Why did The Celts (Almost) Disappear?
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- Опубліковано 22 бер 2024
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Ireland is not a British Isle. We are seperate with our own cultural heritage and under no circumstances are we British.
@@TheTippladhey! i was the writer on this video. unfortunately in historical contexts, “british isles” is used to refer to that grouping of islands, including ireland. though it’s not meant to imply that those islands are all actually british, i understand why it is disliked by many (myself included). i’ve seen this complaint often but haven’t been able to find a replacement phrase that can also refer to that chunk of geography. as much as i have my own opinions and preferences, sometimes i have to put those aside and use the terms recognized historically/geographically/etc. but if you have a suggestion, please do tell me!
@@skylarbubolea ireland and britian will do. Ireland is not a 'chunk' of British geography. Its an island nation and part of the European family of nations. The term British isles when used as you do it is ignorant of Irelands long road to freedom and its epic struggles to rid itself of britians oppressive yoke. Language remains a powerful weapon...use it carefully. 🙂
Do you have any phobia against Portugal? Portugal is not Spain, there are 2 countries on the Iberian Peninsula, sucker.
@@TheTippladAre you also one of those whose nose gets out of joint about people referring to "America" instead of "the United States"?
It would be great if all Earthlings knew all other Earthlings' histories and preferred terminology. But it's a bit much to require that.
It must be uncomfortable to walk with that stick lodged there.
The Celtic people collapsed for the simple reason that people in Boston started pronouncing them Seltic
😂💀
😆 yes
So does a football team in Britain.
So does the french celtes is pronounced "selt"
@@naboost9485 🤯
Most people I think forget that one of the Celtic kingdoms is actually in Spain. It's Galicia
And even more forget that there were more celts in Iberia than just in Galicia. Galicians were a mixture of Iberian celts and Brythonic celts, but there were Iberian celts. Just like Bretons are a mixture of Brythonic and Gaulish celts, even though there were Gaulish celts.
Anything that has a form of the word "Gaul" in it has Celtic origins, like "Portugal".
@@Alexander137_FRLT No not really. Brythonic Celts did move there but only in the coasts and not in big enough numbers to change the entire region.
@@GAMER123GAMING Well, yes they did lol. Gaelician is officialy recognised as being a "brittonic" language, the Britons being the main Brythons.
@@abrahamdozer6273 It's a smart thinking, but not true. Gaul only refers to transalpin Gaul in modern day France and Belgium, cissalpin Gaul only in the North of Italy, Switzerland anw Western Austria. The other celtic lands aren't called Gaul, however they tend to own similar names such as Gaeilge, with some standing out like and Brythonia, or even Goidelia.
And for Portugal, the name comes from Port, because like Spain that was its focus, especially in the capital. However the name comes from "Portus Cale" where Cale is the celtic name given, gal replacing cale is a romanisation. The Romans were the one to add Portus as they built the port.
Brittany, France as well
As you can see on the map
@@gillitheboss7287 Indeed, yes
Those are celts who escaped from uk to france right
@@LeoDas688 yes and no, celts in that case is a redundant term, Britons would be more correct
@@LeoDas688are we watching the same video, it literally says in the video that the escaped the mainland to the British isles
Celtics got resurgence in 1980s, led by Larry The Bird. They were prominent in 2000s with the triumvirate of Garnetius, Piercius, and Trajan Rondo. Nowadays, they were led by Tatumus and Brownicca as one of the stronger in the east.
Also William 'the celt' Russell
I thought you were talking about Larry Bird from the boston Celtics 😂
@@christianenriquez52900crossed my mind too lol
@@christianenriquez52900He was.
@@christianenriquez52900he is😂
Short answer: Romans, germans, english and vikings
Tbf both Latin and Germanic language and culture would go on to reshape the world as well as humanity as we know it.
@@lynxfresh5214 Is that something to brag about though? The world and humanity as we know it are kind of shit.
@@lynxfresh5214 And English is their love child. The most Latinized Germanic language...
@cuchulainn3474 only partly germanic .We're a mixture of mostly British and some germanic.
@@cuchulainn3474 That's just not true, the anglos and nordics were neighbours of the germanic people, but they weren't germanic. If anything english is now a mixture of French, Latin, Deustch, and actual Anglo with a teeny tiny bit of Celtic from the land they so freely devastated with some Saxons.
