget them. The circumstances of the find are unknown, and little can be said about the person who found it. It is difficult to speak about the type of the site where the objects were preserved: a hoard? A settlement? A ruined burial ground? A random accumulation? A metallurgical workshop? It is only indisputable that the location of the village Baturino (Kozhevnikovsky district of the Tomsk region) in the area where the Celts were found can be considered as one of the Upper Ob centers of distribution of metallurgical products in the Late Bronze Age.
- Published
- 2024
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3. A Linguistic Analysis of Anam Cara: Spiritual Wisdom from the Celtic World.
- Author
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ZALLEDINOVA, Zhanna, ASHINOVA, Kunipa, SEIDIKENOVA, Almash, and KARIPBAYEVA, Gulnar Alipbayevna
- Subjects
COGNITIVE linguistics ,LINGUISTIC analysis ,COGNITIVE psychology ,CULTURAL studies ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge - Abstract
Copyright of Novitas-ROYAL is the property of Novitas Royal and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. 'The Celt's far vision of weird and hidden things'? H. P. Lovecraft, William Sharp and the Celts.
- Author
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Sneddon, Duncan
- Abstract
This article studies the racialized construction of Celtic-speaking peoples in racial pseudo-science and literature in the period up to the early twentieth century, and how this construction was deployed by H. P. Lovecraft as part of his literary project. It is shown that stereotypes about 'Celts' and their supposed essential sensitivity to the spiritual and supernatural were key to how writers from the Celtic Revival constructed their ideal of Celtic culture in literature, and how Lovecraft drew upon this in his development of the Weird in both his supernatural horror fiction and his critical work and correspondence with Robert E. Howard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. In the Shadow of the Empire
- Author
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Julian Gieseke
- Subjects
Ancient Ethnography ,Celts ,Iberian Peninsula ,Polybius ,Strabo ,Posidonius ,Ancient history ,D51-90 ,Greek language and literature. Latin language and literature ,PA - Abstract
Comparing is a base operation in the description of foreigners. Yet, its role in Hellenistic ethnography is still understudied. The paper looks at practices of comparing in the ethnographic texts of Polybius, Posidonius and Strabo in the 2nd and 1st century BC, which served to integrate the (newly discovered) peoples of western Europe into Greek views of the world. It shows both that the conquest of these areas by the Romans changed Greek perceptions of western ‘barbarians’ and that older ethnographic traditions were still retained.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. What it means to be a man : elite masculinity and warfare in Cisalpine Gaul, c.400-50 BC
- Author
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Lumsden, Alastair Richard, Coulston, J. C., and Brock, Andrea L.
- Subjects
Celts ,Gauls ,Elite masculinity ,Warfare ,Archaeology ,Barbarian cultures ,Roman Republic ,DG89.L86 ,Celts--Italy--History ,Gauls--Italy--History ,Masculinity--History ,Excavations (Archaeology)--Rome ,Weapons, Ancient Rome--History ,Military art and science--History--To 500 ,Gaul--History--To 58 B.C - Abstract
This thesis explores Cisalpine masculinity and warfare over the period c. 400-50 BC and seeks to demonstrate that material cultural changes reflected broader socio-political and military developments. A statistical analysis is undertaken of the composition of weapon burials from the largest and best-documented Gallic necropoleis in Cispadane and Transpadane Gaul. This reveals that specific combinations of La Tène, Golaseccan, and Italic mortuary goods were employed to express an individual's position in an aristocratic hierarchy, and that these differed between Cisalpine Gallic groups in chronological, regional and intra-regional contexts. These results are then compared with how elite masculinity was expressed amongst other contemporary tribal groups from Transalpine Gaul and the Italian and Iberian peninsulas, along with their socio-political and military developments. The second half of the thesis combines these conclusions with an examination of the Graeco-Roman battle narratives involving Cisalpine Gallic forces and constructs the first in-depth analysis of organisational and tactical capabilities of these forces. Ultimately, this study demonstrates that the Cisalpine Gallic tribes experienced a significant period of socio-political development during the third century, greatly increasing the sophistication of their warcraft and military forces.
- Published
- 2023
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7. Dietary changes seen through the isotope analysis of the La Tène burial site of Prosmyky (Bohemia, 4th-3rd century BCE)
- Author
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Vytlačil, Zdeněk, Danielisová, Alžběta, Velemínský, Petr, Blažek, Jan, and Drtikolová Kaupová, Sylva
- Abstract
Dietary reconstruction using carbon and nitrogen isotopes has been applied to the La Tène population buried at Prosmyky, a large cemetery of the 4th-3rd centuries BCE in northwest Bohemia. The analysis of bone collagen from 55 individuals showed a diet that did not differ noticeably from other contemporary sites in the region. However, chronologically sensitive development in diet, with gradually increasing δ13C values, was present, signifying a growing reliance on millet for sustenance through the cemetery’s lifespan. Moreover, a rather unusual higher δ15N in individuals older than ca. 30 years of age was also observed. Possible explanations are examined, along with a comparison with other published data from the region, suggesting the influence of regionally based developments that might be linked with the societal shifts that led towards the Late La Tène period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. A Forgotten Settlement on the Byzantine Roads: Korniaspa.
- Author
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DİNÇER, Pınar Serdar and DOĞANDOR, Emre
- Subjects
HISTORICAL geography ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,EXCAVATION ,CELTS ,INSCRIPTIONS - Abstract
Copyright of Ortaçağ Araştırmaları Dergisi (OAD) is the property of Ortacag Arastirmalari Dergisi (OAD) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Making of the Celt. Ethnogenesis, Culture and Politics in the Atlantic Arc.
- Author
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Keating, Michael
- Subjects
POLITICS & culture ,BIRTHPLACES ,NINETEENTH century ,SOCIAL reality ,NATIONALISM ,SLAVE trade - Abstract
The theme of Celts and Celticism has attracted fierce controversy over more than two centuries. Passing over the question of ancient origins, this article places the birth of Celticism in the modern period, in line with current understandings of nationalism. Examining the construction of the Celt in Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Galicia and Cornwall, it traces a movement from culture into politics in the course of the nineteenth century. Political pan-Celticism was ultimately a failure not because it was 'artificial' but because of the political conditions of the times and the force of competing projects. Like other nationalisms it relies on myth and tradition but these are social realities not easily to be dismissed by appeal to scientific history. After two hundred years, moreover, Celticism has a history of its own and continues to resonate both in culture and in politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. A Wedowee Dig.
- Author
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Emley, Debbie
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *ANTIQUITIES , *NATIVE American history , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *CELTS - Abstract
The article focuses on an archaeological dig in Wedowee, Alabama, where participants uncovered artifacts and learned about Native American history. Topics include the involvement of local students and teachers, the discovery of various tools like celts and a greenstone hoe, and the importance of teamwork and educational experiences in archaeology.
