Origins of the Iberian Celts

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  • čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
  • An exploration of the origins of the Celts of Spain and Portugal, looking at genetics, archaeology, Roman historical sources and their continuity with the modern population.
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Komentáře • 525

  • @LucHywel-xw5tw
    @LucHywel-xw5tw Před 19 dny +176

    If anyone's obsessed with Celto-Iberian and Celtic warfare in general I strongly recommend Schwerpunkt's videos series

    • @thegreenmage6956
      @thegreenmage6956 Před 19 dny +3

      He goes in haaaard omg 😩 his videos are so long though!

    • @jakecraftlawrance7206
      @jakecraftlawrance7206 Před 19 dny +1

      I definitely enjoy his work

    • @10hawell
      @10hawell Před 18 dny +2

      Thanks, do you or anyone reading this have more of this type channels?

    • @azubliss
      @azubliss Před 18 dny +7

      ​@@10hawellDan Davis History

    • @YohanPlaine
      @YohanPlaine Před 17 dny +6

      ​@@10hawellSurvive the Jive

  • @uptown_rider8078
    @uptown_rider8078 Před 19 dny +105

    Thank you for making a video about the Celts of Iberia. We are just as proud of our Celtic culture and heritage as any of our Brothers and Sisters

  • @nellspencer6417
    @nellspencer6417 Před 19 dny +45

    My husband can trace his ancestry back 600 years, his family have only moved only 15 miles in that time. He is a blood Cornishman and therefore a Celt. His DNA is 10% Iberian.

    • @richardemily1555
      @richardemily1555 Před 18 dny +5

      Your ancestors double every generation. 'whole family' .. for 600 years? You're looking at millions of people..

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Před 18 dny +10

      It's likely just the way that the testing company defines certain clusters. Commercial analysis is not very accurate in terms of ancestral analysis, but there is some ancient connections that go both ways. There is about 7% Gaelic admixture in Asturias from Gaels who fled Ireland during English persecution. There was also a settlement of the British when they fled the Saxons

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 Před 17 dny +4

      that's really cool. on my mom's side, we have family who have lived in the same small town in Portugal for around 700 years.

    • @Ragis
      @Ragis Před 2 dny

      @@richardemily1555It’s not millions. It can be that the whole population of that area in the late middle ages are his ancestors several times over. I have ancestry from a small town in Asturias and they are all probably in essence the same people as 2000 years ago.

    • @admontblanc
      @admontblanc Před 2 dny

      ​@@Ragisinterracial admixtures are overestimated since we're talking about periods when people were much more adverse to accepting vastly different, clearly foreign people.

  • @LigiaArianrhod
    @LigiaArianrhod Před 19 dny +131

    Thank you from a Celt from Portus Cale. :) My grandparents were from Viana do Castelo, northern Portugal, which still maintains a Celtic Folk Festival.

    • @neil03051957
      @neil03051957 Před 18 dny +3

      Good to meet you.

    • @zitarodrigues7336
      @zitarodrigues7336 Před 18 dny +20

      We, the Portuguese people, are very proud of our genetic heritage, resulting from many peoples who invaded Iberia, including the Phoenicians, Visigoths, Celts, Moors, Greeks, Romans, etc.We have always been in a maritime passage region, to the North of Europe and to the South, in the Mediterranean.

    • @luisoliveira8202
      @luisoliveira8202 Před 11 dny +3

      Me too, Grand father from Viana Do Castelo, Gallaecia Bracarensis, Grand Mother, Culleredo. A Coruña (Gallaecia Lucensis) 😁

    • @LigiaArianrhod
      @LigiaArianrhod Před 11 dny +5

      @@luisoliveira8202 Galicia and (northern) Portugal should never have separated. We are one. ;) I feel at home when I visit Galicia and Viana do Castelo is always in my heart, although I was born and raised in Porto.

    • @BETOETE
      @BETOETE Před 7 dny

      @@zitarodrigues7336 t- I like all that, only that Greek or Roman didn't settle in Iberia in great numbers.

  • @trex3003
    @trex3003 Před 19 dny +28

    As a student of all things to do with the history of the Iberian peninsula, I thoroughly enjoyed your presentation.

  • @crebafurros
    @crebafurros Před 19 dny +61

    Thanks for covering this, I am from Galicia and I literally live next to ancient Celtic and Roman settlements

    • @nb9419
      @nb9419 Před 17 dny +3

      However you are the people with the highest rate of Berber DNA in the Peninsula.

    • @crebafurros
      @crebafurros Před 17 dny +5

      @@nb9419 Yes, from the neolithic, it's interesting. "Minifundismo xenético" is interesting too.

    • @nb9419
      @nb9419 Před 17 dny +3

      Yet, you have the highest ghest rate of Berber genes, you know well when they came...Oxford University dixit. As for the highest rate of common genes with Ireland, Asturies isbat thé top of the Peninsula.

    • @nb9419
      @nb9419 Před 17 dny +3

      @@crebafurros ,I know you don't like it, but it is so...If you still have hillforts it's because you surrendered to the Romans and they didn't destroy them as they did in Asturies. That's not in the books of Celts.

    • @crebafurros
      @crebafurros Před 17 dny +5

      @@nb9419 I didn't argue anything, you're correct, and? I don't care about anything like that, is there any problem?

  • @Alfablue227
    @Alfablue227 Před 16 dny +35

    As a Portuguese tracing back to the NE area of Minho, going back past the middle ages. I can tell you how proud I am to have 75% of Celtiberian DNA and 7% of modern Scottish, Irish, Welsh! The rest is basically Roman & Moorish both at at 9%. We also have some Jewish and Greek DNA in the family, but I didn't get any; my sister did. Our culture to this day honors our Celtic heritage, especially in the North, but we also honor our Roman and Moorish legacies, and will continue to do so.