Also the Romans were only one of the Latin Tribes, so Roman wouldn't be the umbrella term, Latin is. And the Celtic also contributed to occidental cultures. And you're using Vikings incorrectly, you mean the Nordics, which is one kind of vikings. However if you replaced germanic and viking in your answer you'd be right.
I didn't know rome started east of the alps 😂
And didn’t conquer Britain
Yeah that bothered me
probably he had to start animation from middle, for it to evenly spread
@@khal7702 fair, that stuff must be hard
And had all of Netherlands
Roman Britannia: "Am I a joke to you?"
Yes, you are joke to Anglo-Saxons into whom you assimilated hahaha
Always have been a joke 😂
@@MvtarvsI don’t think trading with with ancient Egyptians, reaching America prior to the Viking era and pre-Columbus, their worship of nature and rock art is a joke. They are a joke to people with walnuts as brains. The ancient Celts were very smart but secretive people.
@@Mvtarvs Emperor Constantine was crowned there ☦️👑
@@mauriciogranados2908Like he said... joke. A cruel, genocidal, anti-celtic joke
Not just Spain. Portugal as well. That piece of land is called Iberian Peninsula.
The piece of land called Iberian Peninsula was often called Spain, before the "Kingdom of Spain" usurped it's name. Similar to how America used to mean the entire continent, until it became associated with the U.S.A alone.
🇪🇸 En Hispania las tribus Celtas, Iberas, Celtiberas, Cántabras, Turdetanas y otras no desaparecieron con la invasión romana. Lucharon 200 años hasta que Roma pudo dominar la península y sus habitantes asimilados por el imperio.
lmao the spanish flag became the us flag when i translated your comment
@@theyapconnoisseur🇪🇸 ¿ Cuál es el motivo de esa conversión? Yo soy español y ésa es mi bandera. ¡¡¡Aclara!!!
@@theyapconnoisseurWhen I hit the button, it’s still the flag of Spain…
But I’ve experienced what you’re talking abiut
Why pressing translate button makes Spanish flag turn into USA one
🇪🇸Creo que tras leer vuestros comentarios traducidos. Puede ser que la traducción del español al inglés, traslade la bandera del texto original español ( bandera española) al inglés ( bandera estadounidense)
As a Welsh person, I feel proud that my nation's language is the strongest of the Celtic languages
And southern states in North America. It's called redneck or ghetto speak, they say at Alaerbama University.
Irish person here. It's really impressive to see how successful the resurgence of the Welsh language has been, I've heard it spoken in Wales on the street etc. Pretty cool! You can hear Irish spoken here too but you usually have to go to pretty remote places.
Does Welsh have similarities to the southern usa inflections of the Black community? It's kinda English, kinda not.
@@gurnblanston5000 Welsh (and other Celtic languages) is a completely different language to English.
@@envueltoenplastico I know. I meant the accent or inflection of Welsh on the English spoken in the southern U.S. It isn't Scottish, Irish, or German.
Bro does his research on wish
Yeah it's probably rage bait. No one is this stupid and were all posting on it making it look like he's doing well for the algorithm.
Why?
@@allanmsema6224 well in the first few seconds alone he says Celts were an empire like romans which isn't true. That it spread from Ireland outward which isn't true.
Even if he mistook Edward Lhuyds 18th century idea that languages spread because of empires conquering areas as truth. He'd have it backwards the languages in Ireland are different and exist because they're influenced by mainland European languages.
And that's the first few seconds. The whole thing is nonsense
@@ByrneMJames I watched this a couple times and I can't find where he said the Celts had an empire. In fact, he uses the word peoples, regions, culture, and language.
@@allanmsema6224 ask me arse then yeh pedantic thick
Celts were never one people. Even though the different tribes had similar cultural backgrounds they were a diverse population. Even language was different amongst the Celtic tribes. The Romans conquered a divided Western Europe and performed genocide on the culture and its peoples. Rome is how they disappeared.
Right those inferior barbarians living in mud huts had all that land and not real civilization
I'll never understand people who love the Roman empire but hate the Nazis. They are basically the same thing.
I agree. Europe was mostly forests and they had very limited mobility. It was impossible for them being one people.
They were also under pressure from Germanic tribes to the northeast...
