While many today often associate the Celts with Great Britain, where their legacy remains quite strong ... and reached the Balkans and the Black Sea area, as well as Anatolia (in present-day Turkey) ...
award-winning historian David Olusoga explores the long relationship between Britain and people of African origins – from African Romans who guarded Hadrian’s Wall to the black trumpeter of ...
They found that the British Iron Age was unique in having low mitochondrial genetic diversity and high Y chromosome diversity, meaning that Celtic groups all over Britain were likely organized ...
Genetic analysis of people buried in a 2000-year-old cemetery in southern England has bolstered the idea that Celtic communities in Britain placed women centre-stage, showing that women remained ...
Female family ties were at the heart of social networks in Celtic society in Britain before the Roman invasion, a new analysis suggests. Genetic evidence from a late Iron Age cemetery shows that ...
said the research was “fascinating,” especially given how little is definitively known about this time period in Britain, when many different chiefdoms or tribes of Celtic peoples existed.
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