Why did the Celts Collapse?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 05. 2024
  • Why did the Celts Collapse?
    The Celts were a people of mysticism, tenacity, and rich culture. Though they lacked a written language for some time, making it hard to document their lives and civilizations for future generations, we have managed to learn a fair amount about these fascinating people. How they rose to power, how they existed, and even, where they are now…
    ♦Consider supporting the Channel of Patreon and gain cool stuff:
    / knowledgia
    ♦Please consider to SUBSCRIBE: goo.gl/YJNqek
    ♦Music by Epidemic Sound
    ♦Sources :
    www.historyextra.com/period/i...
    gov.wales/welsh-language-data...
    ♦Script & Research :
    Skylar Gordon
    #History #Documentary #Celts

Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @TheAtlasReview
    @TheAtlasReview Před 2 lety +3921

    "Collapse" is the wrong word. Same with your Viking video. It implies that they were unified, and that there was some kind of organisation that fell apart. In both cases, it would be better to say "Decline".

    • @VampireNewl
      @VampireNewl Před 2 lety +97

      That's a good point

    • @MC-CFC
      @MC-CFC Před 2 lety +43

      Agreed

    • @Oneshotkill775
      @Oneshotkill775 Před 2 lety +71

      ur right but ur really splitting hairs

    • @Deebz270
      @Deebz270 Před 2 lety +186

      @@Oneshotkill775 And ur'd be wrong. There was no 'collapse' the Celts were essentially 'assimiltated' by both the Roman and subsequent cultures, with the remnants hanging-on in the remote regions of Breton (Brittany) Wales, Kernow (Cornwall), Eire and Scotland.
      .
      In fact, ur the one that is 'splitting hairs' and in obvious ignorance.

    • @InsaneD602
      @InsaneD602 Před 2 lety +37

      It’s a better word for a title of a CZcams video though collapse will get more clicks than saying decline

  • @niccolocaramori7288
    @niccolocaramori7288 Před 2 lety +1584

    Why did the Celts decline?
    Short answer: Rome

    • @alainmellaerts8926
      @alainmellaerts8926 Před 2 lety +100

      Yes, the Celts were expanding until the rise of Rome. They moved into Cisalpine Gaul, Thrace and Asia Minor. They had raiding parties going into Greece at one time. But they were no match in the end for the more developed states and their ever improving technologies and tactics. That culminated in the invasion of Britain. The Romans went from hill fort to hill fort, built a tower, put siege equipment on it, destroyed the buildings in the fort and waited for surrender. Being brave and fierce didn’t bring victory anymore.

    • @alainmellaerts8926
      @alainmellaerts8926 Před 2 lety +38

      @Motasem The expansion was also stopped by others, Macedonians, Pergamon, Carthago but the decline, yes, Rome.

    • @gokulvasan6880
      @gokulvasan6880 Před 2 lety

      From Celtic English language came

    • @thomasfromswindon7609
      @thomasfromswindon7609 Před 2 lety +44

      @@gokulvasan6880 English is more German / Saxon.

    • @boshinimperialofficer3250
      @boshinimperialofficer3250 Před 2 lety +19

      @@alainmellaerts8926 Short answer: People with technology stopped them

  • @xxxx85
    @xxxx85 Před 2 lety +1124

    3:39 - "conquered the whole of Gaul"
    Well, not entirely. One small village of indomitable Gauls still held out against the invaders. Life was not easy for the roman legionaires who garrisoned the fortified camps of Totorum, Aquarium, Laudanum and Compendium.

    • @PTSeTe
      @PTSeTe Před 2 lety +81

      Shocked that no one said this before!

    • @alansmith4655
      @alansmith4655 Před 2 lety +17

      Lol!

    • @Sidak47
      @Sidak47 Před 2 lety +32

      underrated comment

    • @-lovi-961
      @-lovi-961 Před 2 lety +75

      Asterix and obelix reference! Those comics were soo good! Just cos of that I’m subbing to ye

    • @tomaszbuzaa7322
      @tomaszbuzaa7322 Před 2 lety +20

      You forgot the delirium camp ;)

  • @RFmath_
    @RFmath_ Před rokem +45

    You completely skipped the Cantabrian wars where the celtic tribes gave the Romans a lot of trouble. It took longer for the Romans to conquer this small mountain region in northern Spain than it did for Caeser to conquer all of Gaul. Agrippa was so frustrated with how the campaign went that he refused to get a Triumph for it. This area is called Asturias and went unconquered by the Visigoths and Moors. It took in Christian refugees and was the birth place of the Reconquesta. They still use some celtic words in their unique language branch.

  • @Adiscretefirm
    @Adiscretefirm Před 2 lety +808

    Didn't the Gauls sack Rome centuries before Julius Caesar was born? I think Rome had interacted with Celts a long time before the Gallic Wars.

    • @pietrosantoro2356
      @pietrosantoro2356 Před 2 lety +91

      Yes, by Brennus, 390 BC. "vae victis"

    • @tommytuomaala9087
      @tommytuomaala9087 Před 2 lety +37

      even alexander the great was afraid to expand west

    • @theswedishdude1
      @theswedishdude1 Před 2 lety +158

      @@tommytuomaala9087 Alexander wasn't afraid of anything, he was fearless to a fault leading to him almost dying multiple times during battles. he wanted to expand his empire as far as possible, had he not died when he did he would have started to expand west.

    • @moisuomi
      @moisuomi Před 2 lety +1

      @@theswedishdude1 🤦‍♂️

    • @bigboxes
      @bigboxes Před 2 lety +75

      @@theswedishdude1 If only he hadn't died. He might have lived longer. :p

  • @dhmdm3106
    @dhmdm3106 Před 2 lety +679

    In ancient times Celtic and Italic languages were the most closely related language families in Europe. Some linguists even describe the Indo-European branch as "Italo-Celtic". It was probably one of the factors that contributed to Romance languages almost exclusively thriving in the Celtic regions of the Roman Empire.

    • @carymnuhgibrilsamadalnasud1222
    • @angelmiau8445
      @angelmiau8445 Před 2 lety +15

      Indo european

    • @MrHandiquacks
      @MrHandiquacks Před 2 lety +8

      Very interesting and could be true actually

    • @TooDeepForSleep
      @TooDeepForSleep Před 2 lety +11

      Why are they so different now?
      edit: when did they separate so drastically?

    • @dhmdm3106
      @dhmdm3106 Před 2 lety +58

      @@TooDeepForSleep It's hard to pinpoint because we are talking about pre-history here. The European branch of Proto-Indo-European (ancestor of almost all European language) was spoken about 2500 BC. Proto-Italic and Proto-Celtic were each spoken about 1000 BC. So at some point between those two points Italo-Celtic would have been spoken. The most common culture associated with Italo-Celtic is the Tumulus Culture which existed between 1600-1200 BC in Bavaria. So they probably split around that time and then gradually evolved over time, one in Italy and the other in Central Europe. It was never a "drastic split" but more of a continuous and very gradual "drifting apart".
      It's kind of similar to how Italian, Spanish, French etc. all come from Latin. So it would be much easier for a Spanish person to learn Italian than let's say Russian.

  • @lucasjonesgamedesign
    @lucasjonesgamedesign Před rokem +96

    My favorite thing about the celts was that their houses were circles. This may not seems that special, but due to circle packing it caused their cities to form hexagonal blocks instead of square ones. And as every person of culture knows, hexagons are the bestagons.

  • @thomashavard-morgan8181
    @thomashavard-morgan8181 Před rokem +53

    As someone from Wales I'm particularly offended that you said Ireland and Scotland particularly kept their Celtic identitites, inferring that we did not. Of all the Celtic langauges Wales is the most widely spoken, our mythology and our culture endured in much the same way as the other two, it's just that Scotland and Ireland have a larger presence on the world stage, but Celtic culture is the backbone of Wale's identity.

    • @noahtylerpritchett2682
      @noahtylerpritchett2682 Před rokem +6

      Welsh culture survived the most. Notably for inducing Brythonic Culture (along with the Bretons) spreading a Breto-Welsh folklore and mythology.
      England and France burrowed from Welsh literature a lot.
      To testify Welsh culture. It's influence can be found in its literature in England, France, and even Germany.

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Před rokem +1

      Will Wales secede ? It’s similar to how Ukraine is trying to shake off Russian imperialism to protect language rights

    • @1258-Eckhart
      @1258-Eckhart Před rokem +1

      That's quite true culturally, but Wales disappeared entirely as a political entity when Henry VIII extended the English (actually Anglosaxon) system of local government there so that "Wales" was just a number of counties like England also. This is why Wales never made it onto the national flag of the UK.

    • @twatmang1
      @twatmang1 Před rokem +2

      Agreed, and no mention of Cornwall

    • @IntroducingMrLucci
      @IntroducingMrLucci Před rokem +2

      Same with Northwestern Iberia(Asturias-Cantabria-Galicia) we are all strongly Celtic & celebrate it today. Sadly in the near future we may be all that's left that preserves it as the whole UK appears to be getting replaced & indigenous culture with it. Yes it really is & at an unheard of intentional pace.

  • @alext1065
    @alext1065 Před 2 lety +452

    No mention of Galicia Spain and northern Portugal. Till today at festivals the play bagpipes and wear kilts.

    • @jorgeh.r9879
      @jorgeh.r9879 Před 2 lety +61

      Asturias and Cantabria too

    • @userl697
      @userl697 Před 2 lety +10

      I was looking for this comment

    • @KrlKngMrtssn
      @KrlKngMrtssn Před 2 lety +44

      Galicians like to be identified as Celts. Sorry, but that doesn't make them more Celtic than the French, the central Turks or northern Italians. I believe it is today more a romantic sentiment, which was born during the Galician national awakening mid XIX century. (Rosalia De Castro). Traditions and culture as well as the language are strongly Roman and apart from some archeological findings, today there is not much more. Celtic festivals and bagpipe music doesn't make Galicia more Celtic, because it is more a modern sociological phenomenon in Galicia. Also I would argue, that some linguistic and cultural traits are even more influenced by the later moorish culture than by the very old and few tribes that once inhabited the Galician region. Celts left very little heritage visible in today's Galicia. Similar to other parts of western and Central Europe. Galicia was once Germanic (Suebi) and even moorish, but they don't like to be associated with that, do they? ... even though it is more recent in history than the Celts.