@@BlaqjaqshellaqCelts and Germanic tribes are fairly closely related though, are they not? Both descend from the Bell Beakers with the Celts staying on the continent while the folk that became the Germanic tribes(Battle Axe culture) moved further and further north?
Not sure if that’s entirely correct but my understanding is that even among Europeans Celts and Germanics share close kinship, sisters if you will.
Ireland and Wales: We are the last celts standing.
Cornwall too
And Scotland, Brittany (the peninsula in western france), Galicia (bit of Spain north of Portugal, Cornwall (peninsula of England below Wales), and Isle of Man (island between Britain and Ireland).
plenty celtic minded scots still mate
Scots got that free thinkin monkey brain because the law and parliament don’t have a iron fist yet
It’s not too late to restore mankind
Rome starting in the alps somehow bothered me, just why?
and never reached England!
@@L-mothey conquered the bottom half dude what are you on about bloke 😂hadrians wall ring a bell dude?
@@Walker-ow7vj he's talking about the map not showing it
@@thecurrentmoment yep, same as the topic of the original comment
@@L-mo exactly
When those bells rang at the end i was looking for my new fishing boat on age of empires
"Scotland FOREVER!!!!"
Yes sir
❤
Why not?
I love Scotland
I love Scotland
Highly organized miltary tactics, divide and conquer and amazing supply logistics of the roman and their celtic allies.
The Celts made shit beer hence they collapsed. 😂
Basically what we are witnessing in gaza
@@daveconrad6562I feel using divide and conquer is more relevant to the British colonial mandate than the Israel Palestine conflict from 1947-now.
Forgot about galicia in spain
Galicia is a ukraninian region too.
Asturias as well
The map at the end only depicts areas where Celtic languages are still spoken today, the modern Galician language is a Romance language, the ancient Galician language, which was Celtic, went extinct after the Roman conquests
@@S.M.Mer0Asturias speaks Spanish and doesn’t practice any Celtic traditions how are they Celtic?
@@aislingclarke4347 The genes live on
Celts in Asia Minor persisted until the 11th century. They first rebelled against Eastern Roman by making an alliance with the Norman commander named Roussel de Bailleul, who came to Asia Minor. After the murder of Roussel de Bailleul by the Eastern Romans, they formed an alliance with the Asia Minor Seljuk Turks. They eventually assimilated by mixing with the Seljuk Turks.
Celts in Asia Minor did not persist at all. Anatolia was one of the richest provinces of Rome. And was therefore basically put under assimilation watch. After about 2 centuries everyone in Anatolia called themselves a Roman. They had Celtic ancestors ofcourse. But were barely Celtic themselves
The Celts were were genocided by the Ancient Greeks around 200 bc-100 bc afther that period no Celts was alive in Anatolia.
He learned history from ataturk Potato propaganda School..
@@thedonkey6704 Are you aware of the Norman kingdom founded in the Galatia region in Asia Minor in the 11th century? Do you know that this kingdom was established with the support of the Galatians? I recommend you do some reading and research.
@@georgekallides2145 I am not going to learn from the school of a puppet state like you, whose country was established by imperialist states.
Celtic knotwork in Britain is actually germanic -
The earliest form of knotwork is found on a anglo Saxon cross in England
Totally false, Pictish Stones dating from the 5th century clearly show knotwork. Long before any Anglo Saxons had a presence in the area.
Celts, we are still alive and there has been a little bit of a cultural rebound. Since all that, in fact, Scotland culturally is prudently Celtic, regardless of what the English tell you
Long live the Celtic revival
I'm assuming this means cultural not ethnic
@@anthonycordato7118 I’m not too sure about your sentence mean but like yeah, Celtic culture exists across multiple countries with different ethnicities
Scotland is by no metric celtic😂
@anthonycordato7118 I prefer the term race since if people bother to learn ancient history, we have a separate point of origin from other white races. Case in point Romanians originated from india.
I recently found out that near my city of Cluj-Napoca, Romania, they discovered a mixed Dacian and Celtic graveyard. Apparently they co-existed for a while.
What is the place called like? I knew that our ancestors had connections with the Celts , but never knew about this graveyard.
One other thing, I am originally from Alba Iulia. I wonder if the name of my city is in any way related to the Celtic name of Scotland (Alba) 🤔 other than the Roman influence.