- Published
- 2024
11. Cranial selection in the cremated remains of the Iron Age Golasecca Celtic Civilization (Northwestern Italy, 9‐4th century BCE).
- Author
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Larentis, Omar, Gorini, Ilaria, and Locatelli, Daniela Patrizia
- Subjects
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IRON Age , *CIVILIZATION , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL cultures , *RITES & ceremonies , *RITUAL , *ANTHROPOLOGY - Abstract
The Golasecca Celtic Civilization (GCC) developed in the Italian Iron Age, between the 9th and 4th centuries BCE, and is characterized by the predominant use of cremation as a funerary ritual in the Italian area. Reconstructing the steps of the cremation ritual in archaeology is a complex challenge, as many anthropic actions leave only faint traces in cremated remains. Within the funerary rituals of prehistoric and protohistoric Italy, the skull has received particular attention from numerous archaeological cultures and civilizations. The context of via Marconi 2020 (Sesto Calende, Varese, northern Italy) has allowed hinting at this practice also in GCC, through the anthropological analysis of cremated remains found in two different but spatially close tombs. The analysis of the cremated remains identified the selection of some elements of the skull of an adult individual and the post‐cranium of a non‐adult individual in the first tomb, and the presence of only the skull of the non‐adult individual in the second tomb. The possibility of a ritual attention of the GCC reserved for the skull has been proven for the first time thanks to the analysis of these subjects. This work provides new data on funerary ritual behaviors of the GCC, allowing for a better understanding within the Italian and European panorama. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. In the Shadow of the Empire: Greek Ethnography of the North in the Late Hellenistic Period and the Role of Comparisons.
- Author
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Gieseke, Julian
- Subjects
WORLDVIEW ,PENINSULAS ,NONCITIZENS ,IMPERIALISM ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Comparing is a base operation in the description of foreigners. Yet, its role in Hellenistic ethnography is still understudied. The paper looks at practices of comparing in the ethnographic texts of Polybius, Posidonius and Strabo in the 2nd and 1st century BC, which served to integrate the (newly discovered) peoples of western Europe into Greek views of the world. It shows both that the conquest of these areas by the Romans changed Greek perceptions of western 'barbarians' and that older ethnographic traditions were still retained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Győr-Kálvária összevont lelőhely késő vaskori embertani leleteinek biológiai antropológiai vizsgálata.
- Author
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Gyenesei, Katalin, Kiss, Krisztián, Szeniczey, Tamás, Ujvári, Ferenc, Pesti, Krisztina, and Hajdu, Tamás
- Subjects
PHYSICAL anthropology ,IRON Age ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains - Abstract
A tanulmány a Győr-Kálvária összevont lelőhelyen feltárt húsz csontvázas és két hamvasztásos késő vaskori kelta temetkezésből előkerült emberi maradványok klasszikus embertani és makroszkópos paleopatológiai eredményeit mutatja be. Here we present the results of the anthropological and macroscopic paleopathological examination of the human remains from a Late Iron Age Celtic burial excavated at Győr-Kálvária merged site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. A middle La Tène Period sword from the Museum of Durrës, Albania
- Author
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Ols Lafe and Errikos Maniotis
- Subjects
Durrës ,Museum ,sword ,weapons ,Celts ,La Tène ,History (General) ,D1-2009 ,Military Science - Abstract
The present paper examines a sword dated in the La Tène Period, currently exhibited in the Archaeological Museum of Durrës, Albania. According to the scientific staff of the Museum the archaeological context of the sword has not been specified but the blade had been found in the necropolis of the city. The analysis of the sword is based on its typological features but also the historical, the archaeological and ethnological aspects of the region had been taken into consideration. The most significant feature of the blade is of course the bending. This feature led us to correlate the examined object with the Celts, who practiced this ritual of the intentional destruction “killing” a weapon. This is the first folded sword which had been found in the territory of the modern-day Albania.
- Published
- 2023
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15. Τὸ εὐαγγέλιον τὸ εὐαγγελισθὲν ὑπ' ἐμοῦ (Gal 1:11): The Argumentative Development and Rhetorical Arrangement of Galatians
- Author
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Bianchini, Francesco
- Subjects
- *
GALATIANS , *METHODOLOGY , *RHETORIC , *STAKEHOLDERS , *CELTS - Abstract
In this contribution the author will proceed in three steps. First, he will raise questions about the various rhetorical approaches one might follow in order to study the argumentative development of Galatians, considering the different methodological options. Second, he will offer a survey of existing rhetorical research on Galatians. Then he will seek to outline the argumentative structure and development of Galatians, in order to understand what is really at stake in this Pauline letter. At the end it will be proven that the literary rhetorical approach in studying Galatians is highly useful for a deep understanding of the text of the letter and its aim: Paul wants to re-evangelise the addressees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Oppidum Stradonice, Josef Ladislav Píč, and Joseph Déchelette.
- Author
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Sklenář, Karel
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL finds ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,RESEARCH personnel ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL dating ,NINETEENTH century ,TWENTIETH century ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS - Abstract
The discovery of a Celtic oppidum near Stradonice in Central Bohemia attracted the attention of the Czech archaeologist J. L. Píč at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries and then of the French oppidum researcher J. Déchelette, who translated Píč's book on Stradonice into French. The controversy about the dating of the site was significant for further research, in which Píč tried to interpret Stradonice as the seat of the Germanic ruler Marobuduus from around the turn of the eras, while Déchelette, supported by archaeological finds, correctly identified Stradonice as a Celtic oppidum that had disappeared before the end of the 1st century BC. The article proves that both of these interpretations did not originate only then, but had a deeper tradition in Czech archaeology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
17. Transtextuality, (re)sources and transmission of the Celtic culture through the Shakespearean repertory
- Author
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Savatier-Lahondès, Céline, Drakakis, John, and Berton-Charrière, Danièle
- Subjects
822.3 ,Shakespeare ,Celtic ,Motif ,(Re)sources ,Antiquity ,Rhizome ,Shakespeare, William,1564-1616--Criticism and interpretation ,Celts ,Celts--Great Britain ,Celts--Ireland ,Civilization--Celtic ,Oral tradition - Abstract
This dissertation explores the resurgence of motifs related to Celtic cultures in Shakespeare’s plays, that is to say the way the pre-Christian and pre-Roman cultures of the British Isles permeate the dramatic works of William Shakespeare. Such motifs do not always evidently appear on the surface of the text. They sometimes do, but most often, they require a thorough in depth exploration. This issue has thus far remained relatively unexplored; in this sense we can talk of a ‘construction’ of meaning. However, the cultures in question belong to an Ancient time, therefore, we may accept the idea of a ‘reconstruction’ of a forgotten past. Providing a rigorous definition of the term ‘Celtic’ this study offers to examine in detail the presence of motifs, first in the Chronicles that Shakespeare could have access to, and takes into account the notions of orality and discourse, inherent to the study of a primarily oral culture. The figure of King Arthur and the matter of Britain, seen as the entrance doors to the subject, are studied in relation to the plays, and in the Histories, the analysis of characters from the ‘margins’, i.e. Wales, Ireland and Scotland provides an Early Modern vision of ‘borderers’. Only two plays from the Shakespearean corpus are set in a Celtic historical context – Cymbeline and King Lear – but motifs surge in numerous other works, such as Macbeth, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale and others. This research reveals a substrate that produces a new enriching reading of the plays.