    • @jorgeh.r9879
      @jorgeh.r9879 Před 2 lety +70

      @@KrlKngMrtssn Galician placenames, archtitecture, cuisine, music, festivals, mithology, etc are as Celtic as they are in Ireland. I don't know you got to that conclusion.

    • @ReasonAboveEverything
      @ReasonAboveEverything Před 2 lety +3

      @@jorgeh.r9879 None of those things matter. They are mere relics. What matters is dna.

  • @elcaricaturable
    @elcaricaturable Před 2 lety +622

    7:42 "The Celts largely disappeared from continental Europe"
    The Celts were not exterminated by the Romans or by any other civilization. They mixed with the Romans and other people. What largely disappeared were the Celtic languages, not the Celtic peoples.

    • @michaelrossi4904
      @michaelrossi4904 Před 2 lety +13

      Same thing

    • @marcrolle4601
      @marcrolle4601 Před 2 lety +139

      If the language and culture die, the people die. That's the oldest history lesson one can see.

    • @chrisrosenkreuz23
      @chrisrosenkreuz23 Před 2 lety +20

      Good point, aspects of culture and civilisation still persist as peoples intermingle. It's not like you start speaking a different language and suddenly you forget all your traditions and way of life. Over time even religions get written over by the conquering civilisation's own but the local flavour survives. Like pagan influences on Christianity today for example, each region with its own local flavour.

    • @greywolf7577
      @greywolf7577 Před 2 lety +39

      @@marcrolle4601 You can change your language and your culture and still live. The question is does the modern population of continental Europe have a large percentage of Celt DNA.

    • @damuni1
      @damuni1 Před 2 lety +56

      @@greywolf7577 In the grand scheme of things, dna matters not one bit. We didn't even know it existed until a few decades ago. Culture and language is what makes a people.
      Genetically most Turks, for example, are still very closely related to the Greeks, much more so than they are to the Turkic peoples of Central Asia; still, because of the people's changes in culture and language, they have long since ceased to be Greeks.

  • @garfieldfan452
    @garfieldfan452 Před rokem +3

    its really nice to see my peoples culture talked about there was a fair bit of mistakes in this video but thank you for making it and please do make more videos on my people

  • @urutimaterauncher-orev
    @urutimaterauncher-orev Před 2 lety +83

    It would have been interesting if you also showed a map of its archaeological legacy outside the British Isles and the recovered languages, as well as Celtiberian and Galician-Lusitanian

    • @johnc7651
      @johnc7651 Před rokem +2

      This "isles" term you use should not be used to refer to Ireland, not even geographically, as Ireland is Irish, even the North is at most northern Irish.

    • @urutimaterauncher-orev
      @urutimaterauncher-orev Před rokem

      good to know

    • @ktb183
      @ktb183 Před rokem

      Absolutely, you have many cultural traits in Galicia in North-west Spain. Many there also have the straight black hair, very pale faces that seem to be quite Celtic features.

    • @urutimaterauncher-orev
      @urutimaterauncher-orev Před rokem

      It in all of Western Europe but only in those males who have haplogroup R1b who descend from the ancient Yamnayas because some Scottish clans had the Semitic haplogroup J, the Neolithic I, North African E or the Slavic R1a

    • @theladdiesda8190
      @theladdiesda8190 Před rokem +3

      @John C northern Ireland was colonised by ulster scots not exclusively celtic Irish.
      Thays what they've been fighting over fir the last 400 years.

  • @tiely13
    @tiely13 Před 2 lety +284

    1:53 "the first significant clash between the Celts and Romans came during the Gaulic wars".. this is inacurate.. the Romans and Gauls have been at each others troats for centuries: for instance the sack of Rome by the Gauls in 387BC, or Marius wars.

    • @volvoxfraktalion5225
      @volvoxfraktalion5225 Před 2 lety +5

      This

    • @dmal4008
      @dmal4008 Před 2 lety +27

      There are plenty of inaccuracies i this video. I still liked it. But still

    • @MichaelBartleySocrates
      @MichaelBartleySocrates Před 2 lety +1

      Agreed. Can’t believe they got this wrong

    • @budwyzer77
      @budwyzer77 Před 2 lety +3

      @@vrbe3694 He faced a mixed Celtic-Germanic coalition. Boiorix was a Celtic king.

    • @jytte-hilden
      @jytte-hilden Před 2 lety

      @@vrbe3694 He did, but the Cimbri who seem to have been the leaders of the "crusade" were Celts, and their route notably took them to every corner of Celtic Europe before they were destroyed. German tribes were frequently confederates of the Celts before they were confederates of the Romans and Huns.
      P.S. Interestingly, there was supposed to be a remnant of the Cimbri/Teutone survivors who settled northeast of Lake Garda, who still spoke a Celtic language right up until the 20th century.

  • @joaobarroso2068
    @joaobarroso2068 Před 2 lety +489

    I find it amazing that Hispania/Iberia is always just ignored when talking about the celts xD

    • @noahtylerpritchett2682
      @noahtylerpritchett2682 Před 2 lety +61

      Haha yea lol. Same with the Balkans.

    • @contraplano3157
      @contraplano3157 Před 2 lety +61

      In Portugal we know their presence in history classes. Like Lusitanos, Visigodos...

    • @kbflorida888
      @kbflorida888 Před 2 lety +35

      @@contraplano3157 that’s nice to know. That Portugal edu system includes Celtic culture & heritage. In USA everything descends from England & had better pray to Jesus or you’re nowhere.

    • @KrlKngMrtssn
      @KrlKngMrtssn Před 2 lety +29

      Galicians (and Portuguese) like to be identified as Celts. Sorry, but that doesn't make them more Celtic than the French, the central Turks or northern Italians. I believe it is today more a romantic sentiment, which was born during the Galician national awakening mid XIX century. (Rosalia De Castro). Traditions and culture as well as the language are strongly Roman and apart from some archeological findings, today there is not much more. Celtic festivals and bagpipe music doesn't make Galicia more Celtic, because it is more a modern sociological phenomenon in Galicia. Also I would argue, that some linguistic and cultural traits are even more influenced by the later moorish culture than by the very old and few tribes that once inhabited the Galician region. Celts left very little heritage visible in today's Galicia. Similar to other parts of western and Central Europe. Galicia was once Germanic (Suebi) and even moorish, but they don't like to be associated with that, do they? ... even though it is more recent in history than the Celts.

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 2 lety +31

      I find it the most annoying because I am a galo-portuguese descendant that bears a Celtic surname. and then it gets totally ignored under the Anglosphere lol

  • @stevenrowlands7731
    @stevenrowlands7731 Před rokem +32

    Fun fact: the classic celtic leaf shaped bronze sword was thought to have started in modern day Germany but recent historians have found (through carbon and radiometric dating) that the oldest known celtic leaf sword was found in Wales and re-examination of germanic celtic blades has found Welsh copper used in the forging process. Thus concluding that although the celtic people did not unite they were aware of other tribes and that the British Celts and germanic Celts had a well established form of trade as there have been many diamonds found that appear to have been mined in central Europe. Ok maybe not fun but still interesting

    • @nifrain9494
      @nifrain9494 Před rokem +2

      They not only traded with eachother but also with the greeks, etrucans and latins. They even imported whine!

  • @user-ky6vw5up9m
    @user-ky6vw5up9m Před rokem +7

    Galicia and Asturias in Spain also consider themselves Celtic cultural strongholds

  • @panzerfury6579
    @panzerfury6579 Před 2 lety +49

    The "somehow" that the Romans beat Boudicca's rebellion is the same "somehow" they beat most of their other enemies, superior military tactics and unparalleled cohesion. It was always their greatest strength, until it wasn't.

    • @wingedhussar1453
      @wingedhussar1453 Před 2 měsíci

      It was until rome couldn't recover their armies. They could always recover easily comapred to other enemies

  • @jacob4920
    @jacob4920 Před 2 lety +387

    The story of the Celts is truly a tragic one. But you can't solely blame their decline on foreign enemies (like the Romans, Greeks, and Carthaginians). Their decline is just as much their own fault, as they refused, in most cases, to unite against these foreign threats. This enabled their conquerors, mostly the Romans, to take them apart, piece by piece. Only the war for Gaul, and the rebellion by Boudicca, represent actual cases where Celtic peoples unified against conquest. But in both cases, it was pretty much too late to make a difference.
    What happened to the Celts is a lot like what happened to Native Americans, in the 18th/19th Centuries. They did not unify well, against a common, powerful enemy, except in certain extreme cases. And by then, it was generally too late.

    • @jacob4920
      @jacob4920 Před 2 lety +20

      @@Zeerich-yx9po The fact that they finally did unite, in Gaul, is a sign that they could have united against Rome a lot sooner.
      But they chose not to. Because they refused to take Rome seriously, and never imagined Rome so powerful as to dominate all of Western Europe. If they had united into a proper imperial power around the time that Rome was tied up with their war against Carthage, they would have probably done a lot of damage that would have hampered Rome's growth.
      They did not. They could have, but they chose to ignore the Roman problem until Julius Caesar attacked Gaul. By then it was too late. If the Celts could unite in Gaul, they could have united a lot sooner. But they chose not to, because they underestimated the power of Rome. That's all that I'm saying.