@@stevenrussellpascal The one I was referring to was near Apahida, but there seems to also have bean near Iclod.
Burebista was the one kicking them out.
@@FaithfulOfBrigantia how come?
@@stevenrussellpascal
The Gauls were a group of foreigners who moved there uninvited.
People at the time didn't simply accept that kindly.
I always wondered why my German ancestors had a little bit of Celtic in their blood. Now I know.
Just learned a little about the battle of Gaul (Alesia) fascinating!
Vercingetorix was a genius
The romans never conquered Scotland, your map is wrong
Nobody says that, and the green on the map is the areas covered by Celts. The Roman empire is in red. To some extent, the map is wrong, because it did cover some parts of England, but it doesn't show on this map
isnt the first map not only showing the celtic language? most of central europe still have celtic ancestry, they just speak different language group
Germanic-Slavs*
No the majority of central and western europe is not genetically Celtic. There is some but enough time has gone by now and enough people have mixed that they’re no longer the majority
@@Lingist081where did i say "majority of central and western europe is genetically Celtic"?
i just said they had celtic ancestor, not exclusively celtic obviously
@@Lingist081some parts are still ethnically celtic
Britain has 70% Celtic ancestry while France still has about 50-70% depending on the region.
You didn't even begin to try to answer the question you posed.
Proud Celt here who speaks a Celtic language.
What language are you able to speak? Where are you from?
@@zuarbrincar769 Welsh. I'm from Wales.
@@7822welshsteam oh, Sometimes I get the impression that the Welsh are the Celts most enthusiastic about preserving their heritage 😄❤
Basically anybody that speaks a latin language is celt. The romans are celts too because the etruscans and the trojans, are celts. And the visigoths are not germanics at all but celts from romania( where the celts coulture started/the thracians).
@@mihaiilie8808 ???????
In certain areas of Northern Italy (especially in the Alps), the Celtic legacy is very strong even today
Elaborate
Watch the Kings and Generals Episode on the Celts - They supposedly had a united language and had a well established trade route with the Greeks at Masilla (Marseille) but the trade was cut off at some point.
That's nonsense. Celtic is just the Greek and Latin word for outsider randomly stuck onto a language group by an 18th century brit. The languages in the "celtic" language group that the guy invented arent mutually intelligible. Irish Gaelic and Welsh aren't even similar looking when they're written down on paper.
In terms of archaeology Celtic only applies to 2 expressions of curvilinear art. Things like the gundestrup cauldron that was found in Denmark with Greek art on it made from Roman silver is not evidence of that curvilinear art style.
@@ByrneMJames why don't you at least check out the episode. - Full History of the Ancient Celts: Origins to Roman Conquest DOCUMENTARY - even the first 10 minutes and give me a reply.
@@danielfatfingahs5649documentaries arent all true, Cleopatra on Netflix is meant to serve to teach History, requiring a certain amount of historical accuracy. Its so innacurate Egypt sued it.
Some documentaries are outdated, others are not properly peer rewiewed, some are controversial at best.
Some documentaries are mostly hypothesis because we dont have the sources to prove it etc...
Kings and General is decent at what it does i like it too, but that doesnt mean they are the sole source of truth.
Celts by the time Massalia was funded they were already Looooooong divided
No way a Gaul had the same language as a Britons, or a Celt-iberian
Or even the Galatian.
Its possible that the Gaulish tribes HAD a united language which then broke apart and the Celts before their expansion across Europe in their birthplace of Southern Germany they had one too.
But no Celts do NOT share a common language and in most cases their cultures were only mildly similar, it was religious ties which truly made up the Celts at first and some familiarity between all of their culture. But by no mean it was the same
@@danielfatfingahs5649 Daniel Id second what Erwann said here. And Id add that cultures were not similar in the archaeological record. For example, Hallstatt was a large town, with a market economy, on a trade route. In Ireland we didnt live in towns at all until the 12th c, we didnt have a market economy, in fact we didn't use coinage right up to the 15th c. At least 1000 years after Hallstatt.
Were not related peoples at all.
The celts did not collapse because they were not a nation on it's own. The celts were hundreds of tribes spread all over over europe and some tribes dissapeared and other tribes grew and mixed with other tribes that eventually became nations like ireland, scotland, belgium, germany, france, etc...
They did collapse because their culture and language almost completely disappeared. Only in Britain are some traces left.