- Published
- 2019
18. A method for dating archaeological structures based on astronomical alignments
- Author
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Gaspani Adriano and Spagocci Stefano
- Subjects
celts ,cisalpine gaul ,dating ,enclosure ,sanctuary ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Anthropology ,GN1-890 - Abstract
A method for dating archaeological structures, based on their astronomical alignments, is presented. In this method, the number of alignments falling within a tolerance band is calculated in suitable time bins. These data are then converted into the probability for the alignments to be random. The time corresponding to the center of the (inverted) probability peak is taken as the structure dating, to which a confidence interval is attributed. Through the analysis of an elliptical enclosure in the Bergamo province (Lombardy, Northern Italy), more details of which were provided elsewhere, we show that the structure had two building phases and in each phase the structure was realigned. In particular, we respectively date the site to 510±20 BC and 340±20 BC.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. Social structures in Late Iron Age Transylvania. Archaeological evidence of social competition and hierarchy
- Author
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Aurel Rustoiu and Iosif Vasile Ferencz
- Subjects
transylvania ,late iron age ,celts ,dacians ,History of Eastern Europe ,DJK1-77 - Abstract
The scope of this article is to discuss the main components of the social structures which characterized the “Celtic” and the “Dacian” cultural and chronological horizons, and to identify, on the basis of the available archaeological evidence, the means and practices through which social hierarchy and competition was expressed within the communities of each horizon. The rural society specific to the “Celtic” horizon was largely heterarchic, whereas the “Dacian” horizon was characterized by a hierarchic social organization. The differences between these two horizons can be observed in the funerary practices, the organization of the landscape, and the range of visual symbols used in the expression of social status and power by the local elites.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Research on the Structure of Indo-European Dialect Continuum by Comparing Swadesh Lists of the Closest Descendant Languages
- Author
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G. M. Telezhko
- Subjects
indo-european ,uralic ,altaic ,semitic ,adstrate ,substrate ,languages ,dialects ,anatolians ,illyrians ,thracians ,armenians ,celts ,germans ,balts ,slavs ,italic people ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
Introduction. This article is an attempt to extract information about the interactions of dialects of the Indo-European dialect continuum with each other using a comparative analysis of the basic vocabularies of some Indo-European (IE) descendant languages.The search for external borrowings and influence of a common substrate would help to clarify the ethno-linguistic surrounding of the area where the IE proto-dialects developed.In turn, these data are actual being pro and contra arguments of the well-known hypotheses about the IE ancestral home.Methodology and sources. The number of mutually understandable basic lexemes taken in relation to the number of lexemes in the compared lists was chosen as a measure of the interaction of IE dialects, indicators of their commonality.207-word Swadesh lists of 12 languages in their possibly more ancient states were analysed.For geographical binding of the IE language areal we have selected cross-borrowings from/to neighboring / substrate non-IE languages, the ancient settlement areas of native speakers of which are considered well-known.Results and discussion. The results of the comparison of the basic vocabularies of 12 IE languages have been interpreted in the form of a graph demonstrating the relative location of areas of the corresponding IE dialects. Lexemes meaning 'predator (bear, lion, etc.)', 'cattle (bull, ox)' determined the ethno-linguistic surrounding of the IE areal.Conclusion. The relevant linguistic data permitted to identify in the IE dialect continuum the core of proto-dialects: Baltic, Slavic, Aryan and Italic – and partially superimposed dialect subcontinua:– Balto-Greco-Aryo-Tocharo-Anatolian subcontinuum in the northern part of the IE areal;– Tocharo-Celto-Germanic subcontinuum in the eastern part;– Germano-Celto-Italo-Greco-Armeno-Baltic subcontinuum in the southern part;– Balto-Slavo-Italo-Aryan subcontinuum in the western part.The representation of the Proto-IE areal as a dialect continuum solves a number of difficulties inherent in the most common model of a single IE proto-language.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Etruscans and Rome: the Celtic trail on the Apennines
- Author
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Fedchenko Oleg Dmitrievich
- Subjects
rome ,italy ,latins ,italics ,celts ,etruscans ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
The article deals with the etymology of toponyms “Rome”, “Italy” and Etruscan toponyms. The author concludes that the modern toponymic model of Rome, its environs and the Etruscan region were formed in the Celtic-speaking environment. The meanings of toponyms reflect the geographical features of the area and the architectural features of fortified cities. The results of the study allow us to take a fresh look at the migration processes of the pre-Roman era on the Apennine Peninsula.
- Published
- 2023
22. Migration
- Author
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Fitzpatrick, Andrew P., Haselgrove, Colin, book editor, Rebay-Salisbury, Katharina, book editor, and Wells, Peter S., book editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Our ancestors were not Celts: history, folklore and the Celtic past in Napoleonic France.