    • @jacob4920
      @jacob4920 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Zeerich-yx9po Granted, that's a good point.
      But the Celtics would not have been pushed to the brink, like they were, if they had only worked together sooner. Sure, the Romans would have kept coming after them, but it would not have been a complete walkover, like it turned out to be. Just like the United States would look a lot different today, if Native Americans had banded together a lot sooner, Europe would be different as well, from the standpoint of bloodlines, if the Celts didn't all just try to go their own way. FRANCE would be a primarily Celtic state, the same as Ireland! Think about how weird that seems, but at one point, it could have been a reality! Think about how history would have been altered, if things turned out that way!!
      Also, there's a good chance the Roman influence on Europe would have been kept to a smaller size, if the Celts had presented a bigger obstacle to the Romans. Remember that the Germanic tribes of Central Europe are the ones who wound up holding up quite well against the Roman war machine. And the Germanic tribes were really not all that much more advanced than the Celts were, at their peak. And ultimately, it was a Germanic Hun, named Attila, who sacked Rome, and brought the entire western half of the empire crashing to its' knees. If the Huns could do it, there's no reason to think the Celts couldn't. They just allowed themselves to be picked apart early on, and that wound up killing them.

    • @ronniemcdonald2220
      @ronniemcdonald2220 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes the Romans benefited from the non-unification of the Celts but did not always have it Rome's way. For example Hadrian's Wall was a massive military response forced upon them.

    • @jacob4920
      @jacob4920 Před 2 lety +9

      @@ronniemcdonald2220 Extending their empire to the British Isles was a massive mistake. There was no need for them to settle on the Isle of Briton. They could have left that entire place to the Celts, and would have been just fine, because they would have at least controlled the Channel. Hadrian's Wall is just a classic example of expenses that could have gone elsewhere, if they didn't have the British headache foisted upon them.
      What eventually becomes England was just a massive military/economic drain on Rome, that did nothing to help them against the Goths, or the Huns, in the East. There was never any need to settle there. But England was literally an "ego trip" by one of the Roman Emperors, who wanted to be remembered for conquering SOMETHING, after he was gone. What he accomplished actually did nothing for Rome, and may have actually hastened Rome's collapse in the end.

    • @Merrillific
      @Merrillific Před 2 lety +3

      Pontiac, Tecumseh, Sitting Bull/Crazy Horse being among the more notable attempts at unifying among Native Americans...

  • @prashantmishra1994
    @prashantmishra1994 Před 2 lety +3

    Hi There! It was a great video.That is because,it went into details to discuss the overall celts history and culture and its impact on subsequent time.Scotland,Ireland and rest of the UK as well as France share history because of celts culture.
    Thanks.

  • @flawyerlawyertv7454
    @flawyerlawyertv7454 Před rokem +2

    Thanks. I am learning a lot from your videos. 😍👍

  • @Kevc00
    @Kevc00 Před 2 lety +125

    What happened to the Celts?
    Not much we just chilling

    • @Kevc00
      @Kevc00 Před 2 lety +3

      @lawrence rummerfield Centuries of rule by the English

    • @dafyddcoleman4413
      @dafyddcoleman4413 Před 2 lety +1

      @lawrence rummerfield many of us do speak it

    • @vincentcassidy2169
      @vincentcassidy2169 Před 2 lety +1

      Celts? We're Yanks, Aussies, Canadian- we speak English now

  • @alainmellaerts8926
    @alainmellaerts8926 Před 2 lety +38

    Brennus and his Senones sacked Rome in 390 BC. Some might consider that an earlier confrontation than the Gallic Wars.

    • @oskareriksson2202
      @oskareriksson2202 Před 2 lety +4

      Sure. They fought even before with the etruscans in Northern Italy, in pianura padana, where the Italian celtic tribes established previously there was etruscan colonies sometime. The italic powers and the celts fought for centuries.

    • @niksarass
      @niksarass Před 2 lety

      Battle of the Allia, Gaulish celts sack Rome

    • @krzysztofk1674
      @krzysztofk1674 Před rokem +1

      Brennus is an absolute legend, after a crushing victory over romans he smashed macedonians and greeks too, but in the end died cause of wounds in a battle with greeks, without him, celts were repulsed by greeks. But fuck, no matter that they loosed later, they still won agaist legioners and phalanx (!) having an army of peaseants without armor, without tactics, without normal weapons and this is something really phenomenal.

  • @zim_christ_lion
    @zim_christ_lion Před rokem +29

    I love the Celts. One of the most fascinating people to ever exist. They didn't really collapse or decline but just intermarried and blended into other European cultural groups such as England which has a strong Celtic hybrid culture mixed with Saxon, Viking and Norman influences. ( The same case in France and the rest of Europe.) The Celtic Countries ( Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Cornwall etc ) have thrived strongly to this day. I am sure most Europeans today have some Celtic DNA in their family tree. As a Zimbabwean, I have been honoured to find many Celtic ( from Scotland and Ireland ) ancestors in my family tree from the UK.

    • @TheAwillz
      @TheAwillz Před rokem +6

      Yma o Hyd!
      We’re still here 😉✌️

    • @zim_christ_lion
      @zim_christ_lion Před rokem +2

      @@TheAwillz 💯%💯👌😎👍👍

    • @type45d44
      @type45d44 Před rokem

      As an Englishman, I did a dna test recently, and I am entirely Northern European, Scottish, Welsh, English, Norwegian etc. and yes quite a decent chunk of my dna is Scottish which is fascinating because I do not have any direct Scottish family members

    • @redhorsburgh..2345
      @redhorsburgh..2345 Před rokem

      @@TheAwillz yes we are

    • @type45d44
      @type45d44 Před rokem

      @@ahmetkirdag4489 I’m English

  • @trilithon108
    @trilithon108 Před rokem +7

    387BC the Celts defeated and sacked Rome. They even pulled the Senators beards and demanded gold payments to depart. Celts biggest problem appears to be lack of unity. Hadfields and McCoys in the American Appalachian mountains is the modern version of how they've been for thousands of years. I have their blood and know those divisions😬

  • @yousefshahin2654
    @yousefshahin2654 Před 2 lety +14

    As usual, great video Knowledgia. Looking forward for more :D

    • @bossofbosporus7624
      @bossofbosporus7624 Před 2 lety +1

      Disappointingly inaccurate and uninformative.

    • @bossofbosporus7624
      @bossofbosporus7624 Před 2 lety

      See other comments

    • @bossofbosporus7624
      @bossofbosporus7624 Před 2 lety

      @Matthew Suciu other comments by other people on this video.

    • @mathieudizzy9313
      @mathieudizzy9313 Před 2 lety

      @Matthew Suciu Dude I know it has nothing to do with But Anatolian Turks and Turks in Central Asia are ethnically Turkish, but the only difference between them is that their cousins ​​are different races, right?

    • @mathieudizzy9313
      @mathieudizzy9313 Před 2 lety

      @@bossofbosporus7624 Dude I know it has nothing to do with But Anatolian Turks and Turks in Central Asia are ethnically Turkish, but the only difference between them is that their cousins ​​are different races, right?

  • @finngregory3599
    @finngregory3599 Před 2 lety +97

    How can you do a video about the "Celtic decline" and not mention the large influxes of Germanic tribes that caused even more displacement was almost the nail in the coffin.

    • @rns7426
      @rns7426 Před 2 lety +5

      I don’t think it was displacement. I think they all just intermarried and carried on.

    • @finngregory3599
      @finngregory3599 Před 2 lety +13

      @@rns7426 Realistically although some intermarriages would of went on, there was also large misplacement, the evidence for this is the creation of states such as Brittany in France and Britonia in Spain, saying they just "carried on" makes no sense.

    • @rns7426
      @rns7426 Před 2 lety +14

      Sure it does.
      The old viewpoint of genocide and displacement has never had any evidence to back it up. It was an assumption based on no evidence. The people were more similar than different.
      Even modern dna pretty much show populations were absorbed. They didn’t disappear.

    • @finngregory3599
      @finngregory3599 Před 2 lety +8

      @@rns7426 Your not reading my answers properly, there is evidence for conflict within these events from historical texts and the replacement of language, do you think nobles would give up their position in society easily, not to mention the creation of kingdoms such as Britany which you ignored from my previous answer. My issue was when you said "they just carried on", intermarriages most likely were not without giving up of language, culture, history and traditions and I doubt the "brides" and their families would of had a great degree of choice from the new invaders, so it wasn't as if nothing would of happened. As for genocide during invasions such as the Anglo Saxon migration to Britain we have lots of evidence to back up conflict between the Romano-Britons and the Germanic invaders, but what your definition of a genocide actually is, you'll have to be more specific, but to say there was no conflict is a very vague and black and white belief.

    • @rns7426
      @rns7426 Před 2 lety +1

      @@finngregory3599 I never stated no conflict.
      I am suggesting there was more absorption over time than there was genocide or huge displacement in the British isles.
      Once again there has always been more similarities than differences.
      Not really an argument here. Just disagreeing with older theories that many adhered to for decades that haven’t really produced hard evidence for the over arching theme of invasion and genocide.
      Certainly there was conflict.
      You have to consider Celtic and Germanic tribes have never acted as one but as individual entities.
      It’s not hard to imagine some where in conflict while others were in league.

  • @oFkensoJumper
    @oFkensoJumper Před 2 lety

    Love this channel!

  • @dbsti3006
    @dbsti3006 Před 2 lety +44

    So basically, Celts fought amongst themselves and collapsed instead of banding together. Imagine that. Stronger nations always take advantage of others quarreling. Vercingetorix realized that way too late. He may have been the the only one with some sense.

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 Před 2 lety +2

      Not really surprising really humans fight amongst themselves way too much so far always have and back then villages hated other villages cos their superiors chose hate and power over getting along and before that it was just primal caveman dumbness to protect their tiny tribe. Then other villages and countries took advantage of it when they heard but it was already over when things got too far they just got finished off after they slaughtered countless from each side.