@@panzrok8701 languages and ways of life may dissapear or change but the people, their descendants still live on today, only they are called french, scots, english, irish, dutch, belgians, germans, etc...
Instead of tribes there are nations for over a millenia in europe and those people are descendants of the celtic tribes that lived all over europe 2000 years ago.
@@svenjoel Yes but cultures like the Celts were not genetically homogeneous. So the thing that made them Celtic was their tongue and their way of life.
" The celts were hundreds of tribes spread all over over europe and some tribes dissapeared and other tribes grew and mixed with other tribes that eventually became nations like ireland, scotland, belgium, germany, france, etc.."
This is in fact wrong, the Celts don´t play any role for the ethnogenesis of the Germans, French and Belgians.
@@panzrok8701 "traces"
Right and i suspect you have your country concealled for reasons...
They've been called the British Isles for over 2000 years. it's a geographical term, and it's not going to change now
It's not recognised by a single worldwide authority. Calling it the 'British Isles' is stupid, because there's multiple islands from Ireland to the Isle of Man to the Hebrides, Wight, Scilly, Orkney, and Shetland isle(s).
@@tempejkl In case you missed it I called The British Isles a geographical term, and the Island the Romans termed Brittanica is the largest Island in the group.
Add ancient Egypt to that list, Tutankhamun's closest living genetic relatives are from Basque Spain, Cornwall and Wales.
"and other tribes". This video missed out the Vikings impact on the Celts...
From an empire to a basketball team. Fell off hard tbh
Basketball??? Oh right Americans.
Little reminder that America isnt literally the center of the universe. There truly are other humans outside of America. Its not just movies.
Which empire are you referring to?
@@GAMER123GAMING what is bro talking about😂😂😂.
@@jgg4719 Talking about you
@GAMER123GAMING I'm very confused. They were just making a joke.
There is still a lot of celtic dna among modern populations of their previous living space.
I remember reading somewhere that today's French people are still mostly Celtic in the genetics
Yeah. Even in Anatolia.
So the culture went extinct but the ethnic group is still very much present. And it is also obviously visible in phenotypes.
Irish diaspora is over 100m
There is no such thing as Celtic dna, Celtic ancestry is real but the celts were identical to the other Indo European groups nowhere in Europe other than the British isles is majority Celtic in ancestry tho everyone is mixed of everything
Romans never conquered or invaded Ireland. That is why Ireland is Celtic!
Wales, Scotland, Britanny, Cornwall and others should declare independence
Wales and Scotland are pretty much independent
People really don't think before they speak do they? Your hatred for the English is making you stupid.
@@theodeleon"Wales and Scotland are pretty much independent"
- Scotland was not independent enough to stay in the EU, although they wanted to.
@@theodeleon it's not about "pretty much independent" it's about a new separate country
They don't want to.
Ireland is not in Britain
He didn’t say that. It’s the British Isles. It’s a geographical thing not political.
It is in the British Isles. The British Isles are all the islands surrounding Britain and Ireland. The UK is Britain and Northen Ireland. Britain is England, Scotland, and Wales
@@MrWaterlionmonkey no.
United Kingdom is England, Wales, Scotland. Great Britain is United Kingdom and Northern Ireland.
@@RealKuty that is incorrect
@@MrWaterlionmonkey"Northern Ireland" is an artificial name for a colonial occupation. For most of it's history it has been administered directly from Westminster as opposed to the devolved governments of Wales and Scotland. It has been kept within British grasp purely with military force and repression, and thus it is not a part of the United Kingdom. It was separated from Ireland purely to make a Protestant majority which no longer exists.
You should either classify Europe into West and East and then put the Carpathian Basin in the Eastern cateogry, or include Central in the classification and then include it in that.
Romania also with the dacians
Ireland is not part or in the British Isles.
Well it is otherwise it wouldn't be called the British ISLES
@@user-mh7qx8sk8y It's not part of the british isles, the term is outdated.
@@user-mh7qx8sk8y the British isles are the islands that the Great Britain is made of, the main one being Britain, but also the Channel Islands (Jersey and Guernsey), isle of Man, Shetland islands and other small islands. Ireland is an island on its own, and it's not part of the UK. UK actually stands for "the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland", which makes the island of Ireland politically split, but geographically it's still one separate entity.