    • @user-rq7el8nh6q
      @user-rq7el8nh6q Před 14 dny

      The whole Eastern European Atlantic was a Celtic sea and trading routes

    • @portucaleminho3191
      @portucaleminho3191 Před 13 dny +1

      Que programa usou para descobrir o se dna

    • @Alfablue227
      @Alfablue227 Před 13 dny

      @@portucaleminho3191 Usei o
      My Heritage.

    • @user-rq7el8nh6q
      @user-rq7el8nh6q Před 13 dny +1

      @@portucaleminho3191 nosotros Celtico, no ?

    • @Selenia990
      @Selenia990 Před 11 dny

      ​@@Alfablue227
      Sinto muito, mas nao é confiável e usa cluster com uma tendência muita relativa

  • @junuc10
    @junuc10 Před 13 dny +21

    I have both northern Spanish and Irish DNA. My grandparents came from Galicia in Spain a region with strong Celtic ties.

  • @lukedacosta1401
    @lukedacosta1401 Před 18 dny +21

    Great video. Loved this.... From an Australian with both Lusitanian & Gaelic ancestry this topic had great appeal & info avenues to further explore, many thanks.

  • @haydenarias
    @haydenarias Před 10 dny +5

    I'm an American that moved to Spain to teach English, decided on Galicia on a whim and havent left since making the move 5 years ago. Have fallen completely in love with this region. it has a lot of ancient charm, Madrid and Barcelona feel worlds away, but the atlantic coasts and verdant mountains show their imposing immenseness.

    • @angyliv8040
      @angyliv8040 Před 10 dny

      But your surname is Arias. My mother have arias. It’s a very old and noble surname mostly Galician. They say it came from arius or Aria. The Arian people in Central Europe (celts). I was born in Barcelona but half pf my family is from Galicia and I have morriña about Galicia and the climate. I love rain.

    • @haydenarias
      @haydenarias Před 4 dny

      @@angyliv8040 good observation, yes I'm an Arias. My parents immigrated from El Salvador and Mexico. I imagine at some point in the past, some of my ancestors may have originated from Northwest Spain. My mother's side is Mexican, curiously her family is from a part of Mexico that was once administered under "Nueva Galicia" during the time of New Spain. I took a DNA ancestry test and I am 50/50 Amerindian and Iberian, so mestizo. But it wasn't precise enough to pinpoint the location in Spain. I assume it's a mix of Extremadura, Andalucía, and Galicia possibly, since those were the regions with the highest percentages of emigration to the new world.

  • @harrietharlow9929
    @harrietharlow9929 Před 16 dny +10

    This is great! I carry Iberian and Celtic DNA. Glad to hear more about my fellow Celts on the Iberian Peninsula!

  • @Adventures_with_nick
    @Adventures_with_nick Před 17 dny +6

    I have been studying this for several years, this is the best video I have ever seen documenting Celtic lineage in the Iberian population. Very very well done with this video and thank you!

  • @addeenen7684
    @addeenen7684 Před 18 dny +11

    In my father's line I am a Celt of the Eburon tribe. Julius Caesar tried to kill them. My ancestors then fled to a swamp in Brabant. From my mother's line I may be Hallstatt, the later center of Celtic culture. The culture was not static, every region was connected, like nowadays Europe.

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Před 16 dny +2

      This Dobunni (amongst other Celtic tribes) greets you!!

    • @mueezadam8438
      @mueezadam8438 Před 15 dny +3

      Spanish culture flourished, but not in the way that Greco-Roman and later Franco-Normans could appreciate. It is hard to believe mere ‘hill people’ caused Carthage, Rome, Visigoths, Andalusia , and (frankly) Castilian rulers so much trouble to actually subdue beyond nominal allegiance.
      They were not the kind of conquerer culture that gets overrepresented in the history record, rather they were the unconquerable.

  • @random2829
    @random2829 Před 19 dny +11

    A Happy Beltane to you! Thank you very much for the video.

  • @Airmanagild
    @Airmanagild Před 18 dny +39

    Not only foreigners, but even Spaniards usually forget about our Celtic roots. What's more, some even have some kind of war declared against the "celticism" of Spain. So thank you very much.
    Edit for typos. Lost the heart given by Kevin in the way :(

    • @arturogonzalez6232
      @arturogonzalez6232 Před 14 dny +5

      So true. My family is Mexican going back hundreds of years. But there are a lot of blond and colored eyed individuals (I’m not but my father is) Neither Roman nor Arabic genes on my Spanish side made sense. At first I thought it was Visigothic ancestry but upon more research there was a consensus that Celtic genes made more sense.
      Back to your point, it’s true that even in Latin America and Spain we many times forget that the Celts played an important role in the history and peoples of Spain and by extension Latin America.

    • @angyliv8040
      @angyliv8040 Před 10 dny +1

      @@arturogonzalez6232Visigoth gens are not very extended.

    • @SonOfArganthus
      @SonOfArganthus Před 10 dny

      @@angyliv8040 but the Spaniards themselves would be the Visigoths since they already integrated with the native people no ?

    • @Airmanagild
      @Airmanagild Před 9 dny +1

      @@SonOfArganthus well, we are a bit of everything. Both my surnames are Visigothic (Airmanagild or Airmanagilds would be the original Gothic form of my first surname). Therefore, by paternal lineage, most likely I descend from a Visigoth, and I definitely have Visigothic ancestry, given that I have several more Germanic surnames. It's safe to asume. But genetically, it seems the Germanic genes are not very prominent among us. I have greenish/amber eyes and I am white. But I look like Tobey Maguire, not something like Alexander Skarsgård. I'm pretty sure genetically I'm overwhelmly Celt, just like so many other Spaniards.