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Před 2 lety

      Liberty dies to slave hordes

    • @urosmarjanovic663
      @urosmarjanovic663 Před rokem

      Julius Caesar recorded a case that two Celtic tribes he was facing on battlefield started to fight between themselves.

    • @metallhead120
      @metallhead120 Před rokem

      @@FlyingMonkies325 Reading your comment, even in my head, makes me wanna take a breath. Man, use commas, please.

    • @futuresomething3477
      @futuresomething3477 Před rokem

      Same thing with illyrians, they never brcame allies to eachother every city was carrying for themselves, if the illyrians were unified, the roman empire history whould be totally different.

  • @RuiCBGLima
    @RuiCBGLima Před 2 lety +28

    Why don´t you mention Northwestern Spain (Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria) and Northern Portugal (Minho, Trás-Montes) they also have bag-pipes. Also, similar landscape too

  • @itshistorysenpai2895
    @itshistorysenpai2895 Před 2 lety +93

    And also the celts were the first to sack Rome

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 Před 2 lety +4

      Are the Goths lumped in with the Celts?

    • @richardirvine1997
      @richardirvine1997 Před 2 lety +6

      @@Spongebrain97 The Celts sacked Rome several hundred years before the Goths even appeared in history. Study the subject a bit before commenting; you avoid looking silly,

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 Před 2 lety +25

      @@richardirvine1997 Well thats why I was asking a question son. You act like I told the OP they were wrong lmao

    • @sergioacevedo2254
      @sergioacevedo2254 Před 2 lety +15

      @@Spongebrain97 Back when Rome was still a relatively small republic around the 300s BC, it was sacked by a celtic tribe. This gave the celts a bad stigma to a degree, amongst the romans for centuries to come and was partially used as an excuse for Caesar's invasion of Gaul.

    • @Pitbull00000
      @Pitbull00000 Před 2 lety +3

      @@richardirvine1997 you look silly and edgy, sit down boi.

  • @jeremymcnatt6319
    @jeremymcnatt6319 Před rokem +4

    I'm of Pictish descent, from Nechtan Morbet I believe. Caledonians and Pictish (Pict or Picti being a roman insult) are thought as the ones who came before us, living in the northernmost part of Scotland. It's interesting to see how the Celtic side of things came to be, and how things carried down over time.

    • @damionkeeling3103
      @damionkeeling3103 Před rokem +1

      The northern 'Picts' at least seem to have been called after the Verturiones tribe. The Anglo-Saxons called them Werteras and their territory is often referred to as the kingdom of Fortriu. Fortriu/Werteras/Verturiones all having common origin in whatever the original name was.The southerners may have been grouped around the Maeatae (Miathi) tribe. I agree that the term Pict is not helpful. I suspect the Romans started referring to the people north of the Clyde-Forth line as Picts after the last invasion in 210 which was the last time the Romans attempted to invade further north. They washed their hands of everything north and fell back into using memes to refer to the people there.

  • @marydonohoe8200
    @marydonohoe8200 Před 2 lety +13

    Please consider adding to this a study of Galicia in northwestern Spain. As mentioned elsewhere in the comments, they do wear kilts and play a lowland-type bagpipe. But the people of the country-side also live much as they always have, with village chieftains and traditional political order. Their trad music is a bit more melodically oriented than the march-like rhythms of the Scots and dance patterns (jigs and reels) of the Irish. But still very Celtic sounding. They also use a drum very like the bodhran. A lovely, generous people!

    • @urosmarjanovic663
      @urosmarjanovic663 Před rokem +2

      Have in mind that back in the day, sailing along the coast was way more safer than traveling across the land. That could explain connection between Gallicia/Asturias - Brittany - Cornwall - Wales - Ireland - Isle of Man - West Scotland

  • @jkwo2007
    @jkwo2007 Před 2 lety +3

    Very educating. Thank you very much for sharing.

  • @Sharktankgaming
    @Sharktankgaming Před 2 lety +217

    "For some reason, the Romans won" (against Boudica). I'm sure you know many reasons why they won even though they were outnumbered. Better organisation, militarily and economically, better tactics and strategies, and the most important, ruthless in their actions.

    • @mappingshaman5280
      @mappingshaman5280 Před 2 lety +45

      And also the fact boudica was basically useless as a military general.

    • @Sharktankgaming
      @Sharktankgaming Před 2 lety +56

      @@mappingshaman5280100% right my friend. Even referring to her as a "general" is also not productive. Warlord or Tribal Leader is closer to her status. She had the bare bones idea for plans on how to attack, just "blah, roll over them with our numbers. Blah, revenge. Blah, wipe out every Roman." I understand the reason for her rebellion (its horrible and many can empathise with) and I can concede she did give the Romans a run for their money (for a time), but it's so wrong to elate her to goddess status simply because muh feminism is the "soup de jour" of modern morality/modern social ethics.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Před 2 lety +4

      🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Ha!

    • @mat3714
      @mat3714 Před 2 lety +8

      Also , boudica is probably a roman invention. Cassius dio simply could not have seen her and since it happened all the time with Roman writers you kinda have to admit that nobody else on the British isles mention her nor any other roman officials and that Cassius description fits the female representation of provinces. Since it was a popular uprising emerging from illiterate tribes it's very likely that Cassius simply invented boudica and based her character on the said province female representation already known to Roman urban dwellers who would read the story. ( roman provinces were depicted as women on different texts and sculptures, a very impressive collection of elaborate scenes inspired by the provinces mythology survived the ages in Greece )

    • @JAG8691
      @JAG8691 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Sharktankgaming Contrast that to the success of the Lusitanian leader Viriathus with a much smaller force than Boudica had.He initiated his campaign after the Roman massacre of the Lusitanians and had multiple victories against larger Roman forces but was ultimately murdered by 3 traitors within his ranks.

  • @jacquesrenou2850
    @jacquesrenou2850 Před 2 lety +13

    My mother's people came from Breton, Brittany France and I'm proud of that heritage and ancestry,also knowing I'm a Celtic as well!💙

  • @franciscoserrano9781
    @franciscoserrano9781 Před 2 lety

    Wow great vid!

  • @leidersammlung6955
    @leidersammlung6955 Před 2 lety +4

    The Celtic Holocaust, by Dan Carlin.
    Best audio on this subject I’ve come across, yet.

  • @tainewalters2536
    @tainewalters2536 Před 2 lety +44

    Saying 276,000 people speak Gaelic as a first language isn’t really true. That’s just people that live in gaeltachts ( Irish speaking areas ) and only about 20% of people living here use Gaelic on a daily basis

    • @itzskizzyk5472
      @itzskizzyk5472 Před 2 lety +4

      @Rusty Shackleford well in scotland theres only one school in glasgow that speaks gaelic as first language, there will be a lot more up north but im unsure as im no fae there lol pretty damn sad if i do say so myself, id love to speak scottish well even irish wouldnt go a miss.

    • @entwistlefromthewho
      @entwistlefromthewho Před 2 lety +5

      Welsh is actually in a much healthier position than Irish and is on target to get 1 million speakers by 2050.

    • @riazhassan6570
      @riazhassan6570 Před 2 lety

      @@itzskizzyk5472 Question 1: how close are Irish and Scottish Gaelic? Question 2: is there any overlap of Gaelic and Welsh? Question 3: are there any speakers of Cornish anywhere, or has the language disappeared?

    • @itzskizzyk5472
      @itzskizzyk5472 Před 2 lety +4

      @@riazhassan6570 1. very similar 2. unsure ive never studied either language 3. im not cornish nor english so i could not tell you, im scottish. you will need to ask an english person

    • @RonFer1945
      @RonFer1945 Před 2 lety +4

      @@riazhassan6570 Scottish Gaelic came from Ireland and is very close to Ulster Gaelic. Manx similarly came from Ireland. These are all 'Q' celtic languages. Welsh, Cornish and Breton are 'P' celtic languages, descended from the language of the pre-Roman Britons. When the Anglo-Saxons invaded and pushed the Britons westward, some crossed over to Brittany and the Bretons are their descendants. Cornish died out as a native language in the 18th century but has been revived and is known by a few hundred people in Cornwall, where it can be learnt in some schools. Manx also died out as native language in the 20th century but is kept alive by enthusiasts who learn it.

  • @memyselfi0120
    @memyselfi0120 Před rokem +5

    Strange. I read the word Celt was an 18th century borrowing from French which ultimately comes from the medieval Latin word for 'chisel'....

    • @fredikazu
      @fredikazu Před rokem

      Celt come from the Greek name Keltoi for the people north of the Danube.
      It predates Latin

  • @brigantiasmemerepository6439

    I mean Celts really aren't gone. Not only are the Celtic nations (Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Isle of Man, Cornwall, Britanny, and Galicia) Celtic, but England itself is indisputably genetically Celtic. More than this, even northern and central France are still majority Celtic based off limited genetic studies allowed, and there is a massive Celtic diaspora in the "Anglosphere" with Australia, New Zealand, and Canada all completely Celtic, and the USA boasting a huge Celtic population. The truth is we Celts still number in the hundreds of millions, and spread across the entire globe. It is not the Celtic people that have been lost, but rather our culture. I do hope one day we can regain our lost cultures, reviving cultures and languages like Welsh, Breton, and Irish.

  • @bufferly5595
    @bufferly5595 Před 2 lety +504

    We Celts haven't gone anywhere, here's to another 3000 years! Onen Hag Oll!

    • @MC-CFC
      @MC-CFC Před 2 lety +7

      Shame

    • @xLionsxxSmithyx
      @xLionsxxSmithyx Před 2 lety +31

      @@chickeninyeezes3759 doubtful, we are everywhere, quite a Few Celtic towns in countries around the world.

    • @Northern85Star
      @Northern85Star Před 2 lety +44

      Multiethnic/multiculturalism is the last nail in the coffin for you. No immigrant is going to want to learn celtic.