- Author
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McCain, Stewart
- Subjects
- *
ANCESTORS , *CELTS , *NATION building , *CULTURAL pluralism , *MANUSCRIPTS - Abstract
This article offers a new interpretation of the Académie celtique. Active between 1804 and 1813, the Académie sought out megaliths and collected popular customs, songs and stories, which they understood as the vestiges of the ancient Celtic inhabitants of Gaul. The Académie has often been associated with nation-building projects, either as a manifestation of concern with the cultural diversity of the French population, or as a search for the nation's glorious ancestors. Based on close reading of the Académie's publications, manuscript correspondence and minute books, this article argues that the Académie was also a vehicle for the enthusiasm of its members for a vision of the Druids as Deist Philosophes, an aspect hitherto overlooked in the literature. In doing so it demonstrates the complexities of French nation-building projects, revealing both the crucial role of religion in debates over popular culture in France during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic period, and the contested place of the Gauls in the memory culture of the period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Irish Bards in Shakespeare's Richard III and As You Like it
- Author
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Andrew Breeze
- Subjects
shakespeare ,richard iii ,as you like it ,ireland ,bards ,satire ,celts ,Language and Literature ,Political science - Abstract
Shakespeare alludes twice to Irish bards. In Richard III, the king mentions a prophecy by one of his imminent death; in As You Like It, Rosalind jokes on how Irish bards can supposedly rhyme rats to death. Both refer to supposed bardic powers of seeing the future and of ritual cursing of enemies. A survey of the literature shows satire and prophecy as going back to ancient times. There is in addition ample material on the (sometimes deadly) effects of satire in medieval and later Ireland, where it is known from chronicles, legal tracts, handbooks of poetry, and various surviving poems. There are in addition comic tales on how bards exploited their power, including an eleventh-century one on King Guaire's Burdensome Company, wherein the poet Senchan rhymes to death certain mice that had spoiled an egg reserved for him. Shakespeare's references can thus be related to traditions well-known in Gaul and medieval (or early modern) Ireland and Scotland.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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25. A LATE IRON AGE GRAVE WITH HUMAN REMAINS FROM APAHIDA IN THE COLLECTION OF ENDRE OROSZ.
- Author
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BERECKI, SÁNDOR
- Subjects
IRON Age ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL museums & collections ,TOMBS ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains - Abstract
In 2015, the grandchildren of Endre Orosz, a self-thought archaeologist and collector who operated mainly in Cluj County, donated his archaeological collection to the Mureş County Museum. Cremated human remains of one of the Late Iron Age graves in Apahida, Transylvania were also found among the finds. From the nearly one hundred Late Iron Age graves, this is the only known find suitable for anthropological analyses [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. IMPACT OF CHRISTIANITY ON DEVELOPMENT OF KING ARTHUR LEGENDS IN THE KNIGHT LITHERATURE OF MIDDLE AGES
- Author
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Yanenko E.M. and Zolotov V.I.
- Subjects
celts ,christianity ,joseph of arimathea ,religious contact ,king arthur ,the breton branch of the arthurians ,robert de boron ,chretien de troyes ,the grail ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 ,Law in general. Comparative and uniform law. Jurisprudence ,K1-7720 ,Social Sciences - Abstract
The article deals with the actual problem of cultural contact for modern historical knowledge on the example of the origin and development of the legends about King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. The main purpose of the research is to reflect the understanding of historically important images and symbols of European society through the subjective ideas, thoughts and intentions of a person of the Middle Ages. The main method of research is the socio-cultural approach, focused on the relations of people of the time, characterized by cultural diversity. Christianity in the Arthurian legends of the Middle Ages was one of the elements that had a significant impact on their formation and further development. This was influenced by the early and peaceful Christianization of the British Isles, as well as the cultural and religious contact of the Celtic settlers with the population of Armorica. This article examines two branches of the development of Arthurianism, the Christian origins of the legend of the Holy Grail, as well as the influence of Christian morality and homiletics on the plot-forming motifs of the medieval chivalric novel. In the course of the study, it is traced what influence on the development of the Arthurian cycle, in addition to the ancient Celto-Welsh tradition, was exerted by the early Christianization of the British Isles and how the combination of these factors turned Arthurian into a significant cultural tradition of European civilization.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. 'Through the Eyes of Another Race': Ulysses, Roger Casement, and the Politics of Humanitarianism
- Author
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Gibbons, Luke, author
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. "Celts" up and down the Alps. Insights on mobility patterns in the pre‐Roman/Celtic population from Verona (NE Italy, 3rd–1st c. BCE): A multi‐isotopic approach.
- Author
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Laffranchi, Zita, Granados‐Torres, Arsenio, Lösch, Sandra, Zink, Albert, Dori, Irene, Delgado‐Huertas, Antonio, and Milella, Marco
- Subjects
- *
CELTS , *IRON Age , *STABLE isotopes , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *CENOMANI (Celtic people) - Abstract
Objectives: The Late Iron Age in continental Europe featured complex demographic processes including, among others, the establishment of transalpine "Celtic" communities on the Italian peninsula between the 4th and 1st centuries BCE. To date, only few data are available about mobility and migration in these populations. Here we explore these topics among the Cenomani of Seminario Vescovile (SV‐Verona, Italy, 3rd–1st c. BCE) through a multi‐isotopic approach and test the possible associations with sex, age and funerary treatment. Materials and methods: We analyzed isotopic ratios of oxygen (δ18O) and carbon (δ13C) from bone phosphate and collagen, respectively, of 49 individuals (23 males, 17 females, and 9 nonadults). In addition, we explored possible intraindividual lifetime changes by comparing collagen δ13C from bone and dentine of 26 individuals. We assessed nonlocality based on individual deviation of isotopic values from the population mean plus three times the median absolute deviation from the median (±3MAD). We then checked for isotopic differences between sexes and type of funerary treatment using Mann–Whitney tests. Results: One individual shows isotopic values consistent with a nonlocal origin. Five more individuals may have originated from a different locality. No statistical differences separate sexes and types of funerary treatment. Discussion: Results suggest a local origin of most of the individuals of SV with the few exceptions pointing especially to an Alpine origin. The low frequency of nonlocals at SV suggest a reduced mobility in this population, or the preeminence of short distance movements undetected by our analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Coin hoard with imitations of Philip II from Bulgaria
- Author
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Slavova, M. and I. Prokopov
- Subjects
imitations ,celts ,ghetto-daki ,coins ,coinage ,tetradrachms ,drachms ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 ,History of Eastern Europe ,DJK1-77 - Abstract