    • @juanfrancisco9417
      @juanfrancisco9417 Před 6 dny +1

      ​​@@SonOfArganthusSpaniard race es apróximadamente:
      40% indoeuropea celta.
      35% indoeuropea íbera.
      10% indoeuropean latina. (Roma)
      10% indoeuropea germánica (visigodos, vándalos y suevos).
      5% semitas (árabe, bereber norte de África, y judia) y otros (eslavos e Iranos por los alanos).
      Puede verlo en el MAPA GENÉTICO EUROPEO.

  • @st4rl0rd10
    @st4rl0rd10 Před 12 dny +3

    Cantabria is beautiful. Guys, you should visit it sometime. Galicia aswell

  • @Bjorn_Algiz
    @Bjorn_Algiz Před 19 dny +11

    Ah I'm in love with the title already! ❤😊 thank you for sharing this! I will tune in with an open ears and a clear mind.

  • @dflt5th
    @dflt5th Před 17 dny +30

    Galicia is considered celtic by many and it still maintains a celtic music tradition.

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 17 dny +7

      Et l ancienne galaëcia était jusqu au nord du portugal, même langue, dommage 2 frères qui ce sont opposés... Mais ils seront toujours nos frères... Vive à galicia

    • @luisoliveira8202
      @luisoliveira8202 Před 11 dny +1

      @@teresasemanas5707 🥰

    • @nathanaelpereira5207
      @nathanaelpereira5207 Před 3 dny

      "celtic"... the ROman stratum is still prevalent.

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 3 dny +1

      @@nathanaelpereira5207 on parle de l ancienne "galaëcia" qui était jusqu àu nord... Parlez vous portugais, français.. Désolé, j écris mal en portugais.. Mais je le comprends et parle

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 3 dny

      @@nathanaelpereira5207 en France, il y y'a un peuple descendants de"bretons"ils on encore leurs langue, dance, chant etc

  • @Puzzledtraveller
    @Puzzledtraveller Před 19 dny +34

    I'm Basque. My surname Inclan is a parish in Pravia in Asturias and my DNA is majority Basque Spanish.

    • @random2829
      @random2829 Před 19 dny +7

      We have a Basque community in Arizona. Some interesting history:
      The State of Arizona takes its name from a ranch started by Bernardo de Urrea sometime between 1734 and 1736. The general area around his ranch was also known as Arizona. He and a majority of the first explorers, settlers, and miners in the area were Basque and it is they who probably gave the Basque name Arizona (the good oak) to the region.

    • @dr.victorvs
      @dr.victorvs Před 19 dny +2

      I was 29 years old when I realized by surname "Vasconcelos" had to do with Basque Country.

    • @MW_Asura
      @MW_Asura Před 18 dny +1

      You mean you're American

    • @random2829
      @random2829 Před 18 dny +5

      @@MW_Asura In some parts of the country, those are "fightin' words". Many have not bought into the concept of the "melting pot" where ancestral languages, cultures, and religion are destroyed and replaced with "American" culture.

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Před 16 dny +2

      @@random2829 Thank you! So tired of being subsumed into "the "melting pot".

  • @Cailean_MacCoinnich
    @Cailean_MacCoinnich Před 19 dny +66

    Very interesting vid.
    As a native Scot with 50% Celtic, 24% Scandinavian and 20% Briton, I feel for the Iberian Celts. The native populations are being decimated faster now than at any time in history.
    We've lost our languages, most of our cultures, and now we're being removed from the gene pool.

    • @MalachiHealey
      @MalachiHealey Před 18 dny +13

      Do not go gently into that good night.

    • @MaironTheAdmirable
      @MaironTheAdmirable Před 17 dny +7

      The britons were celts. So you’re 70% Celtic

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 Před 17 dny +6

      you still see the Celtic legacy in the north of Spain & Portugal. blond hair, blue eyes and fair skin is not uncommon in the Iberian peninsula, the further north you go.

    • @MannyKnowsYourSecrets
      @MannyKnowsYourSecrets Před 17 dny +7

      @@bconni2 Those are mostly visigothic and english, french and other immigrant heritage.

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 17 dny +5

      ​@@MannyKnowsYourSecretsles celtes était aussi beaucoup roux, aux, yeux bleu, verts...
      Et je suis du nord... Très blanche aux yeux amande noisettes et beaucoup dans ma famille sont aux yeux bleus, verts et aussi du roux.

  • @user-of9go8yc2d
    @user-of9go8yc2d Před 19 dny +11

    Força Luso

    • @Benito-lr8mz
      @Benito-lr8mz Před 18 dny +7

      Viva Viriato🇵🇹 y Viva Numancia🇪🇦

    • @Hispania_45
      @Hispania_45 Před 14 dny

      Arriba España ✋🏻🇪🇸

  • @DGB120
    @DGB120 Před 19 dny +9

    Awesome content! Best way to start off the day❤

  • @Andy_Babb
    @Andy_Babb Před 18 dny +2

    Fantastic! Another well made doc! Thank you! Love this channel

  • @ComicAcolyte
    @ComicAcolyte Před 8 hodinami

    I love this channel man I'm obsessed with my Celtic heritage I live East Dunbartonshire in Scotland and I can still feel the echoes of my ancestors and how they resisted the romans. Great place to run my region.

  • @TheHeathenCoalition
    @TheHeathenCoalition Před 19 dny +13

    Interesting Topic, Happy Beltane!

  • @SirMillz
    @SirMillz Před 8 dny +1

    I've always had an interest in the Celt Iberians. Thank you for this video.

  • @GarfieldRex
    @GarfieldRex Před 18 dny +7

    21:43 Extremely interesting, just the other day I was watching a video of thr Celtiberians, but was missing the origin, of the Celts specifically. Many thanks! Also, it is assumed that the Astures in the region of Asturias who began Spanish Reconquista were pretty intact in their Celtic culture, Christian with some pagan rites, but pretty cohesive and not much alike the Visigoths and Romans.