    • @xLionsxxSmithyx
      @xLionsxxSmithyx Před 2 lety +57

      @@Northern85Star well... you're wrong based on the fact that I had a Lecturer in College who was an immigrant from India and she Embraced and integrated into Welsh Culture, she even learned to speak the language fluently...

    • @Northern85Star
      @Northern85Star Před 2 lety +61

      @@xLionsxxSmithyx Doesnt matter. 99% wont do it, and you are becoming an ethnic minority like everyone else native to western europe. RIP.

  • @cherri_chip7257
    @cherri_chip7257 Před 2 lety +111

    When the channels I'm subscribed to talk about celtic culture
    **happi welsh noises!**

    • @caimaccoinnich9594
      @caimaccoinnich9594 Před 2 lety +2

      By "happy Welsh noises" do you mean: llllllllll tttthhhhh dddddd?😂
      No shade. As a native English speaker and someone who speaks Xhosa fluently, I can pronounce the latter two via my English and the first with my Xhosa. In Xhosa we write ll as hl.
      Words like: hlukuhla (shake), isihlahla (wrist), hleka (laugh) and hlala (sit) all have the ll (hl) sound. It's very common.

    • @mappingshaman5280
      @mappingshaman5280 Před 2 lety +2

      Said "English squire" :p

    • @narxes
      @narxes Před 2 lety +3

      *Username checks out*

    • @planteruines5619
      @planteruines5619 Před 2 lety

      Happy britain noises too

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory Před 2 lety

      yet you're called english squire

  • @caulfieldstephen
    @caulfieldstephen Před 2 lety

    Great video. Thanks

  • @bravura9112
    @bravura9112 Před 2 lety +4

    The current Celtic nations are as much Celtic as the Italians are Roman.... perpetuating an old language and appreciating old art doesn't mean the culture has survived, that means part of the culture survived, but the culture as a whole has been long gone. People feeling emotionally and romantically nostalgic to the past do not equate to an old culture persisting to the modern times.

  • @brianmsahin
    @brianmsahin Před 2 lety +228

    The Celts haven't collapsed! We're still here! In Ireland, and Wales, and Scotland!!!😁

  • @madmasseur6422
    @madmasseur6422 Před 2 lety +22

    It's a mystery and a miracle how the Basque culture and language managed to survive yet the continental celtic culture and languages didn't

    • @victorg8924
      @victorg8924 Před 2 lety +7

      Because they were the only ones who join the romans in the beginning (tipical basque strategy) and when you are the only one alive, it is time to say everybody that you are super strong, and that is why you survived. But the reality is that they were smarter. That is why their language survived, but there is nearly no battles known in basque territory or even involving basque people. The famous basque warriors are always in the lines of the strongest civilization at the time.

    • @JosesAmazingWorlds
      @JosesAmazingWorlds Před rokem +1

      All that northern coast of Spain is quite mountainous and inhospitable relative to the fertile lands to the south. They were probably left alone.

    • @wertyuiopasd6281
      @wertyuiopasd6281 Před rokem +1

      Most basque are French but they have strong DNA and regional identity.

    • @nurval1093
      @nurval1093 Před 11 měsíci

      @@victorg8924 basques are the perfect example of the phrase: "if you can't fight them, joint them".

  • @MrMarshallAC
    @MrMarshallAC Před rokem +2

    Here are some similarities between Indian languages and Irish:
    Bhailé (town, pronounced as Baalya) : Palya (town in Kannada, Telugu, Tamil)
    Cuna (high quality or elegant) : Guna (Quality in Tamil, Kannada and most Indian languages)
    Bia (food) : Bua (Food in Telugu)
    Faiché (green or lawn, refer to the Irishname of St. Stephen's Green) : Pache (Green in Tamil Malayalam, Kodava, Telugu and Old Kannada)
    Dubh (Black, dark or shady) : Dhabba (stain in Hindi)
    Mc or Mac (son or Child) : Maga, Makkala/Makka/Makkalu (son or children in most South Indian languages.
    Innui (today) : Indhu/Inru (today in Kannada/ Tamil)
    Suaite (Mischief) : Cheshte/Settai (Mischief in Kannada/Tamil)
    Śeomra (Room) : Kamra (room in Hindi)
    Ranga (hall) : Ranga (hall in Kannada), Arangam in Tamil means the same
    Thalamh (ground) : (Thal means ground in Classical Hindi. Army is called Thal sena). Talam in Tamil means base.
    Cos (leg) : Kaalu/ Kaal( leg in Kannada/ Tamil)
    Ti ne (fire) : Thee in Tamil
    Cothu (nutrition) : Sathu in Tamil
    Dia (God) : Deva in most Indian languages.
    Taighde (research) : Thedu in Tamil means search
    Kil (Shrine) : Koil in Tamil
    and many more!

  • @icemanire5467
    @icemanire5467 Před 2 lety +12

    Great video. Just letting you know the term "British isles" isn't accepted in Ireland. It's intertwined with centuries of politics despite it meant to being a geographical term.

    • @uuutuuube3691
      @uuutuuube3691 Před 2 lety +1

      What do they call them in Ireland?

    • @lester4506
      @lester4506 Před 2 lety +3

      @@uuutuuube3691 bri'ish isles

    • @noelward9579
      @noelward9579 Před rokem +6

      @@uuutuuube3691 we just say, Ireland & Britain, if we have to mention both Islands

    • @murpho999
      @murpho999 Před rokem +4

      @@lester4506 no we don’t. Never. Not used or recognised by Irish government either.

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart Před rokem +2

      @@murpho999
      But used by just about everybody else.

  • @CraftySouthpaw
    @CraftySouthpaw Před 2 lety +27

    I remember the writings of one Roman (I forget who) who basically said that the Celts lacked any real strategy when they attacked and would rely on their numbers and ferocity to win battles. The Roman strategy was to stand firm and let the Celts burn themselves out, then counterattack.

  • @MC-CFC
    @MC-CFC Před 2 lety +28

    You mean declined. They were never a unified empire so they never collapsed

    • @chiisuigintou
      @chiisuigintou Před 2 lety

      Agrees, they were many tribes, like the Eburonion tribe, who fought these Romans and gave Julius Caesar a great defeat.,.
      Julius caesar later told.,.
      (Btw, Galia Belgica, or the region named Belgae, nowadays Belgium was home to several tribes)
      Horum omnium fortissimi sunt Belgae, propterea quod a cultu atque humanitate provinciae longissime absunt, minimeque ad eos mercatores saepe commeant atque ea quae ad effeminandos animos pertinent important, proximique sunt Germanis, qui trans Rhenum incolunt, quibuscum continenter bellum gerunt.

  • @deborahlagarde7182
    @deborahlagarde7182 Před rokem

    Thanks! (I'm part Irish and Scots-Irish). Please do one on the Druids one of these days.

  • @henryhawthorn8849
    @henryhawthorn8849 Před rokem +5

    Celts also remain in northwestern Spain, known as “gallegos” although they speak a Portuguese dialect not related to Gaelic.

    • @johnny6strings
      @johnny6strings Před 5 měsíci

      The Portuguese language originated in Galicia

  • @RobertPage562
    @RobertPage562 Před 2 lety +221

    We Celts haven't gone anywhere. The irish, scottish, manx, welsh, cornish, and Bretons are all Celtic

    • @austinbosh7402
      @austinbosh7402 Před 2 lety +65

      Let's be honest here, the modern "Celts" have much, much more in common with Anglo Saxons then they do with their ancient ancestors.

    • @alainmellaerts8926
      @alainmellaerts8926 Před 2 lety +22

      The Gallo-Romans became the French. The Franks only replaced the top layer of society.

    • @JJaqn05
      @JJaqn05 Před 2 lety +5

      What? The English are more Celtic than the Irish, Scottish and Welsh

    • @mk9650
      @mk9650 Před 2 lety +8

      I bet you don't use a Celtic language as your first one

    • @alainmellaerts8926
      @alainmellaerts8926 Před 2 lety +19

      @@mk9650 Cé mhéad ba mhaith leat geall a dhéanamh?

  • @mhorram
    @mhorram Před 2 lety +33

    _". . . the first significant clash between the cultures of Rome and the Celtics came in the form of the Gallic Wars. These conflicts began in the year 58 BC and ended in 50 BC."_
    Not true. The Celts actually sacked Rome in 387 BC after utterly defeating the Roman army at the Battle of Allia! The Celts only agreed to leave Rome when they were paid a ransom of gold weighing over 1000 pounds.

    • @chiisuigintou
      @chiisuigintou Před 2 lety

      Horum omnium fortissimi sunt Belgae, propterea quod a cultu atque humanitate provinciae longissime absunt, minimeque ad eos mercatores saepe commeant atque ea quae ad effeminandos animos pertinent important, proximique sunt Germanis, qui trans Rhenum incolunt, quibuscum continenter bellum gerunt.

    • @mhorram
      @mhorram Před 2 lety +2

      @@chiisuigintou I'm not sure what your point is C.S. I was commenting on the video's erroneous claim that the first encounter between the Celts (Gauls) and Rome took place in 58 BC when the actual first encounter took place in 387 BC. You are using a snippet from Julius Caesar's _Gallic War_ (written after 58 BC but referencing when he, Caesar fought them.)
      For those wondering what the Latin quote says: _"Of all these the Belgians are the bravest, because they live far away from culture and civilization, because they seldom see merchants who import things that weaken the soul, and because they are close to the Germans, who live over the Rhine and with whom they are constantly at war."_

    • @hoi-polloi1863
      @hoi-polloi1863 Před rokem +2

      Don't forget how the Gaulish leader Brennus pulled one of the nastiest flexes in history. They were negotiating over how much ransom the Romans would have to pay to get rid of the Gauls. Romans complained about unfair weights on the scale. Brennus put his sword onto the scale and said, *vae victis*. (Meaning "woe to the vanquished", or in more modern terms, "yer fucked")

  • @pompelmostique
    @pompelmostique Před 2 lety +2

    I enjoyed your video! Although I think Boudica may have been outraged at her name being pronounced Boo-dik-a instead of Boo-duh-kuh

  • @spcm6781
    @spcm6781 Před 2 lety +81

    The Triskele symbol you used in this video to represent the celts in Ireland and Britain isn't a Celtic symbol. Its predates them by 1000s of years. It was a symbol carved into Newgrange by the Neolithic people who almost completely disappeared in Ireland with the arrival of the bronze age people.