@@user-mh7qx8sk8y The correct term is The British Isles and Ireland... your welcome 🇮🇪
The "British Isles" include Ireland. They do not include the Channel Islands.
British Isles AND Ireland. British Isles is a colonial term.
NO IRELAND ISLES STOP THIS DELETE THIS COMMENT
In the region of Venice there was a local italic population, and not the celts.
Now they are #1 seed in the nba!
The map shows the extent of the Celtic Languages while discussing the Celtic peoples which is misleading.
The celts were not pushed to the extremities of Ireland and Britain, the languages were.
The peoples of these islands are Celtic.
Celtic culture was however pushed to the extremities. There is little similarity in culture and identity between the Cornish, Welsh, Scottish and Irish when compared to the English.
Especially as the English crown spent the past thousand years trying to eradicate all Celts they could.
@@tophatdalekthetophatteddal7402 the English are in fact, still mostly Celts who had their culture replaced by an Anglo-Saxon elite
@@MH-ms1dg does not change the past thousand years. English should not be counted as celtic in any modern context.
@@MH-ms1dg similar to the Norman invasions
@@tophatdalekthetophatteddal7402I can just feel the seethe coming from you.
Ireland is not one of the British Isles. The British Isles are the island of Britain and the many small islands surrounding it just to the east of Ireland.
It is just because Ireland gained independence doesn't mean they can change geography
@@user-mh7qx8sk8y Geographical terms changes quite often actually.
@@BrianBorumaMacCennetig367 Doesn't mean that an island can just leave an archipelago it's physically a part of.
@@jeremiaas15 Let's make it clear. They are not the British Isles. Just because they were named by the British, doesn't mean that the British had the right to include Ireland as one of them.
@@FergusJohnston Mate, they were not named by the British. The Ancient Greeks named them that, and we on the continent, fom Portugal to Russia, have no reason to stop calling them that, it's still physically the same archipelago.
Those Celts in Anatolia: why the fuck am I here?
Should also mention the fact that celts were not one nation but numerous separate and divided tribes that also fought each other during the same period
Ireland isn't in the British Isles ireland is just ireland respect it
No, while Ireland isn't part of Britain, it is an island in the British Isles
@J-alCapone lad look it up the Irish and the Irish government don't recognise it
It is nothing to do with nationality, it is a geographical fact
It is only a term based on geography and not nationality. While it holds no legal status it is still what they are called.
@@J-alCapone it's not lad it's something the brits called us
Quick answer... Romans annihilated them almost everywhere lol
No. We conquered them and then they changed they language
@@ValeriusMagni just much Java genocided malays in Lampung Batavia and many more
People were assimilated, some of them lost their languages and mixed their culture. But a culture does not stay the same for thousands of years. Also Christianity paid a role in assimilation.
Everywhere? No. A singular Celtic village with Asterix and Obelix stands proudly independent
Long/Intellectual answer: Vandal sack of Rome
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL!!!!!
Celts merged with germans in Bohemia and Moravia. Their culture remained pretty strong when the west slavs appeared. A lot of our mountains, rivers still have celtic names. And we have a lot of customs of their origin too.
The map is inaccurate. The Romans stayed below the river Rhine in The Netherlands.
Galatians, one of the largest tribes of the Celts, migrated from the Gaul region to Türkiye. Their population was so large that the region, which until then was called Phrygia, began to be called Galatia. Later, this Celtic tribe rebelled against the Eastern Roman Empire and formed an alliance with the Seljuk Turks. They eventually assimilated by mixing with the Seljuk Turks. Today, there are people with Celtic blood in the northern parts of Central Anatolia in Türkiye.
We wuz Europeans and shit bro there's no way celts were able to survive as there own ethnic in anatolia till the 11th century but all the ones around them failed to.
So hard to believe. Very interesting.
@@dawnbreakermultiverse941 There are still ruins around the village, graveyards. I don't think they just disappeared all sudden, it's impossible
The ruins remains across Yozgat province, you can find details if you search Google
@@burakonderuslu679 they were clever to settle there, bcs yozgat region hasn't been occupied/conquered in the last thousand years.
germanics rule the waves and the land
Nuh uh
Ratio him here
👇
@@anthonycordato7118 you liked your own comment 😭 stupid celt
@@america7082 4 V 2 you lost
@@hadiisaboss5307 uh it says 8v6 i think i won?