  • @anxeletemccolin699
    @anxeletemccolin699 Před 10 dny

    Great video, so well documented and enjoyable. Thank you for the good work and greetings from celtic Asturias!

  • @pedrokarstguimaraes1096
    @pedrokarstguimaraes1096 Před 19 dny +8

    💪 I was naturaly listening irish music and culture. It is an impulse writen in genetic. We are still here.
    About horns in helmets there were not. I recomend “Les Celtes” from Bompiani, sponsored by FIAT, a true enciclopédia about Kelts, in images.

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Před 18 dny +3

      Look up Celtiberian helmets. The picture does not show horns exactly but it is based on actual artifacts

    • @Leontemplar-yt6ff
      @Leontemplar-yt6ff Před 14 dny +2

      @FortressofLugh I prefer wings myself 😆

  • @janschipper5750
    @janschipper5750 Před 19 dny +1

    Nice one again. Keep up the good work.

  • @kathleenmccrory9883
    @kathleenmccrory9883 Před 19 dny +4

    Very interesting subject. Thank you for sharing.

  • @newweaponsdc
    @newweaponsdc Před 6 dny +3

    A Welsh linguist here on CZcams (Ben Llwyelyn) who specializes in Celtic languages showed that the reason why Portuguese sounds so totally different from other romance languages is because of the pre-Roman Celtic languages spoken there. He said that Portuguese is Latin spoken by Celts; but Spanish although unrelated to Basque in origin, has the exact same phonemes as Basque so therefore Spanish is Latin spoken by Basques. The -sh sounds before consonants is common to both Irish (Gaelic) and Portuguese; and you find the nasal vowels and diphthongs so common in Portuguese in Breton as well.

    • @miguelnunezd6319
      @miguelnunezd6319 Před 5 dny

      Only portuguese or also galician? Cause they have the same roots

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 3 dny

      ​@@miguelnunezd6319certaines villes, jusqu au nord, mais pas toutes.. Je crois qu'il y a là carte sur Google, et l ancienne carte du comté de coimbra, portucalence

  • @Alasdair37448
    @Alasdair37448 Před 16 dny +1

    Beautiful video and I love your conclusion at the end. Also could you link some of your sources in the description so that I might delve into this topic a little deeper and see the evidence for myself?

  • @jalbertseabra2283
    @jalbertseabra2283 Před 8 dny +1

    Rather interesting and yet, highly speculative.
    Living in Portugal, I had the opportunity to visit several pre-roman population centers, the Castros.
    The Lusitanios are considered extremely significant in our pre-roman History.
    Unfortunately, relevant studies are not being systematically pursued. at this time.

  • @rorymax8233
    @rorymax8233 Před 19 dny

    Fascinating and very enjoyable 👏👏👏

  • @dhenriqueff
    @dhenriqueff Před 14 dny +2

    Thank you from a Lusitanian Celt.

  • @thegreenmage6956
    @thegreenmage6956 Před 19 dny +2

    Nice one Kevin 👍 another one 😙

  • @alvarodelavega
    @alvarodelavega Před 4 dny +1

    From what I have heard from scholars of Iberian history, the ancient tribes in the North of the peninsula were proto-Celtic peoples, an older variant of Celts. On the other hand, it was a huge variety of different tribes, not as a single culture, frequently battling each other. Something like what Papua is, countless valleys and mountains inhabited by different peoples with some points in common, such as metal works of similar shapes, such as tools or ornaments, ceramics, or art.

  • @pedromiranda1000
    @pedromiranda1000 Před 6 dny +2

    e center and north of Portugal you'll still see a lot of evidence they left behind. Fun fact, if you're Portuguese and you go to Galiza you'll notice that the language is really similar to Portuguese, maybe an evidence of our common ancestry. Also there is a local places in Portugal where some people speak a língua mirandesa (similar to my own name :D) which if you're Portuguese is really hard to understand, not sure if it's related to celts or not. Another fun fact, in Portugal you can see the statue of Viriato in Viseu and you can also see another statue in a museum in Zamora, Spain. Viriato is a lusitanian heroe that fought the romans.

  • @Brenden667
    @Brenden667 Před 2 dny

    That was well done. Good story telling.

  • @josegamurca
    @josegamurca Před 16 dny +7

    I think I see now why languages like old Welsh and old Portuguese are so similar in certain aspects. They wore the same kind of Celts.

  • @chesvilgonzalezvilches8309
    @chesvilgonzalezvilches8309 Před 19 dny +20

    🇪🇸 Las tribus hispánicas, celtas, íberos, celtiberos, turdulos, lusitanos y otras más lucharon y resistieron a los romanos durante 200 años. Numancia es el símbolo de la resistencia y el sacrificio de un pueblo ante el invasor.

    • @Benito-lr8mz
      @Benito-lr8mz Před 18 dny +1

      Son nuestras verdaderas raíces étnicas y culturales no perderlas nunca!!.

    • @BETOETE
      @BETOETE Před 16 dny +1

      celtas ibericos, uníos contra el vasallaje romano al igual que trato Inglaterra con Boudicca (desafortunadamente perdio, pero su memoria de rebeldía persiste!).

    • @mueezadam8438
      @mueezadam8438 Před 15 dny

      @@BETOETECassius among other classic historians was an unreliable narrator writing centuries after the fact, with an agenda to write off any Roman loses as flukes or treachery rather than any legitimate strength of the opposing force.
      Why did Rome lose Britannia? B-because we were too busy! _(Ignore the fact that the province was like half a century old at this point- implying the romanization effort barely reached past the settlements)_
      Why did Rome lose Germania? B-because those damn barbarians were incapable of being civilized! _(ignore the fact that most rebellions were Romanized Germans who described living conditions in the empire as worse than slavery-Bavati revolt for example)_

  • @juststardust8103
    @juststardust8103 Před 5 dny

    Great video full of information.