The subject of the publication is a coin hoard containing 179 imitations known as “East Celtic”. They repeat the iconographic type of the tetradrachms of Philip II. The coin type is well known and falls into the classifications of all researchers of the so-called Celtic coinage. The authors of this material do not comment on the issue of the ethnic origin of the issuer. Also the about question of the center of this abundant coinage. The purpose of the publication is to present one of the most voluminous finds of this coin type discovered south of the Danube River. Another important aim of the material is introduce into scientific circulation some results from the study of the weight and metal content of the coins. According to previous research, the range of distribution of this imitative type is mainly north of the Danube River. They are included in all catalogs of Celtic coins, but information on their location is scarce. Often the authors present information only from which collection the coins are from. It is only in his work devoted to the so-called “Ghetto-Dacian” coinage that K. Preda gives a comprehensive picture of the main hoards and the areas where they were discovered. It also offers information on treasures south of the Danube River. The place of storage of the coin treasure published here is extremely unusual. It is in the collection of the Haskovo Regional History Museum. No similar finds, including single coins, have been found in the region of Haskovo district, as well as on the territory of today's Southern Bulgaria. The authors have unconfirmed information about the location of this coin hoard. The coins were discovered in today's Northeastern Bulgaria.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Beads and decoration elements made of amber in items of jewelry from the burials of the nomads of Asian Sarmatia in the context of trade in exotic materials in Eurasia
- Author
-
Treister, Mikhail
- Subjects
amber ,“amber road” ,beads ,elements of jewelry decoration ,celts ,scythians ,sarmatians ,xiongnu ,nomads ,mediterranean ,black sea area ,central asia ,china ,siberia ,mongolia ,eurasia ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 ,History of Eastern Europe ,DJK1-77 - Abstract
If the distribution of amber in Europe has been studied quite fully, then the study of the distribution of amber in Eurasia is replete with white spots. This also applies to amber jewelry among the nomads. The focus of the present article is amber jewelry among the nomads of Asian Sarmatia in the context of its distribution in Eurasia in the Early Iron Age. In this regard, the distribution of amber beads in Central Europe, Italy, the Balkans, and Scythia in the 7th — 4th centuries BCE, in the necropoleis of the ancient cities of the North Pontic region of the 6th — 4th centuries BCE, Colchis — of the 5th — 4th centuries BCE, in the Near East, Central Asia, in Siberia and Mongolia is considered. No later than the 4th century BCE items made of amber, mainly originating from the territory of Ukraine and the Baltics, rare in this period in the North Pontic area and unknown in Scythia, appear in the Sarmatian burials of the Southern Urals, where they are found more often and in larger numbers in the complexes of the 3rd and 3rd — 2nd centuries BCE. Two possible ways of distribution are considered. One — across the Northern and Eastern Black Sea regions, further on via Caucasus, Caspian Sea and the old bed of Uzboy, which seems preferable, and the second — via Western Asia, which hardly correlates with the provenance of the material of the majority of beads from Prokhorovka in the Urals. In the burial complexes of Asian Sarmatia of the 2nd — 1st centuries BCE amber beads are extremely rare and are presented in single quantities both in the Trans-Volga region and in the Lower Don. It is not excluded that such beads found their way via both Western Asia and Central Europe (through Tanais). No later than the 1st century BCE amber beads are beginning to be used both in Hindustan and Central Asia, as well as in Eastern Siberia and China. Attention is drawn to their rather wide distribution in the burials of the Xiongnu in Mongolia in the late 1st century BCE — 1st century CE. In this region and probably in Bactria, judging by the finds from the Tillya-tepe, amber was also used as a material of inlays in jewelry and belt buckles. Despite the fact that it is obvious that amber beads could have come to the Xiongnu and China from the west (as Baltic amber was used to make beads from the early Scythian Burial-mound Arzhan-2 in Tuva), the fact that it may not have necessarily been of Baltic origin, but originate from Burma, was confirmed by the study of amber objects from the 1st century CE tomb M18 in Nanyang. In the 1st — first half of the 2nd century CE amber beads are widespread both in the necropoleis of ancient cities and settlements of the North Pontic region, as well as in the barbarian burials of the Crimea, Sarmatian burials in the Bug and Dnieper regions. There are relatively few of them in the burials of the nomads of the Lower Don region — they are more often found in the interfluve of the Volga and Don. Amber beads are especially common in burials of the Late Sarmatian period, when they are known practically throughout the territory of Sarmatia from the Carpathian-Danube basin to the steppes of the Southern Urals. In Asian Sarmatia, three clusters are distinguished: first of all — the Lower Don region and the southern part of the Volga-Don interfluve, as well as — the South Urals and the interfluve of the Khoper and Volga. During this period amber was widely used for the manufacture of pommels of swords and daggers. Starting from the 2nd — 1st centuries BCE amber beads in burials are quite often found together with coral beads and pendants (in 40—47% of cases). This may indicate a common source of beads made from these exotic materials. In the 4th — 3rd centuries BCE, when jewelry made of amber and coral appeared among the Sarmatians of the Southern Urals, it is likely that the ways of their distribution were different. Corals were more likely to arrive through Western Asia.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. An update to the La Tène plant economy in northern Serbia
- Author
-
Medović Aleksandar, Marjanović-Jeromela Ana, and Mikić Aleksandar
- Subjects
archaeobotany ,beer production ,celts ,lallemantia iberica ,triticum spelta ,pulses ,scordisci ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
The archaeobotanical research of the macrobiotic remains from archaeological sites provides a valuable insight into the plant economy of the continental Celtic (Gaulish or Galatian) tribe of Scordisci, which lived around the rivers of Sava, Drava and Danube during the last three centuries before Christ. The field crop production of Scordisci was based upon cereals, grain legumes and oil crops. The importance of spelt wheat (Triticum spelta L.) in the everyday diets of Scordisci has been underestimated so far. Recent researches proved the presence of Byzantine oat (Avena byzantina K. Koch) at the Celtic tilths in the northern Balkans. Cereals were stored in mud-plastered granary baskets. The spectrum of grain legumes is as diverse as that of cereals. The latest analyses expand the list of oil plants with a new species-dragon's head (Lallemantia iberica (M.Bieb.) Fisch. & C.A.Mey.). There is also the first evidence of a beer production facility in one of the Scordisci oppida, Čarnok.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. CIVILIZATION AND BARBARRY COEXISTENCE ISSUE: MILITARY ASPECT.
- Author
-
S. I., Sulimov, I. V., Chernigovskikh, R. A., Cherenkov, V. D., Chernykh, and B. V., Vasiliev
- Subjects
CIVILIZATION ,CELTS ,ANTIQUITIES ,NOMADS - Abstract
This work is devoted to the socio-philosophical analysis of the military confrontation between civilized and barbaric societies. The authors examine antique and ancient Chinese ideas about the phenomenon of barbarism, and also highlight common cultural features inherent in the Germans and Celts and opposed to Rome, and the Far Eastern nomads who were adjacent to imperial China. Having analyzed the military potential of civilized societies, the authors come to the conclusion that the victory of barbarism is possible only in the case of civilization internal collapse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
