Les lunettes de soleil à la fin.... ça m'a tué xD C'est une excellente idée de traiter le plus gros questionnement entourant la question "celte" c'est à dire le terme "celte" en lui même. Superbe vidéo!
what is he talking about at 04:00 not knowing if there were definitely celtic tribes in Britain?? We KNOW that celtc tribes migrated to Britain at least as early as the 2nd century BC. Winchester used to be called Venta Belgarum (from the continental tribes of the Belgae confederation), the Atrebati were Belgian in origin, so were the Ambiani who held coastal parts of Britain. Then there were the Suessiones of who Caesar wrote that they held parts of Britain in the time of Diviciacus.
Lusitanian is not a Celtic language, so it kinda disapproves the Atlantic theory. You can check the book "Palaeohispanic Languages and Epigraphies" by Alejandro Garcia Sinner and Javier Velaza. There is a chapter dedicated to Lusitanian language, where it is written explicitely: The prevailing opinion is that Lusitanian was not Celtic. It must have diverged from western IE dialects before the kernel of what would evolve into the Celtic and Italic families had been constituted
La "preuve" génétique d'un métissage entre celtes continentaux et population du sud des îles britanniques ne serait-elle pas plutôt liée à l'existence d'un passage à pied à cet endroit qui a persisté jusqu'en -10 000 environ ?
Vidéo intéressante, surtout vue la grande désinformation sur le sujet.
Du contenu qui mériterait bien plus de visibilité de vues 😃
Merci beaucoup ! :D
Les lunettes de soleil à la fin.... ça m'a tué xD
C'est une excellente idée de traiter le plus gros questionnement entourant la question "celte" c'est à dire le terme "celte" en lui même. Superbe vidéo!
Merci beaucoup ! Oui, s'il y a bien quelqu'un qui mérite ses lunettes de soleil, c'est le Pr. Cunliffe !! :)
what is he talking about at 04:00 not knowing if there were definitely celtic tribes in Britain?? We KNOW that celtc tribes migrated to Britain at least as early as the 2nd century BC.
Winchester used to be called Venta Belgarum (from the continental tribes of the Belgae confederation), the Atrebati were Belgian in origin, so were the Ambiani who held coastal parts of Britain.
Then there were the Suessiones of who Caesar wrote that they held parts of Britain in the time of Diviciacus.
judging by Barry Cunliffe - First Nations Australians are not all the same due to different languages and never meeting eachother
"Pretanii" ne fait pas plutôt référence à l'étain ?
Ce n'est pas l'étymologie acceptée par les spécialistes, qui comprennent bien ce terme comme faisant référence à un peuple "peint". 🙂
Cunliffe is a genius
Lusitanian is not a Celtic language, so it kinda disapproves the Atlantic theory. You can check the book "Palaeohispanic Languages and Epigraphies" by Alejandro Garcia Sinner and Javier Velaza. There is a chapter dedicated to Lusitanian language, where it is written explicitely: The prevailing opinion is that Lusitanian was not Celtic. It must have diverged from western IE dialects before the kernel of what would evolve into the Celtic and Italic families had been constituted
Thank you so much for the suggestion.
La "preuve" génétique d'un métissage entre celtes continentaux et population du sud des îles britanniques ne serait-elle pas plutôt liée à l'existence d'un passage à pied à cet endroit qui a persisté jusqu'en -10 000 environ ?
Les preuves génétiques ne datent pas de cette période, en tout cas en l'état actuel de la recherche.
Pret(an)i - Pretty?