    • @spcm6781
      @spcm6781 Před 2 lety +4

      @@BeautifulGreen252 That's true but technically us Irish while we speak a celtic language we have very little "celtic" dna. The bell beaker people who arrived here during the bronze age make up the bulk. The geals who be a better name for us.

    • @douglas_fir
      @douglas_fir Před 2 lety +2

      Not true. It's most importantly a European symbol, but it became Celtic over time because that's what the descendants of said Neolithic farmers became and still are.

    • @douglas_fir
      @douglas_fir Před 2 lety +3

      @@spcm6781 There isn't really any Celtic DNA unless you're trying to say swiss or Austrian. Celtic just means European descended (mainly Atlantic and central) and either speaks or spoke a Celtic language, or practiced or practices some sott of Celtic culture.

    • @spcm6781
      @spcm6781 Před 2 lety +1

      @@douglas_fir Yes I agree that's why I said "celtic" dna in comas

    • @disapearingboi
      @disapearingboi Před 2 lety +5

      @@douglas_fir Archaelogists are rethinking the singular 'origin' of Celtic culture. Just because Hallstatt/LaTene art deveoped in those regions doesn't mean all aspects of Celtic culture did. The development of what we now call Celtic culture was likely very dynamic. The Celtic languages were likely already prolific before the Hallstatt era. The Celts should not be viewed as a singular ethnic group but rather a cultural complex.

  • @Ravens_Nest10
    @Ravens_Nest10 Před 2 lety +3

    Hey, do you think you could do a video on the Dane/Norse invasion of England lead by the sons of Ragnar and Jarl Guthrum and his summer army? That is a very intense and inspiring time period.

  • @RangaTurk
    @RangaTurk Před 2 lety +8

    A Uralich tribe broke away from the main group that settled around the Baltic Sea and settled in Bavaria. But that is just in one region that was once considered to be a Celtic heartland.

  • @NateDohdoubleG
    @NateDohdoubleG Před rokem

    Great video 👍

  • @colineaston6305
    @colineaston6305 Před 2 lety +7

    Read the book by Peter Berrisford Ellis. One of the best histories of the Celtic tribes ever written.

  • @Sukhen_R555
    @Sukhen_R555 Před 2 lety +3

    Got some knowledge about the world thanx mate

  • @JackRSlim
    @JackRSlim Před 2 lety +34

    Representing Breton culture here and proud of it. You're right, we're still consider ourselves close to other Celtic cultures. That's the good thing of being from a multiethnic and multiorigins culture, we're open minded towards others groups. Also you're totally right about us fighting each other hard, we still do it as of today but always in a fair spirit toward each other ;)

    • @mariaamparo9781
      @mariaamparo9781 Před 2 lety

      Si los pueblos Mediterráneos,Roma y Grecia no les enseñan a escribir a estos Bretones ,Sajones,Hermanos,Escandinavos etc.no nos estaríamos comunicando,estarían aún con pieles a los hombros....

  • @davegibson79
    @davegibson79 Před měsícem +1

    I believe that the Asturius region of Spain also has some remaining Celtic heritage and language. They're sometimes included and at other times not, for some reason. It would have been nice to hear what happened to Celts in other areas such as Turkey. Everyone knows about the Gauls and Boudicca, but the history of the Celts in Spain, Turkey and central Europe is almost never discussed.

  • @Arthur-pc1eh
    @Arthur-pc1eh Před 2 lety +3

    Consider studying the "Celtic from the West Hypothesis". The Celts wouldn't have migrated to Britain and Ireland "just before" Roman invasion, but rather would've continuously developed already along the Atlantic Basin ever since Indo-Europeans contacted those areas.

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Před 2 lety +3

    Can you do a video about the Emirate of Sicily, please?

  • @philking3892
    @philking3892 Před 2 lety +12

    There's a lot of holes in the knowledge in this video. He doesn't mention Celt Iberians, where many of the Irish and British Celts came from. He doesn't mention the uniting Celtic tribes that fought the Romans and even sacked Rome before the Galic wars, some of which were given lands and settled in northern Italy. He doesn't mention the uniting Celtic tribes that stopped the expansion of Rome into northern Britain and therefore also into Ireland. His understanding of the types of 'celtic' languages is very basic.

    • @SaorAlba1970
      @SaorAlba1970 Před 2 lety

      The Picts of Scotland were not Celts they wrote their language on hieroglyphs on standing stones most Scots have the Russia steppe gene from our Pictish ancestors as Irish, welsh and English don't have the gene our ancestors were the Scythians who also wrote their language in hieroglyphs ... the Celts originated from the Iberian Peninsular our Celtic blood comes from the Dal Riatans of Ireland who settled in North West Scotland www.scotsman.com/news/politics/genetics-show-many-scots-are-descended-russian-nomads-1463717 ...

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 Před rokem +2

      Dear heaven, holes is not the word. Did he get the info out of a school book.

    • @robbertopsomer1862
      @robbertopsomer1862 Před rokem

      No mention of Caesar's two landings in Britain nor Hadrian's wall....

  • @sedeslav
    @sedeslav Před 2 lety

    0:25 you have to add Celtic opidums on river Sava in Slavonia (northern Croatia) I was on excavations with archeologists 2011-12 and we found traces of celtic settlements all over a Sava river banks.

  • @erickoraganie8705
    @erickoraganie8705 Před 2 lety +1

    1:54 This was not the first, a very significant clash happened centuries earlier when Gauls even sacked Rome.

  • @anglowarrior7970
    @anglowarrior7970 Před 2 lety +47

    Waiting for the series on German and Italian War of Unification 👍👍

    • @hackedbyusa8819
      @hackedbyusa8819 Před 2 lety +3

      Love Germany so much 🇾🇪❤️🇩🇪
      Respect Italy from Yemen 🇾🇪🤝🇮🇹

    • @anglowarrior7970
      @anglowarrior7970 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hackedbyusa8819 I also love germany ❤ it's history is very interesting and fascinating

    • @giannarosize
      @giannarosize Před 2 lety

      @@anglowarrior7970 when they stop living in mud huts they ruin Europe with every chance they had

    • @anglowarrior7970
      @anglowarrior7970 Před 2 lety +1

      @@giannarosize I doesn't like that part of history I love roman and macedonian empire and its successor states history in antiquity

    • @russko118
      @russko118 Před 2 lety +1

      @@giannarosize nah they just tried to go for a "total domination" as france and the uk did before them (and the usa, russia and china after them), like evry other major power

  • @C_hoffmanni
    @C_hoffmanni Před 2 lety +28

    Really glossed over Galicia in Spain and their Celtic-Romance language

    • @rickyyacine4818
      @rickyyacine4818 Před 2 lety +1

      But Celtic came first 🤔🤔🤔

    • @user-xu6mx6lj3m
      @user-xu6mx6lj3m Před 2 lety +1

      @@KrlKngMrtssn spain is a mix of almost every culture of mediterean

    • @user-xu6mx6lj3m
      @user-xu6mx6lj3m Před 2 lety

      @@Zeerich-yx9po true

    • @scotsexile1
      @scotsexile1 Před 2 lety

      @@KrlKngMrtssn I suspect you´re right but Galicians do have a Celtic link and feel it in their bones. Their country is not like Spain. Neither is their music or culture and above all they are a stubborn people who are impossible to tame. Interesting that two people as far apart ideologically as Franco and Fidel Castro were Galicians. BTW so was my father-in-law, a Brazilian gallego. This is the Celtic trait. Be the same but be completely different at the same time.

    • @evandxvies
      @evandxvies Před 2 lety +1

      Their language isn't celtic

  • @user-dg5vx8li8f
    @user-dg5vx8li8f Před 10 dny +1

    It is true that the Celts, their language, their culture, their identity, their sovereignty over the land, and their power became extinct, but their blood, their lineage, their people, and their genes still exist to this day, and the lineage of the Celtic people is the R1b haplogroup, and when we take a look at the distribution of this haplogroup on the map now, it completely matches the spread of the Celts in ancient times, and when we take a look at Iberia, we find Their ancestry is high, but their culture is completely extinct and they adopted the Latin identity, which comes from the Hubblegroup J2, as well as the Germanic I1, but we see a large presence of the Hubblegroup Celtic R in Britain.

  • @robertmckeag3531
    @robertmckeag3531 Před rokem

    Ullans has also been recognised since the early 2010's aside from that omission and some unusual pronunciations good video.

  • @bala9257
    @bala9257 Před 2 lety +9

    Nice to know that the languages are spoken till date and traditions alive.

    • @camerondon3712
      @camerondon3712 Před 2 lety +2

      True. A good number of Scottish towns further south and (as far as I'm aware) the Western Isles still hold to their culture. I know that Scots Gaelic is spoken natively further west, and currently I'm learning it up in the north. The culture and language will live for as long as there are people willing to keep it going.

    • @bassmasta93
      @bassmasta93 Před 2 lety +1

      @@camerondon3712 we still speak welsh here in wales. But the English want it gone, like they always have.