@@america7082 liking your own comment = -4 so do the math
last year they were eleiminated by the heat but this season they are the team to beat in the east conference
I love history ❤ Recently learned about christianity history and it has made world history make so much more sense!
One word
ROMANS
One word
VANDALS
It's not the British isles learn that fact
Celts never left Central Europe specifically Bavaria Tyrol and Swabia dna wise still very Celtic
"Celts never left Central Europe specifically Bavaria Tyrol and Swabia dna wise still very Celtic"
1st) There is no such thing as "Celtic DNA".
2nd) Celtic population in Germany ends in the 1st pre Christian century although the downfall of Celtic culture in Germany already begins in the 2nd pre Christian century. When the Migration Period began in 375 on the entire European mainland there were no Celts anymore only the Island Celts on the British Isles existed by this time.
In the modern map you forgot Galicia which is an automous region of Spain
el gallego es puramente latino xd. De celta no tiene ni los buenos dias
But Irish and Scotish are still Celtic, most of them just speak English, so that map is kind of wrong.
Celtic is a language group not an ethnic group. That being said, they all are still classed as celtic in a modern sense.
@@tophatdalekthetophatteddal7402it is a r@cial grouping aswell (I censored cause UA-cam would flag me
@@anthonycordato7118 no, its not and never has been outside the modern day. Studies have proven no genetic correlation between celtic speakers to suggest they are a single racial group. They are individual ethnicites not any form of race.
In the modern day its become political to extend celticness onto some imaginary unified ideal.
The zame is for north Italy, France and parts of spain. You are celtic if you speak a celtic language
@@ValeriusMagni Am I Germanic beacuse I can speak English? Is a black man from Jamaica Germanic beacuse he speaks English?
Its not called the British isles...
Its the British and Irish isles...thats official
Who made that official Fiachra? I thought the territorial stuff wasn't used in geography to avoid bias and the geographical term was north atlantic archipelago.
@@ByrneMJames The Iriah government did. And the British Government no longer uses the British isles. You cant name the territory of another sovereign nation. Its been 100 years since independence!!
@@fiachramaccana280 ugh that sounds like FF alright. Permanently enshrining the 19th c in law. Cheers Fiachra
Its the Irish isles. Thats scientific fact. That beats your "official"
@@GAMER123GAMING ok by me
Because Celtic is a blanket term for a widespread diverse group of people who fought each other at least as much as they fought the Romans. This made it possible for Rome to conquer them piecemeal
It's nice people today keep it alive
Cesar made a genocide
Rome demilitarised all the peoples it conquered. When the legions were gone, the populations previously protected by them were easy prey for the many warrior tribes that overran their lands.
Mike how does that fit with most legionnaires never having seen Rome because they were recruited from their region to soldier in their region?
The same as most of today’s soldiers, Legionaries were trained up from a civilian upbringing. Many of them came from colonies formed by retired Legionaries, and followed in their fathers’ footsteps. The Legion was their life, they would probably never see their home again. Also, towards the end ever increasing numbers of recruits came from outside the Empire. Their loyalty was to their unit, not to the people of the Empire.
Interestingly, I saw a documentary about the legend of King Arthur that tied in with this. The theory is that Arthur was the commander of an auxiliary cavalry unit from eastern Europe. When the Legions were withdrawn from Britain the cavalrymen opted to stay, having married and put down roots in Britain. It’s only a theory, but it seemed quite plausible. After all, the emblem of Wales is the dragon, which is also an emblem in parts of eastern Europe.
Proud Assyrian here.
I *miss* Asterix!
Same thing is happening today to Germanic Europeans with the invasions of the foreigners from across Asia and Africa!
As if any one is sad for Europeans who did that to 90% of the world
The Romans targeted the Celts
The Romans targeted everybody 😅
Couldn’t take Cornwall though 💪
@@conorf8091 Who the Romans? They conquered all!
Wonder what bc Afgahistan would do to the Roman's? Since there are destroyers of empires. 😅
@@conorf8091wrong😂
They are still with us is a important component in Spaniards genetics
Babaria is full of Celtic heritage
Correction celts came from the milesians, which originally was located in modern-day turkey. The claim was before that they came from ireland. In the bc we invaded the brittish isles defeating the tuatha de danann.