  • @edfer81
    @edfer81 Před 14 dny +2

    I'm related with this. Greetings from Barcelos (Barca Celia)

  • @colinjames7569
    @colinjames7569 Před 19 dny +3

    I already knew this.
    Gaelige may not have a language. We share history orally. There is a past we know and identify with. Thank you for your efforts Kevhan 😊

    • @Uncanny_Mountain
      @Uncanny_Mountain Před 16 dny

      Same as the Maori in New Zealand
      Who share the same Sothic Lunar Calendar as the Chaldeans, and the Irish

  • @peyxx
    @peyxx Před 11 dny +2

    you just need to go to a tras-os-montes village(north portugal) and bread a gulp of cold winter hair to know the celts presence

  • @user-nw5fg2mw8b
    @user-nw5fg2mw8b Před 19 dny +2

    Thanks interesting wise info

  • @christophervance1165
    @christophervance1165 Před 18 dny +2

    This was dope.

  • @dave3gan
    @dave3gan Před 19 dny +2

    Excellent video, really found it interesting - especially the connections to Ireland (being Irish)

  • @user-hg1ky3cj2s
    @user-hg1ky3cj2s Před 13 dny

    Wonderful video. Thanks so much. Lynn in Naples FL

  • @anna3046
    @anna3046 Před 4 dny +3

    I’m Portuguese blond with green eyes with origins in Northern Portugal, Celtic country!

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 3 dny

      Roux, blond dans ma famille avec des yeux bleu, verts et moi très noisettes en amande..

  • @MrSludov
    @MrSludov Před 17 dny +1

    Your channel is amazing on every level. Not only is it impeccable on an academic level, where you show a deep knowledge of classical sources and the latest archaeological discoveries. The perfect editing, the extraordinary conjunction of visual story with spoken story, the careful diction, your own personal appeal... I find all of this outstanding to the highest degree. Congratulations, I always look forward to your latest post, and I am never disappointed.
    As a Spaniard I have to say that this is one of the episodes in which your talent has reached a higher note. It's absolutely perfect.

  • @jamesbusald7097
    @jamesbusald7097 Před 17 dny

    great show

  • @BBD1
    @BBD1 Před 13 dny +1

    Nice! I disnt knew!
    Great video from a Celto-Iberian hehe

  • @veronicalogotheti1162
    @veronicalogotheti1162 Před 18 dny +2

    Thank you

  • @basilbrushbooshieboosh5302

    Great. Thanks.
    Barrett - Barretta - Barrettes
    I have kin there somewhere. Closest I know are great grandparents Antonio and Maria Barretta from Italian Switzerland.

  • @ionaguirre
    @ionaguirre Před 17 dny +1

    Quite a nice video.
    I'm from nothern Spain, actual Navarra (basque and spanish, of course, speakers) but living at Avila Mountains, the land of the Vetones(Vetons) tribe.
    People here is very concious and proud of their celtic heritage. Many traces can be found everywhere. Paints, engraved stones, figures, ceramic ...
    Again, nice video.

  • @frankhernandez6883
    @frankhernandez6883 Před hodinou

    *Excellent. from one Kelt to another!*

  • @IamKingCraig
    @IamKingCraig Před 19 dny +2

    Arddechog, you are doing important work. Would be good to have a chat. Much to share.
    Heddwch a bendithion ❤

  • @WillsM85
    @WillsM85 Před 14 dny +2

    Thank you for mentioning that ancient Irish mythology that says that humans arriving in boats from Iberia were the first human inhabitants of Ireland. There has to be some truth to this as it's so specific.

  • @MiguelCoBMaggot
    @MiguelCoBMaggot Před 16 dny +3

    At 18:40 you show my city of Barcelos and caption it as Braga, technically true as Barcelos is in the district of Braga, but they're two different cities, it would be a bit like showing Albany but captioning it as New York City. Just thought it was a bit funny.

  • @zachscully
    @zachscully Před 19 dny +3

    More on the non-Indo Europeans, proto-Celts, and Celts of ancient Iberia pre- and at-contact with Carthage and Rome, for Bealtaine!

  • @Leontemplar-yt6ff
    @Leontemplar-yt6ff Před 9 dny +2

    The earliest surviving account of Irish origins is found in the Historia Brittonum ("History of the Britons") (And the Origins of the Arthurian Legends) written in Wales in the 828. It says that Ireland was settled by three groups of people from the Iberian Peninsula. The first are the people of Partholón, who all die of plague. The second are the people of Nemed, who eventually return to Iberia. The last group from Hispania (mīles Hispaniae), who sail to Ireland in thirty ships. All but one of their ships are sunk. its passengers are considered the ancestors of all the Irish.

    • @Leontemplar-yt6ff
      @Leontemplar-yt6ff Před 9 dny +1

      It also says that after that even more waves came and inhabited Britain.

  • @Member3285
    @Member3285 Před 18 dny

    Nice work, I appreciate the evidence-supported statements. Now, I am curious about the cultural influences between Saharan pastoral nomads and bell-beaker.

  • @umcaraai2417
    @umcaraai2417 Před 19 dny +7

    It's interesting that you mentioned the Bell Beakers being 40% indoeuropean. I am genetically from Northern Portugal, specially celtic places in Trás-Os-Montes and always thought i had 30% indoeuropean and mostly ANF because although i am 1.80m and pale, my eyes are brown, my hair light brown and wavy and i have an roman nose. However when i did ancestry test and later confirmed my results in various vahaduo calculators i was: 46.6% Indoeuropean, 40.8% Neolithic Farmer, 6.8% Epipaleolithic north africa (due to stone age migrations i assume, not moorish conquest, since there is no arab or proto african in the mixture) and 5.8% western hunter gatherer. Do i pass as a Celt? Or do i need to be blue/green eyed from the british isles?