33. Re-approaching Celts: Origins, Society, and Social Change.
- Author
-
Pope, Rachel
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL change , *IRON Age , *CLASSICAL antiquities , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *AGE groups , *HISTORICAL archaeology , *VERSTEHEN - Abstract
This work re-approaches the origins of "the Celts" by detailing the character of their society and the nature of social change in Europe across 700–300 BC. A new approach integrates regional burial archaeology with contemporary classical texts to further refine our social understanding of the European Iron Age. Those known to us as "Celts" were matrifocal Early Iron Age groups in central Gaul who engaged in social traditions out of the central European salt trade and became heavily involved in Mediterranean politics. The paper focuses on evidence from the Hallstatt–La Tène transition to solve a 150-year-old problem: how the Early Iron Age "Celts" became the early La Tène "Galatai," who engaged in the Celtic migrations and the sacking of Rome at 387 BC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Naked Hermit : A Journey to the Heart of Celtic Britain
- Author
-
Nick Mayhew-Smith and Nick Mayhew-Smith
- Subjects
- Celtic antiquities, Sacred space--Europe, Celts, Civilization, Celtic
- Abstract
Descending into the darkness of a long-abandoned hermit's cave, wading naked into an icy sea to pray, spending the night on a sacred mountain, Nick Mayhew-Smith recounts an extraordinary one-man mission to revive the ancient devotions of Britain's most enigmatic holy places. Based on ground-breaking research into the transition from Paganism to Christianity, this book invites the reader on a journey into the heart of the Celtic wilderness, exploring the deep-seated impulse to mark natural places as holy. It ends with a vision of how we can recover our harmony with the rest of creation: with the landscape, the weather and the wildlife, and ultimately with the body itself. Follow the footsteps of holy men and women such as Columba, Patrick, Cuthbert, Gildas, Aidan, Bede, Ninian, Etheldreda, Samson and others into enchanting Celtic landscapes, and learn the unvarnished truth behind the stories that shape our spiritual and natural heritage.
- Published
- 2019
35. Early La Tène scheme iron fibulae in the Republic of Moldova
- Author
-
Octavian Munteanu, Mihail Băț, and Aurel Zanoci
- Subjects
fibulae ,early la tène scheme ,middle dniester ,getic fortifications ,“late scythian” tombs ,celts ,Auxiliary sciences of history ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The present study brings to the foreground of discussions a certain type of artifacts, the importance of which in the process of analyzing archaeological finds is difficult to overestimate, but which, unfortunately, was not used by the researchers to the proper extent. Thus, in the archaeological literature there is no single work on the Iron Age fibulae that were discovered on the present-day territory of the Republic of Moldova. Moreover, even when some specimens were introduced into scientific circulation, their publication was very short, often without a clear and precise presentation of the context, and the images accompanying incomplete texts in most cases are not clear enough for detailed analysis. Based on this situation, we decided to fill this historiographic gap and at the first stage we devoted our research to the iron fibulae of the early La Tène scheme found on the territory of the Republic of Moldova. As a result of the investigation, a lot was allocated, consisting of 12 fibulae, most of which were found on the territory of the Getic hillforts on the right bank of the Dniester. The degree of preservation of the items leaves much to be desired. The number of undamaged fibulae is relatively small, and those preserved fragmentarily create sufficient impediments for the possibilities of classification. Despite these circumstances, a catalogue of early La Tène scheme fibulae was developed, on the basis of which the main analogies were identified both in the neighboring areas (Romania and Ukraine), and in the Central Europe. We suggested to trace the chronological landmarks for the existing analogies, as well as to evaluate the chronological framework of the presented artifacts. At the same time, we set out to follow the ways and means by which these fibulae reached the Prut-Dniester area and, where possible, to highlight probable phenomena and processes that were behind the respective distribution of this type of artifacts.
- Published
- 2020
36. Auf der Suche nach den Keltinnen in Italien. Die Hohlbuckelringe aus Marzabotto (prov. Bologna/I)
- Author
-
Heidi Geschwind
- Subjects
italy ,marzabotto ,celts ,boii ,hohlbuckelringe ,knobbed rings ,anelli ad ovoli ,mobility ,cultural exchange ,women ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Marzabotto (prov. Bologna/I) is one of the most important archaeological sites for research on the mobility of Celtic women. Since the 19th century, six undecorated ‘Hohlbuckelringe’ (anklets with hollow hemispheres/ knobbed rings) have been found and studied. This type of jewellery arises in the middle La Tène period in Central Europe, where certain variants developed in different regions. Due to the studies of the anklets from Marzabotto, a Celtic influence can be assumed in LT B2 in Emilia -Romagna, which has its origins in the area of Slovakia, Hungary, and the Czech Republic. For the first time in Marzabotto, the La Tène woman’s jewellery is the focus of the provenance debate.
- Published
- 2020
37. Paleodemography of the Late Iron Age Cemetery from Fântânele--Dealul Iuşului, Transylvania.
- Author
-
Berecki, Sándor, Gál, Szilárd Sándor, and Vaida, Dan Lucian
- Subjects
CEMETERIES ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,PHYSICAL anthropology ,RADIOCARBON dating - Abstract
In the Late Iron Age biritual cemetery from Fântânele-Dealul Iuşului / La Gâța the remains of 43 individuals from 41 graves have been excavated to this day. The analysis of inhumation and cremation burials allowed for a paleodemographic study of this community settled on the fringes of the Celtic world. In addition to data on the sex and age or intravital body height of the deceased, pathological changes and epigenetic traits were also observed in some cases. Furthermore, analyses of the cremated human remains also brought to light different characteristics of burial habits, such as burning temperature or the rate of collection of the remains from the pyre. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Religion of the Anglo-Saxons and its Influence on Literature and Different Aspects of Life.
- Author
-
Muhammed, Anmar Adnan
- Abstract
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- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 'Bad-style' Coins or Imitation? / 'Bad-style' Coins or Imitation?