Wrong
There are many origin story's, as a Christian obviously god separated people for a reason, and gods work is everything, so PLACE of origin is debatable
That's an 8th c story written to fit Ireland into the carolingian wold chronicle. And whilst Charlamagne promoted it as history to justify his role as the holy roman emperor. Its not history.
The reason there are waves of invasions at set dates and battles that create new Kings is the chronicle proved that the Kings of all great nations died and were succeeded at the same times until Constantine had a revelation on the road to Damascus. It showed God's hand in guiding the creation of the Holy roman empire.
We had to write the Lebor Gabala/book of invasions because we were tribal and didn't have 1 king of Ireland that could be replaced at the set times.
If you're interested Robin Flowers book the Irish Tradition is on most big bookshop shelves. It's a copy of his lectures in trinity college in the 70s so it's easy to read and has some fun ideas
@@ByrneMJames Wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong
@@GAMER123GAMING why am I wrong? And are you autistic?
The Roman conquest of Gaul was absolutely devastating. Caesar’s legions killed half the population
to learn more about.....why did the Celts collapse.. nice clean loop!
Yma O Hyd🏴
People always say Britain oppressed the Celts when Britian was the only country to preserve Celtic culture at all to the modern day
I mean, they did actually oppress the Celts, from banning music in Ireland for a time to banning Gaelic in Scotland, they did absolutely oppress the celts
what're you on about? England tried to assimilate and ruin the culture. you realise that English was the only language allowed for education and religion for hundreds of years under British rule
Can't speak for Scotland and Wales but Ireland calls cap
Are you kidding me? Britain systematically destroyed Irish culture from language obliteration, religious persecution to genocide for 800 years. Celtic survived due to the resilience of Irish people not to the kindness or acquiescence of former British rule
@@MacgiollaIGyou going to do something about it?
The term British isles is also not accurate. Ireland is not part of Great Britain, not British and thus not part of the British Isles.
Well you are stupid. They have been called the British Isles before there was even such a thing as "British" and "Irish". It was named by the Romans as Brittania.
Ireland is VERY MUCH apart of the British Isles.
British isles refers to both islands, not just Britain. Has been like that since the middle ages. Was used predominantly in a time where Ireland was under control of Britain. Sooooo.
Celtic islands🗿
It's British Isles.... Irish people are British, in the same way anyone from the Scandinavian area is a scandinavian whether they like it or not. They are geographically British, not politically
@@AlwaysRightAllNightwhat??? You know irish people are Gaelic and English people are anglo saxons. Think over it again or go to hell with you
Germanics❤🇪🇺💪
Boooo.
World War bad guys twice, roman bad guys, since forever .
Ya , not great.
France is better .
barbarian
Which germanic are you?
Booo
Where are the germanics people why is nobody liking my comment how can some random ass ratio Me😴
Having some Irish ancestry wonder if I could trace it back to the Celts definitely interesting .
*_What happened to the Celts?_*
*_Roman Legions Happened......_*
Did anyone else notice the Roman Empire beginning in Venice? That was odd.
The biblical book known as Galatians is the reference to the Celtic people in modern day Turkey.
didnt know they were this big all i knew them were as irish but now i learn more history wow
Damm we were taking over at one point I didn’t know that.
Also population of Isle of Man is predominantly of celtic origin.
Here is something to think about: in northern Iran there is a region called. Gilan. Where people speak Geelak. Coincidence?
Wow why is this the first time I’ve heard of the Celtic empire and history and name in general
I'm a Celt and still here in Australia
It's called geno cide and that's what's happening now against the native people of all of these reasons. For some reason some group hates then all
Bretony in northwest France was founded by the Celtic people of Britain. They were pushed out by the Anglo-Saxons.
what about galicia? they deserve to be mentioned more and i‘m fully aware that they mixed up wurh romans, iberic tribes and later germanic tribes like the sueben…
what happened to the Gauls?
*Gaius Julius Caesar standing in between two walls at Alesia* : no idea
Brythonic- Wales (Cymru), Cornwall and Brittany. Not sure if Galacia is Brythonic or another branch and then theirs Scotland/Ireland/Mann Gaelic
This guys videos makes me want to play Crusader Kings III
They're still in Boston doing well
And Burebista, the first dacian king anihilated, humilated and killed many of them and those who remained alive were kicked out from Pannonia