    • @mitchamcommonfair9543
      @mitchamcommonfair9543 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bassmasta93 That isn't true. There was no banning of language

    • @bassmasta93
      @bassmasta93 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mitchamcommonfair9543 it is true, the English always moan and complain about welsh road signs, and I’m pretty sure it was discussed to potentially remove them to keep the English happy.
      The English used to beat it out of welsh children back in the day, my great grandparents would be hit with the cane if the teacher heard them speak welsh.
      It was Litterally beaten out of children.

    • @mitchamcommonfair9543
      @mitchamcommonfair9543 Před 2 lety

      @@bassmasta93
      Welsh teachers would do that. But then I expect there is always someone else to blame eh?

  • @anmetious4779
    @anmetious4779 Před 2 lety +10

    Celts, your culture is really great, I hope, you will save it for the future generations

  • @UserUser-fg5cb
    @UserUser-fg5cb Před 2 lety +1

    CAN YOU PLEASE LIST THE TIME PERIOD THAT THIS HAPPENED IN THE TITLE, THANKS!

  • @dugald56
    @dugald56 Před 2 lety +16

    The Celts were in Great Britain and Ireland (and as far north as Iceland. Doubtless continental Celts did migrate to GB, but they’d been trading and intermarrying between tribes for thousands of years. The Celts were the so-called Ancient Britons. I refer you to the books of the eminent Cambridge professor, Barry Cunliffe.

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Před rokem +2

      In my village in Ukraine, Carpathian mountain, they play an instrument similar to the bagpipe and many red haired people in Wrstern Ukraine

    • @otapi
      @otapi Před rokem

      @@buddyrojek9417 Are not those red haired people in Ukraine are descendants of the Kievan-Rus? Those were viking tribe, they founded Kiev. That was almost a thousand years after the Celts.

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Před rokem

      @@otapi i am in the Western region, they say the celtic genetics extended this far East

  • @jamesstepp1925
    @jamesstepp1925 Před 2 lety +7

    The Celts failed for one simple reason. They were not united in their politics, militaries or actions. Caesar did not face the full might of the Celts until right up to the end. Vercingetorix tried to unite the Celts under one banner, but it was too little too late at that point.
    There is a lesson here to learn in these hyper partisan political times in the US. "A house divided cannot stand", especially against a near peer opponent that is united.

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Před 2 lety +26

    The Celts are one of those groups that I know there’s a big cultural mystique about, but I really know very little about them. I could definitely stand to learn more.
    Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you friends. :)

    • @anacasanova7350
      @anacasanova7350 Před 2 lety

      Mística ... Los celtas fueron combatidos especialmente por los romanos por sus sacrificios humanos. Que estaban prohibidos en Roma .

    • @jdaleb
      @jdaleb Před rokem

      Back at ya buddy

  • @captainireland1375
    @captainireland1375 Před rokem +2

    Fun fact: in keeping celtic traditions alive, people still sometimes fight naked in Ireland.
    It's not as common for obvious reasons but maby like 6 or 7 times a year you could see two naked guys fighting on the streets

  • @JuanHernandez-hm2fb
    @JuanHernandez-hm2fb Před 2 lety

    I like the documentary its very help historical!!

  • @ehudzechariahschmidt7036
    @ehudzechariahschmidt7036 Před 2 lety +6

    Also, hasn't there been several revivals of Celtic identity in France? The French people are afterall predominantly Celtic in terms of genetics and descent

    • @maiavanwaes7590
      @maiavanwaes7590 Před 2 lety +1

      YES. Thank you. We are gallo romans here, not just roman, the gallo is not just to make it sound prettier. The population was not replaced, they just mixed.

    • @commenter4190
      @commenter4190 Před 2 lety +1

      @@maiavanwaes7590 Same in northern Italy, as northern italian "gallo-italic" languages resemble much the French more than Italian, as you can hear also on youtube: look for "Lombard language" or "Emilian language" and hear.

    • @maiavanwaes7590
      @maiavanwaes7590 Před 2 lety

      @@commenter4190 I just did now! How amazing! The emilian language is really a strange mix, you can hear all the different influences in it verry clearly. A beautifull legagy of our history, thank you so much for sharing!

    • @maiavanwaes7590
      @maiavanwaes7590 Před 2 lety +2

      @Reynz J yes they do, why do you say that ? czcams.com/video/iESweHJMIoo/video.html
      Go watch this video, it shows the genetic make up of every country in europe. It still makes more then 50% of our dna, england is not that ahead of us, Spain and Portugal still show their celto iberic origins as well, only the scotts and the irish kept more bc they live on islands. So stop thinking gaulish were whiped out, they were not, not at all, you don't erase the entire population of half a continent in a few years war. Like france and england had a war that lasted for a 100 years and both of us are still here, are we not? You don't make an entire population vanish, they just adapted.

    • @maiavanwaes7590
      @maiavanwaes7590 Před 2 lety +1

      @Reynz J again you're wrong. Romans were absolutly not known for perpetrating genocides... not at all. They were a culture a assimilation which is the most efficient way of colonization.
      This R1b group means that for modern genetics, those 3 groups mixed so much they do not even bother to specify the sub groups. And in order to mix you certainly need to be alive isnt it ?
      I mean, just check on frikin wikipedia at this point. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Gaul
      With this part specificly explaining how it worked :
      In the five centuries between Caesar's conquest and the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, the Gaulish language and cultural identity underwent a syncretism with the Roman culture of the new governing class, and evolved into a hybrid Gallo-Roman culture that eventually permeated all levels of society.Gauls continued writing some inscriptions in the Gaulish language, but switched from the Greek alphabet to the Latin alphabet during the Roman period. Current historical research suggests that Roman Gaul was "Roman" only in certain (albeit major) social contexts, the prominence of which in material culture has hindered a better historical understanding of the permanence of many Celtic elements. The Roman influence was most apparent in the areas of civic religion and administration. The Druidic religion was suppressed by Emperor Claudius I, and in later centuries Christianity was introduced. The prohibition of Druids and the syncretic nature of the Roman religion led to disappearance of the Celtic religion. It remains to this day poorly understood: current knowledge of the Celtic religion is based on archeology and via literary sources from several isolated areas such as Ireland and Wales.
      So as you can read, the ruling class was roman, the administration was roman in nature, and they have sync, but the people living on the land were THE SAME PEOPLE AS BEFORE.

  • @Takayama-sama
    @Takayama-sama Před 2 lety +14

    I love learning about the Celts! I am most likely part Celtic (my mum’s family is Irish) so it’s like I’m learning a little piece of my own family’s history

    • @blanketparty5259
      @blanketparty5259 Před 2 lety +2

      Maybe if you're French. French are more celtic than the Irish

    • @Takayama-sama
      @Takayama-sama Před 2 lety +1

      I’m not sure how accurate that is. Brittany the only part of France with a strong Celtic background. That’s not to say there is no one of Celtic decent in the rest of France, I think other cultures such as the Germanic Franks and the Romans are more dominant culturally than the Celts. I could be mistaken of course, I am no expert on French genealogy or history.

    • @blanketparty5259
      @blanketparty5259 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Takayama-sama I'm just going by recent genetic discoveries. Linguistic transfer does not equal genetic transfer.

    • @savodoom3175
      @savodoom3175 Před rokem +1

      @@blanketparty5259 widely debunked.

    • @blanketparty5259
      @blanketparty5259 Před rokem

      @@savodoom3175 Not at all, you clearly havent done genetic research

  • @DiabEUsky
    @DiabEUsky Před 2 lety +1

    Apparently there was a small unconquered village in the Armorica region in northern Gaul which managed to defend itself against roman legions :D

  • @timflatus
    @timflatus Před rokem +1

    The main error in this is showing Londinium existing before the Roman invasion. Cornish and Manx also have a small number of modern speakers and are generally included among the Celtic Nations

  • @ansosboy8687
    @ansosboy8687 Před 2 lety +5

    2:32 wow interesting think only In Nusantara archipelago (Now become a modern Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei) that the soliders fight Naked but in Nusantara is make sense to fight naked cause the weather is so hot so this make wearing the protection gear is very not effective but in Europe the weather is so cold 😅😅😅

  • @userl697
    @userl697 Před 2 lety +14

    Galicia.. ? Spain has Celtic people who have kept the celtic culture very well.

    • @KrlKngMrtssn
      @KrlKngMrtssn Před 2 lety +6

      Galicians like to be identified as Celts. Sorry, but that doesn't make them more Celtic than the French, the central Turks or northern Italians. I believe it is today more a romantic sentiment, which was born during the Galician national awakening mid XIX century. (Rosalia De Castro). Traditions and culture as well as the language are strongly Roman and apart from some archeological findings, today there is not much more. Celtic festivals and bagpipe music doesn't make Galicia more Celtic, because it is more a modern sociological phenomenon in Galicia. Also I would argue, that some linguistic and cultural traits are even more influenced by the later moorish culture than by the very old and few tribes that once inhabited the Galician region. Celts left very little heritage visible in today's Galicia. Similar to other parts of western and Central Europe. Galicia was once Germanic (Suebi) and even moorish, but they don't like to be associated with that, do they? ... even though it is more recent in history than the Celts.

    • @alfredosenalle9284
      @alfredosenalle9284 Před 2 lety

      @@KrlKngMrtssn The Suebi and the Visigoths did have a bigger impact in Galicia than the Moors ever did. Muslim occupation in northern Spain didnt last enough time as to leave a significant imprint

    • @KrlKngMrtssn
      @KrlKngMrtssn Před 2 lety +2

      @@alfredosenalle9284
      You need to research a little bit your own country my friend.
      The discussion is not about comparing the Celtic vs Arab heritage. It's about saying that the celtic identity in Galicia/Asturias/Portugal is a deliberate social construction and therefore not scientifically justifiable. It is a simple irrational belief in those places.
      A simple curiosity: The presence of Arabs in Galicia was indeed very shortlived, but interestingly there are in Galician over 2500 words of Arab origin (more than celtic origin):
      www.lavozdegalicia.es/noticia/lavozdelaescuela/2018/11/28/pegada-do-arabe-galicia/0003_201811SE28P6991.htm
      In Galicia there are 250 villages/towns/places with Arab origin:
      www.tdx.cat/bitstream/handle/10803/11017/Anexo3.pdf?sequence..