- Author
-
I.S. Prokopo
- Subjects
numismatics ,coins ,tetradrachims ,imitations ,Celts ,Thracians ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The aim of this article is to discuss a very important topic of interest and to define the character of an immense group of coins, namely — the group of the tetradrachms, which, according to the author, are called the tetradrachms of the island of Thasos, and the “Thasos type” tetradrachms of “bad-style”. A number of authors have supported the hypothesis that the coins in question are eastern Celtic imitations. The author of this article has analyzed a number of large coin hoards, which he has already sorted and published. The methodology includes the analysis of spatial distribution; the examination of the internal chronology and dynamics of the coinage; a “die-study”. The author has divided the coinage in terms of names and types of Thasians present on the coins in three main groups: original — up until approximately the end of the 2nd Century BCE; of a “Thasos type” under the control of the Roman administration in Macedonia in the period up until ca. 80 BCE; imitative — after 70 BCE. At the same time, the author has given his own definition regarding which tetradrachms of the “Dionysios Soter” type are imitations. These are the rough and almost completely barbarous imitations, on which the legends are simply forged by marks. The images are stylized and they diverge from the prototype. The coins themselves, which have so far been called imitations, the author has divided into three groups: the first and the second ones he refers to as “bad-style” coins, whereas the third one he calls “real” imitations. The question of the so-called imitations of the tetradrachms of the Macedonian regions has been touched upon, as well.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The problem of demonizing the image of a pagan hero in the church and secret literature of the 12th–14th centuries
- Author
-
V.A. Ilichev
- Subjects
middle ages ,europe ,polytheism ,christianization ,celts ,normans ,fenians ,berserkers ,epos ,saga ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
The adoption of Christianity as the dominant form of the religious world perception was the basis for fundamental changes in the field of socioeconomic, political, and spiritual life of the peoples of Central and Western Europe. This study is a reflection of the results of the scientific research on the problem of how the indicated transformations are conveyed in the culture and art of the period from the 12th to 14th centuries. The main tendencies of European perception of the hero image during the pagan era were singled out on the basis of the materials obtained during the analysis of texts from such sources as English church chronicles, Irish folklore, Scandinavian sagas, and other works of scaldic poetry. A wide range of general scientific and specialized methods and techniques necessary for the analysis of archaeographic data were used. The scientific relevance and novelty of the study lies in the fact that it represents an attempt to carry out a comprehensive analysis of the selected sources on the history of the German-Scandinavian peoples in the early and high Middle Ages. At the moment, an increased attention to the culture and life of the peoples of Northern Europe in the Middle Ages has taken place, both among humanitarian professionals and among non-specialists. In this regard, this work has a certain theoretical and practical significance for representatives of various humanitarian scientific disciplines – history, sociology, anthropology, religious studies, etc., as well as representatives of those research practices whose activities are directly or indirectly related to the study sociocultural background of the European Middle Ages.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Anglophobia: The Unrecognised Hatred Part I: The Unrestrained Vilification of Anglos.
- Author
-
HARRISON, RICHARD and SALTER, FRANK
- Subjects
- *
CELTS , *EMPLOYMENT discrimination , *VIOLENCE , *ETHNICITY , *SEXUAL assault - Abstract
The article informs on the history of unrestrained vilification of Anglos. It mentions Anglo Australians are routinely discriminated against in employment and promotion, despite an elaborate system of so-called equal opportunity legislation and accompanying bureaucracies. It also mentions vilification and discrimination are sometimes followed by the most extreme form of Anglophobia, and types of violence include the sexual assault of Anglo women and girls based on their ethnicity.
- Published
- 2022
42. A history of Gaelic script, A.D. 1000-1200
- Author
-
Duncan, Elizabeth
- Subjects
891.6 ,Civilization, Celtic ,Paleography ,Celts - Abstract
This dissertation provides a comprehensive account of the development of Gaelic script written in the eleventh and twelfth centuries in the Gaelic world. This has involved palaeographical and codicological examinations of the surviving manuscripts and fragments. Most manuscripts which survive from this period were written in Latin; however, this period also signals the first surviving manuscripts produced entirely in Middle Gaelic (most notably, Leabhar na hUidhre, Leabhar na Nuachongbhála, and OBL Rawl. B.502 [B]). One purpose of this dissertation is to contextualise the Middle-Gaelic language manuscripts within their Latin background. Two script-types were used in this period in Gaelic manuscripts (Gaelic National minuscule and Insular Half-uncial) which are both discussed in this dissertation. Much fundamental palaeographical work on the manuscripts in question has not previously been undertaken. On a very basic level, this study therefore provides arguments for distinguishing between the number of hands in manuscripts based on palaeographical and codicological observations. As a result of close palaeographical analysis I have been able to argue a chronological development for Gaelic script situated within the few reliable arguments for dating and locating some manuscripts. The employment of some abbreviations, monograms, and ligatures, new to Gaelic scribes, has proven to be particularly significant in terms of distinguishing between the layers of palaeographical development. These palaeographical features examined in light of ascetic qualities of the script has allowed me to place many script-specimens in ‘groups’ or ‘styles’ which subsequently reveal some argument for dating and locating manuscripts. This study of Gaelic script reveals that big scribal changes were underway in the eleventh and twelfth century: new styles of script were developed and a wealth of new abbreviations were used by some scribes. However, the evidence indicates that these developments were not necessarily felt simultaneously across the Gaelic World.
- Published
- 2010
43. Celtic Magic Tales
- Author
-
Liam Mac Uistin and Liam Mac Uistin
- Subjects
- Tales, By, Celts, Tales--Ireland, Celts--Folklore, Folklore--Ireland
- Abstract
Four magical legends from Ireland's Celtic past vividly told - heroic quests, great deeds, fantasy and fun.
- Published
- 2015
44. Blood of the Celts : The New Ancestral Story
- Author
-
Jean Manco and Jean Manco
- Subjects
- History, Celts, Celts--History, Celts--Origin, Kelter
- Abstract
The heritage of the Celts turns up from Portugal to Romania, from Scotland to Spain. Yet debate continues about who exactly were the Celts, where ultimately they came from, and whether the modern Celtic-speakers of the British Isles and Brittany are related to the Continental Celts we know from ancient history. So a fresh approach is needed. Blood of the Celts meets this challenge, pulling together evidence from genetics, archaeology, history and linguistics in an accessible and illuminating way, taking the reader on a voyage of discovery from the origins of the ancient Celts to the modern Celtic Revival, with some startling results.
- Published
- 2015
45. Eternal Banquets of the Early Celts.
- Author
-
URBANUS, JASON
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *TOMBS , *IRON Age , *CELTS , *MANNERS & customs - Abstract
The article examines the discovery of a 2,500-year-old tomb that is located in the village of Lavau, France. Particular focus is given to how the tomb offers evidence of trade, ritual and power in Early Iron Age Celtic society. Additional topics discussed include France's National Institute of Preventive Archaeological Research (INRAP), the trade of Greek goods during the Bronze age and the role that alcohol played in Celtic society.
- Published
- 2015
46. PREZENTÁCIA MATERIÁLNEJ A DUCHOVNEJ KULTÚRY KELTOV V PROJEKTE ŠTUDENTOV KATEDRY MUZEOLÓGIE NA FF UKF V NITRE (Presentation of the Material and Spiritual Culture of the Celts - Student Project at the Department of Museology, FA CPU in Nitra)
- Author
-
Gogová Stanislava and Šteiner Pavol
- Subjects
CELTS ,DEPARTMENT OF MUSEOLOGY FA CPU IN NITRA ,TRAVELLING EXHIBITION ,ACTIVITY SHEETS ,PRESENTATION ,DIGITAL PRESENTATION ,Museums. Collectors and collecting ,AM1-501 - Abstract
The 21st century has brought several changes to the culture, including the field of museology and monument care. These changes require evolving the methods of cultural heritage presentation. Students at our department therefore decided to upgrade their current presentational activities by creating a panel exhibition and developing it as an educational project for primary schools. They chose the topic of Celtic material and spiritual culture, since a lot of evidence of their civilization was found in Slovakia. Besides the exhibition, the project includes a multimedia presentation for teachers, activity sheets for pupils, and a 3D visualisation of a Celtic settlement.