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Před 19 dny +5

      Not so much that the bell beakers were 40% Steppe derived. They were actually often higher than that in percentage terms. What I meant was that around 40% of the gene pool in Bronze Age Iberia was represented by this incoming population. The steppe percentages thus would have been lower than that. However, the steppe percentage was increased further with the Urnfield Celtic migration.
      Commercially available genetic testing should not be taken as entirely accurate. I don't know how they are categorizing "indo-European". However, all Iberian people are indo-European as you have Steppe ancestry and speak Indo-European languages. I wouldn't be too caught up in the specific admixtures.

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Před 19 dny +2

      I don't have blue or green eyes either, brother, so if that is the requirement, we both fall flat.

    • @umcaraai2417
      @umcaraai2417 Před 19 dny +2

      @@FortressofLugh Thank you brother, i shall identify as a Celt now.

  • @ivanbro1208
    @ivanbro1208 Před 13 dny +2

    Im portuguese and 30% of my dna is celtic, and another 50% pure iberian. So i would say quite large indeed

  • @binalcensored2104
    @binalcensored2104 Před 14 dny +2

    Being a Bragaerae, since kid I always felt a great attraction for Ireland and Scotland, I even used to dream with those places, it was like I was dreaming with an ancient home village...

    • @KrlKngMrtssn
      @KrlKngMrtssn Před 14 dny

      It's a romantic sentiment, an emotion. Legitimate but irrational.

    • @binalcensored2104
      @binalcensored2104 Před 13 dny +1

      @@KrlKngMrtssn Microbs were just something irracional not even 100 years ago.

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 2 dny

      Je suis attiré par l Irlande et fascinée depuis mes 11ans...et je ne comprenais pas pourquoi.
      C est quand j ai vu un film et à l âge de 11 ans, je suis tombé amoureuse et j en n est 55ans! Et ma famille viens de tras dos montes, bisous à tout les portugais dans le monde 🇵🇹🇫🇷

  • @Leontemplar-yt6ff
    @Leontemplar-yt6ff Před 18 dny +7

    (Oldest findings based in Iberia) - “ it is now believed they came from Netherlands”

  • @silvinabelmonte
    @silvinabelmonte Před 19 dny +6

    Viva Galicia❤

  • @marciocarvalho8975
    @marciocarvalho8975 Před 14 dny +2

    A cultura Celta surgiu na península Ibérica como já foi provado

  • @jonathans9537
    @jonathans9537 Před 12 dny

    Kevin can you do a video on Germany at some point? It would be incredible to see you tackle it.

  • @thebrocialist8300
    @thebrocialist8300 Před 19 dny +2

    Great work, man! 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @txibiam6117
    @txibiam6117 Před 15 dny

    very interesting

  • @danthemanjkms
    @danthemanjkms Před 19 dny +2

    The present day basque country was inhabited by three different celtic tribes upon the arrival of the romans to the area. Their partial annihilation brought in colonizers from already romanized people and subjected peoples like the ancestors of the basques who were living in and at the foothills of the Pyrenees.
    Their loyalty was the reason they weren’t ended as a culture and were left alone to be bilingual in latin and in their dialects as well as spread into the current basque country and a pocket of La Rioja during the roman period.
    It’s curious that the three main surviving ancient basque dialects/languages roughly correspond to the three territories of the previous celtic tribes.

  • @padraigmaclochlainn8866

    Kevin, great video, I have a question.
    What is your opinion on the Upton Chamber? A Stone chamber unlike any of the other root cellars in Massachusetts, dating to around the 1600s. It is akin and very similar to one's in Ireland and it's door aligns with the setting sun on the solstice. Also, thoughts on Dal Riata Gael slaves on the nordic voyage to North America?

  • @Annatar
    @Annatar Před 14 dny

    Awesome video as always! One nitpick: you sometimes say CELTS and show footage of clearly Germanic peoples with the Suebian knot!

  • @audiovideando1592
    @audiovideando1592 Před 16 dny +1

    Great video! Just a small correction to the extension of the iberian celts. They also occupied what is nowadays known as Basque country, as is shown in the ancient toponomy (names of rivers and mountains) and some traditions like the sacred oak. The basques inhabited originally the adjacent land to the east, and spread out westwards to their actual location right after the fall of the Roman empire.

    • @BETOETE
      @BETOETE Před 16 dny +2

      there is a certain genetic connexion between the modern Irish/Cornish/Welsh population and the north Iberian peninsula but with the Basques too, however is not proven that Basques and British Celts are related directly but thru a third party, above all language and cultural aspects are different.

    • @audiovideando1592
      @audiovideando1592 Před 15 dny

      @@BETOETE It is fascinating how the basque language was preserved. It's the only pre indoeuropean language in Europe (hungarian, finnish and turkish are non indoeuropean but not preindoeuropean since they arrived at a latter date). It has all to do with the Pyrenees and the borders between France and Spain. The physical and political divide allowed that language to survive in the high mountains. However, the Pyrenees have two open gateways at both extremes: in the east (towards Catalonia) is very broad, in the west is narrower but also accesible to the Basque country. So the ancient basques roamed mainly in the central Pyrenees. After the invasion of Suevi, Vandals and Alans, the present Basque country (which had been celtic) was weakened, and the basques spread out to that area mixing up with the remaining celt population. Later on, after the muslim invasion, the christian state of Navarra was created and that helped to the preservation of the basque language.

    • @BETOETE
      @BETOETE Před 15 dny +1

      @@audiovideando1592 yeah, there's a connexion DNA between Irish Celts and Basques but it doesn't mean that they are related all way thru

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 3 dny

      ​@@audiovideando1592pourtant en France... Les "bretons" sont celtes, ca langue, ses chants, même c est dances

  • @giuseppersa2391
    @giuseppersa2391 Před 19 dny +3

    Well I know what I'm having for breakfast tomorrow morning ❤🇿🇦😎✌️🌹

  • @suzannedunn4978
    @suzannedunn4978 Před 16 dny

    Thanks!