    • @alfredosenalle9284
      @alfredosenalle9284 Před 2 lety

      @@KrlKngMrtssn Are you saying that Galicians are more Arab than Celtic ?

    • @KrlKngMrtssn
      @KrlKngMrtssn Před 2 lety

      @@alfredosenalle9284 I am saying that the claim of Galicians (and more widely north western Iberians) of having some sort of "Celtic culture", in being a sort of modern Celts, to the same extent as Irish, Scottish or Welsh is totally nonsense.
      All of Iberia has nowadays a Latin culture, eat olive oil and speak Romance languages.
      Celticism is a romantic narrative in Galicia, born with the Rexurdimento and later with the Xeración Nós. It's artificially constructed.

  • @ronnyjambo2226
    @ronnyjambo2226 Před rokem +2

    I'm not sure where you find your pictures, but Boudica was never married to Hereward the Wake. They lived 1000 years apart.

  • @lightdrizzle
    @lightdrizzle Před rokem +1

    You didn't mention Galicia in North West Spain. Very heavy Celtic vibe there & I´m Irish. Also, they have their own language Gallego.

  • @franksullivan1873
    @franksullivan1873 Před rokem +4

    They didn’t entirely collapse,they just integrated and assimilated into the fabric of Europe.There are still pockets in Northern Spain ,Ireland and outlying islands of Scotland that havea Gaelic dialect,although they are fading.

  • @thehistorychannel6973
    @thehistorychannel6973 Před 2 lety +36

    Everyone who live in a Celtic area must be taught in a Celtic language in their schools, its important that we don't let an entire branch of the Indo-European Languages die out...

    • @ryanhughes6405
      @ryanhughes6405 Před 2 lety +5

      Agreed

    • @samueljesse2179
      @samueljesse2179 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ryanhughes6405 Cornwall is integrated into England although they are Celtic through and through and see themselves as a nation within a nation

    • @ryanhughes6405
      @ryanhughes6405 Před 2 lety +1

      @@samueljesse2179 cool fact

    • @simoncoish2661
      @simoncoish2661 Před 2 lety +3

      @@samueljesse2179 Interesting that Cornwall barely gets mentioned in this video and yet the language is enjoying a resurgence and the Celtic cultural icons are still prevalent throughout Cornwall.

    • @Kevin-oh9hu
      @Kevin-oh9hu Před 2 lety

      @@simoncoish2661 keep dreaming simon

  • @Cherb123456
    @Cherb123456 Před rokem

    Thank you!

  • @ianyeager4633
    @ianyeager4633 Před 2 lety

    (6:44- "but somehow; etc.' is like "and then a miracle occurs," in that it's very vague. Maybe Bodicka just fell victim to Gaius' Latin Lover charms? Kinda like Hippolita 'n Hercules? Or Lucy 'n Ricky, whom we all love, the greatest triumph of the syndicate? Syndicatus Populusque Romanus?)

  • @DanishAli-bf4ny
    @DanishAli-bf4ny Před 2 lety +49

    I'm muslims.. but I love the history of cristians, rommans.. crusaders... Just love them

    • @IbadKM
      @IbadKM Před 2 lety +14

      @Alan Collins Yes you are correct but I think he didn’t mean to say that celts were Christian. He meant he loved European history as a whole.

    • @user-ip5yc7bg2k
      @user-ip5yc7bg2k Před 2 lety +8

      I also love middle eastern history. Uruk, Israel, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Islamic golden age you name it

    • @DanishAli-bf4ny
      @DanishAli-bf4ny Před 2 lety +4

      @@IbadKM Exactly..

    • @irmaosmatos4026
      @irmaosmatos4026 Před 2 lety +2

      @Alan Collins Christians were in Europe way before Constantine, he just saw that they were now as almost as big as the Hellenic and accepted them, secondly, the Celtic religion was full of mysticism, head-hunting cannibalism, ritual sacrifices of people and things like that, also animism.

    • @stumcfadzen5645
      @stumcfadzen5645 Před 2 lety +1

      Sa' alam brother Ali. I think the study of history can be a cultural bridge. Nice.

  • @TheBlobik
    @TheBlobik Před 2 lety +4

    Battle of Alesia wasn't that much "too little to late" - it was just as much the effect of the Ceasars Genius. I mean, they have walls and we cannot get them? Lets build our own walls, so that they cannot pierce through our siege. Oh, they asked reinforcements to break the encirclement? Lets build another set of walls so that they can not break the siege from outside.
    Battle of Alesia is one of the most iconic ones in history. It shows the extreme boldness of Ceasar.

  • @michellesheaff3779
    @michellesheaff3779 Před rokem

    I'm Québécoise. From the very beginning, the Irish joined the French settlers, and ran the woods with us, and fought the English with us. We were both Catholic and enemies of the United Kingdom. And the French coureurs des bois came mostly from Bretagne, including my ancestors, which is also Celtic so as we say here "on a les atômes crochus"--which literally translates as "we have hooked atoms" and means our beings right down to our very essence are meant to link together. These Irish settlers were so many and had such a huge influence on our culture, the folkloric music and dance of Québec is deeply rooted in Irish culture. Our gigs and reels sound the same except any lyrics are in French. The step-dancing is the same, except the upper body moves with Gallic abandon instead of being straight and rigid. There were so many Irish playing Irish sports one of the very first laws passed in Quebec City was to prohibit the playing of hurley in the streets as it was disrupting horse-and-carriage traffic--the precursor to street hockey. Our first commercial beer was from an Irish brewer and for some reason its name became an exclamation still used to this day: "Ie Boswell!"
    We received an ever bigger influx of Irish immigrants in 1847 and 1848 during the Famine when Irish coffin ships were turned away from Boston and New York City and everywhere except Quebec. There's an island downriver from Quebec City in the St. Lawrence River, l'Île des Irlandais, also known as Quarantine Island or Grosse Île. We built hospitals and dormitories and kitchens and churches and cemeteries. We all worked together side by side, English and French, Catholic and Protestant, to save as many lives as we could among the starved and sickly, desperate and diseased Irish refugees. Of many large families often only a few orphans survived, including my great-grandmother, the youngest and only survivor of a big brood. Quebec families were asked to adopt them at masses throughout the region. The priests wrote back: "Send me more orphans! My parishioners are fighting over them!" All of the orphans were adopted, including my great-grandmother, given a good home by fur merchants in Quebec City by the name of Poulain.
    I have ancestors from Ireland, Scotland, Cornwall and Wales from my English-speaking side, and Ireland and Bretagne from my French side. I just need an ancestor from the Isle of Manx to complete the set. I almost have the Celtic Fringe covered!
    All that to say, the Celts never went away. We just migrated and mixed and matched. We're not only still here, we're all over the place. One of the greatest diaspora of all time. You'd have to go to Antarctica to find a place without an Irish pub. And even then I bet you either the British or Australian research station has one!

  • @supersueca1
    @supersueca1 Před rokem +1

    You can still find a lot of Celtic influence in Galicia and Northern Portugal, in music and pagan festivals

  • @mpessan
    @mpessan Před 2 lety +3

    It's a pity the spirituality of the Celts and all their spiritual wisdom and approach to life does not pervade Ireland's culture today.

    • @tothboy01
      @tothboy01 Před 2 lety +3

      From what I've read about Celtic religion, it seems to have revolved around 1: a triune or triple mother goddess, 2: the belief in the 4 elements of ancient alchemy (i.e. fire, water, earth, and air), 3: temples as natural sites such as groves and rivers, and 4: the belief that the soul resides in the head (I think the ancient Egyptians believed that the soul resided in the heart). I think there are also some ancient Roman accounts describing Druids as not only priests, but also as philosophers who concerned themselves with questions about astronomy and the planets, as well as the nature of the universe. I personally find Celtic mythology/religious stories fascinating, like those about heroes such as Cuchulainn and Finn Mac Cool, which are similar to heroes from other cultures like the Mesopotamian Gilgamesh or the Greek Heracles.

  • @johnroxburgh4087
    @johnroxburgh4087 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm Scottish and it bracks my heart to hear alot of this

    • @johnc7651
      @johnc7651 Před rokem

      I think we should view our Celtic ancestry as a group of tribes, much like it was within Ireland itself before they united against the English. It was never an empire or nation and generally more tribal in nature. It doesn't change anything though, we all remain very proud of our origins.

  • @trhoades2063
    @trhoades2063 Před 2 lety

    They were groups of small tribes that raided, they found homes they enjoy and a way of life that was more stable and they basically stayed and relaxed a little

  • @dc9482
    @dc9482 Před 2 lety +16

    The Celts did not "collapse" or "fail" we are still here alive and well. Ireland and Germany are the only two western countries that weren't dominated by Rome, our language still survives until this day along with our music, folklore, traditions etc. I am a fluent Irish speaker

    • @johnnyoranges
      @johnnyoranges Před 2 lety +9

      The Picts of modern day Scotland weren't conquered by the Romans.

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen Před rokem +2

      Very little, if any, Celtic tradition or language in Germany, though.

    • @rumpelstilzz
      @rumpelstilzz Před rokem +1

      @@KaiHenningsen But for that, Rome is not to blame. Rather catholicism. Oh wait, the Vatikan is in Rome...

    • @camulodunon
      @camulodunon Před rokem +1

      @@rumpelstilzz WDYM, any Celts that remained in central Europe were overrun by Germanic tribes during the migration period. None of that had anything to do with Christianity.

    • @camulodunon
      @camulodunon Před rokem

      @@KaiHenningsen that's not what he means. He means that Germany, alongside Ireland was one of the places that the Romans never conquered.