- Published
- 2018
47. The barec of 'Piani del Monte Avaro' (Bergamo, Italy)
- Author
-
Gastaldelli, A.
- Subjects
astronomy ,archeoastronomy ,moon ,rigel ,barec ,celts ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Anthropology ,GN1-890 - Abstract
This article outlines some archaeoastronomical results about an Iron Age site gained during the "Practical Archeoastronomy Course" held the 24th and 25th of June 2017 by Prof. Adriano Gaspani. The Iron Age settlement is called "Barec dei Piani del Monte Avaro". On it where found a closed enclosure of stones formed by an elliptical drywall inside which there are some megalithic structures: a monolith on a lithic platform, another monolith on which was placed on purpose a big rock with a perfectly vertical vein of white quartz oriented astronomically in accordance with the megalithic structure. At the top of the barec there is a large erratic monolith that overhangs all the stones of the drywall. The dry stone enclosure was found to be contemporary to monolithic structures. Within the enclosure lie, in the lower area, the remainders of a probable hut bottom. The site was active during the 6th century BC and the people that most likely attended to it was the celtic tribe of the Orobi who belonged, as well as all the tribes spread in the area now known as Lombardy (located between 45 deg and 46 deg North geographical latitude) to the Golasecca Culture. This civilization dates back to the first part of Iron Age and derives from the Canegrate culture of the 13th century BC which in turn is linked to the ancient culture of Halstatt, the oldest Celts lived in Northern Europe. The results of this astronomical survey are the detection of three alignments directed toward important directions, associated with the rising and the setting of the Moon at the southern extreme standstill, that proved this complex to be a Moon Sanctuary.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. On the Sarmatian Conquest of Scythia
- Author
-
Aleksandr V. Simonenko
- Subjects
sarmatians ,siraci ,maeotae ,celts ,sources ,hypothesis ,diodorum from sicily ,conquest ,tiraspol barrows ,hoards ,cruciform mouthpieces ,History of Civilization ,CB3-482 ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 ,Anthropology ,GN1-890 - Abstract
The chronotope of Scythia conquest is one of the main issues of archaeology and history of the Scythian and Sarmatian Age. The literature sources present four versions of reasons and events, which led to the desintegration of Scythia in the 3rd century BC: the Celtic (expansion of the Celts from the Balkan region); the climatic (sharp deterioration of the climate with disaster consequences); the economic (decline of the grain trade); and the Sarmatian (the Sarmatian penetration from the East). The present paper studies the so-called Sarmatian hypothesis from the new viewpoint. The few but spectacular archaeological finds in the territory of Ukraine, Moldova and Romania (the special bronze frontlets and plaques for the breastplate, the bits with cruciform harsh mouth-pieces, and large eye-like beads-amulets) and their parallels in the North-Western Caucasus and in the Kuban region allow suggesting that at the beginning of the 3rd century BC the military expansion of the Siraci and Maeotae had ousted the Scythians from the North Pontic steppes to Trans-Dniester region. The mentioned finds mark the movement of their owners from the East to the West, all the way to the Danube. We also investigate the Scythian burial mounds of the second half of the 3rd – middle 2nd cc. BC in the Lower Dniester, also known as Tiraspol barrows. The analysis of the archaeological materials let us assume that the Caucasian conquerors represented the nobility of the Scythian horde, and its representatives were buried in the Tiraspol barrows. The ritual deposits (hoards or strange assemblages) of this time found in the Caucasus and in the North-Western Pontic region can be considered as the sites of military elite of this new unit. Probably, it should be identified with the Saii ruled by king Saitapharnes mentioned in the Olbian decree in honour of Protogenes.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Was Rhode a Rhodian colony on the Iberian Peninsula?
- Author
-
D.M. Kamari
- Subjects
iberian peninsula ,rhode ,rhodians ,phocaeans ,celts ,iberians ,colonization ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
The paper is devoted to the problem of the reliability of Pseudo-Scymnus data that Rhode ('Ροδη, today's Rosas in Spain) was founded by Rhodians more than three centuries before the arrival of Phocaeans. The data of archaeological excavations did not allow us to date the appearance of Rhodians until the 5th century BC. Moreover, the information of ancient authors is contradictory and divergent. Herodotus, who lived in the 5th century BC, wrote nothing about Rhodians in Spain. He claimed that the first were Phocaeans. Greeks often distorted the original place names. For example, there were a lot of rumors in ancient times that Zacynthians founded Saguntum. The discovery of lead sheets in Pech-Maho and Ampurias revealed that the city had an Iberian name, Seganthe. According to the data from the ancient Greek sources, Celtic-Iberian population and Ligurians lived in the area where Rhode was founded. Therefore, probably in the early 20th century, P. Pedrizet suggested that the place name Rhode has the Ligurian origin, but other linguists did not support his ideas. The author, on the basis of ancient sources and archaeological evidences, believes that Phocaeans changed the local Celtic name into the Greek one.
- Published
- 2018
50. Gendered division of labor in a Celtic community? A comparison of sex differences in entheseal changes and long bone shape and robusticity in the pre‐Roman population of Verona (Italy, third–first century BC).
- Author
-
Laffranchi, Zita, Charisi, Drosia, Jiménez‐Brobeil, Sylvia A., and Milella, Marco
- Subjects
- *
CELTS , *IRON Age , *PHYSICAL activity , *FEMUR - Abstract
Objectives: The presence of a gendered subdivision of labor has been bioarchaeologically investigated in various prehistoric and historical contexts. Little is known, however, about the type of differences in daily activities characterizing men and women among the Celtic communities of Italy. The focus of the present study is the analysis of differences in patterns of entheseal changes (ECs) and long bone shape and robusticity between sexes among the Cenomani Gauls of Seminario Vescovile (SV—Verona, Italy, third–first century BC). Materials and Methods: The sample includes 56 adult individuals (22 females and 34 males). Presence of ECs on nine bilateral postcranial attachment sites, and values of humeral and femoral shape and robusticity indices based on external measurements were compared between sexes by means of generalized linear models and Mann–Whitney tests. Results: Results show a lack of difference between sexes in long bone shape and robusticity, and a higher incidence of upper and, especially, lower limb ECs in males. Discussion: These results suggest the presence of sex‐specific activities at SV mostly related to farming and differently influencing the considered variables. Also, this study suggests the relevance of a series of nonbiomechanical factors (developmental, hormonal, genetic, and methodological) when attempting biocultural reconstructions from osteoarchaeological samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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