Archaeologists in France uncover Celtic warriors buried sitting upright in a rare Iron Age grave site in Dijon.
The burials date to the Late Iron Age (450 to 25 B.C.), when the Gauls — a loose association of Celtic tribes — lived in ...
Archaeologists from the heritage conservation department of the Stuttgart regional government have completed the main phase ...
Two 2,300-year-old swords discovered in a Celtic Iron Age necropolis in France "have few equivalents in Europe," and one is decorated with tiny swastikas, the French National Institute of Preventive ...
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 in ...
An analysis of dozens of British Iron Age skeletons has revealed that Celtic society was organized around women. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
Ancient genomes reveal an Iron Age society centred on women A groundbreaking study finds evidence that land was inherited through the female line in Iron Age Britain, with husbands moving to live with ...
Dr. Cassidy explained, "Migration into Britain during the later Bronze Age has previously been detected, leading some to hypothesize that Celtic language arrived during this period. But our results ...
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