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Před 16 dny

      Thank you!

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 2 dny

      ​@@FortressofLughbonsoir, vous parlez français, il y'a "les bretons" en France c est bien connu celtes, leurs langues, chant, dance..
      Et moi ma famille qui vient de tras dos montes, et nous avons aussi des yeux bleus, verts, blond,et des cheveux roux. Et mon dernier fils... Là barbe rousse 😂, il es pas content. Bien le bonsoir de France

  • @angrytedtalks
    @angrytedtalks Před 16 dny +2

    The concept of a cultural identity is blurred by history due to genetic mixing, language, political or military conquest and natural cultural change.
    By the same process that many modern Spaniards and Portuguese may consider themselves "Celt", the English (also subject to the regular invasions and migrations of other European groups and the loss of Celtic languages) are also predominantly Celt.
    Though born in Cornwall and with a hint of Irish and Scottish ancestry, my mother (from Kent) always described us as Celt.
    The fact that the Celtic _culture_ came from Austria/Switzerland in its most ancient form is underpinned by the spread to Galacia (central Turkey), Ireland and the extremities of Europe's Atlantic seaboard.
    We don't use the bell beaker pottery or swirly patterns on bronze and gold jewellery, so to consider ourselves Celt seems a bit of a stretch given the obvious DNA mixing of 2,000+ years.
    No question that the Celts are a vital component in European history, however.

  • @10hawell
    @10hawell Před 18 dny +3

    Kant in Polish means outer corner like of a table, with róg (read rug -horn) meaning inner corner, like corner of a room

    • @joebidet2050
      @joebidet2050 Před 18 dny

      Kant in kyrgyz is sugar 😊

    • @jacowaco8841
      @jacowaco8841 Před 15 dny

      So it is in both Spanish and Portuguese, canto.

  • @arturoarche4113
    @arturoarche4113 Před 12 dny

    This is such an interesting video. I am of Spanish heritage and some of my DNA is actually Celtic in origin. I was raised in north central Spain in Salamanca, and I remember the history classes mentioning the Celtic presence in that area. There were stone figures called “verracos”, or male pigs near the Roman Bridge over the Tormes River at what was the southern entrance of the city at that time (the 1960’s). I believe these still stand today. These stone figures were all over the province and in nearby Avila and Segovia. These were attributed to the vacceos which were thought to be Celtic in origin. At that time there was not much interest in the Celtic heritage in Spain, other than the Galician and Asturian bagpipe music of the North. The academic stance at the time was that Spain was not generally considered to have much Celtic ancestry, in fact it was argued that their sparse presence was not relevant enough because they were mostly absorbed by the local tribes which were called Iberians. Most of the ancient pre-history at that time centered around these people and the Tartessians that settled in the south. I am very glad that there is a renewed interest in this topic and that dogmas considered true in the past have been proven wrong.

    • @tannhauser137
      @tannhauser137 Před 3 dny +1

      Los verracos corresponden en su gran mayoría a los vettones. Los verracos son algo exclusivo de los vettones, pueblo celtibérico establecido en las actuales provincias de Ávila, Salamanca, el sur de Zamora, el oeste de Toledo y el norte de Cáceres, aunque ya sabemos que es difícil delimitar con precisión los territorios que abarcaba cada tribu. De los últimos encontrados en el yacimiento de “El Gordo” se ubica en la cima del pico homónimo, a una altitud de 998 metros sobre el nivel del mar, delimitando los términos municipales de Plasencia, Oliva de Plasencia y Cabezabellosa. Tienes también unas ESTELAS, reproducen guerreros celtas con sus ornamentos y armas en Torrejón el Rubio. También se han hallado otros dos verracos en Botija (Cáceres) y otro en Segura de Toro.
      En realidad no es en el norte dónde habían CELTAS era en la parte OCCIDENTAL DE LA PENÍNSULA y hay más restos arqueológicos en EXTREMADURA que en todo el NORTE junto, por algo los VETTONES, los LUSITANOS y los CELTICI estaban en esa zona. El ‘Tesoro de Berzocana’, conjunto de dos torques (collares en forma de herradura circular) decoradas de oro macizo de 24 quilates y la pátera (plato o vasija poco profunda) de bronce que al parecer las contuvo. Estos pueblos se dividían entre los de origen celta y los de origen íbero.Los que habitaban la zona de las Villuercas, Jara e Ibores, eran del primer grupo, concretamente vetones. Otros pueblos celtas asentados en Extremadura fueron los lusitanos, asentados en el oeste de la provincia de Cáceres, y los célticos, que ocupaban el sudoeste de Badajoz. Entre los íberos se encontraban los turdetanos, ocupando el oeste de la provincia pacense y los túrdulos, asentados en el sudeste. Los castros (poblados fortificados) de Aldeacentenera, Berzocana, Retamosa y Fresnedoso de Ibor son un buen ejemplo de las culturas indígenas de la península ibérica. Ubicados en algunos de los lugares más estratégicos del Geoparque Mundial de la UNESCO.

  • @xavier5131
    @xavier5131 Před 7 dny

    When the English conquered Britain, some britons went to France but others went to northern Galicia where they founded a village named Britonia and lived pacifically. They even had their own bishops, like Maeloc. When the moors entered Spain, the bishop of Braga moved to Britonia. Still today, some celtic traditions are kept in Galicia, like Halloween celebrations.To me, this evidences a continuous relationship among the atlantic Celts until the fall of the Roman Empire.

  • @sylviabendavid
    @sylviabendavid Před 15 dny

    Thanks

  • @wingmanhoy3999
    @wingmanhoy3999 Před 15 dny +1

    O hEochaidh Haughey Hoey Hoy, I have traced my true origins to Rhine River area of Switzerland and Germany, we are apart of the Eraine and Darini Fiatach, Nemedian people , Noahs original descendents,Fiatach dynasty, Tuatha De Danann Clanna Dedad, very much enjoyed this video, amazing history, all the very best. Amazing my family history is Ireland, Scottish of Norse Haey Orkney Island Hoy Island.

  • @XnecromungerX
    @XnecromungerX Před 18 dny

    i was told my greatgrandma is Celtiberian? so interesting to see this video

    • @MW_Asura
      @MW_Asura Před 18 dny +1

      She's as Celtiberian as we in Iberia are. In other words, not at all

    • @XnecromungerX
      @XnecromungerX Před 17 dny

      @@MW_Asura thanks

    • @Hispania_45
      @Hispania_45 Před 14 dny +2

      @@MW_AsuraHow are Iberians not Celtiberian? Those are the principle ancestors from the Iron Age.

  • @Alejojojo6
    @Alejojojo6 Před 4 dny

    My mother inherited haplogroup is U5 which is hunter gatherer (appeared in Europe between 20 000-12 000 years ago) while in my father side im R1b which appeared 6000 years ago from the Yamnaya peoples of the steppes

  • @alchemiamagic4722
    @alchemiamagic4722 Před 12 dny

    Very nice :-) I truly enjoyed :-) I am a 70% genetic Iberian, by the way

  • @nnonotnow
    @nnonotnow Před 19 dny +5

    Fascinating. An advanced study of my DNA indicates 9% Iberian. Something I was unaware of. I don't know about the Celtic part. Most of my ancient DNA is Germanic or Nordic. Thanks so much for this

    • @joebidet2050
      @joebidet2050 Před 18 dny

      Yeah me too
      I ran dna thru different sites
      And always get about 8% spain as hit
      Was surprised

    • @joshuaperkins9916
      @joshuaperkins9916 Před 17 dny

      @nnonotnow,
      I have similar situation. The main player ancestry companies have me as Norwegian, British and Swedish mainly, I show up anywhere from roughly 9% to 12% Iberian with these other companies. Relatives that I personally know along with numerous pop ups with the main players, are mainly U.S. Brits some U.S. Scandinavians and then Norwegians, followed by England and some Scotland and then Sweden. Perhaps we should all collaborate and figure this out?

    • @mueezadam8438
      @mueezadam8438 Před 15 dny

      Sorry what do you mean by ancient? Germanic, (much less Nordic) migration was mainly during the early classical era. Do you mean proto-Germanic? If so that’s quite interesting!

    • @micupedro
      @micupedro Před 12 dny +2

      I am Spanish from Valencia, on the Mediterranean coast, and I do not have any Irish ancestors but I am 10% Irish. (Apart from Iberian, Italian, Western Europe and Baltic or Fines). Obviously these coincidences come from an ancient substratum of peoples who arrived from Eastern Europe and the Caucasus and mixed with each other and with the native hunter-gatherers, in a period between the Neolithic and the Iron Age over years and generations.
      I specifically have a large genetic closeness with samples taken from burials of an ancient pre Roman people who lived in the Catalan Pyrenees, called Ilergetaes and whose capital was Ilerda, current Lleida (Lerida in Spanish). It is worth noting the ending of his Getaes name, which presents great resemblance to that of other peoples of the East such as the Massagetae and the Daciogeta. But the most curious thing is that I also have great genetic proximity to burials in southeastern Moldova of individuals belonging to the Scythas who probably belonged to the same ethnic group.

  • @ryand2543
    @ryand2543 Před 18 dny

    Hell yeah

  • @micupedro
    @micupedro Před 12 dny

    I am Spanish from Valencia, on the Mediterranean coast, and I do not have any Irish ancestors but I am 10% Irish. (Apart from Iberian, Italian, Western Europe and Baltic or Fines). Obviously these coincidences come from an ancient substratum of peoples who arrived from Eastern Europe and the Caucasus and mixed with each other and with the native hunter-gatherers, in a period between the Neolithic and the Iron Age over years and generations.
    I specifically have a large genetic closeness with samples taken from burials of an ancient pre Roman people who lived in the Catalan Pyrenees, called Ilergetaes and whose capital was Ilerda, current Lleida (Lerida in Spanish). It is worth noting the ending of his Getaes name, which presents great resemblance to that of other peoples of the East such as the Massagetae and the Daciogeta. But the most curious thing is that I also have great genetic proximity to burials in southeastern Moldova of individuals belonging to the Scythas who probably belonged to the same ethnic group.

  • @LouisMota
    @LouisMota Před 10 dny +2

    I’m from northern Portugal. My paternal haplogroup is R1B-L2. It originated from the Hallstatt Celts in the Alps.

    • @pedromiranda1000
      @pedromiranda1000 Před 6 dny

      Hi Louis. How this you find that you're paternal haplogroup is R1B-L2?

    • @Alejojojo6
      @Alejojojo6 Před 4 dny +1

      R1B is Yamnaya. Doesnt come from Hallstatt. I have the same one. There are theories even that Celts originated on the atlantic and mot in the Alps

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 Před 19 dny +2

    now that word can't could that also be related to the word Canton Bridgend? Considering Cambridge Oxford and London are three corners of the modern British language? Just speculating here.

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Před 18 dny +1

    Thanks for the good video

  • @katapo777
    @katapo777 Před 3 dny

    23:37 cantabrians ,corner in modern portuguese is canto, fascinating

  • @user-uu4ef9kw4j
    @user-uu4ef9kw4j Před 8 dny

    My husband is descended from Iberian Celts.

  • @LuDa-lf1xd
    @LuDa-lf1xd Před 15 dny +1

    25:25 Numancia makes more sense knowing that 💀

  • @shatterthemirror8563
    @shatterthemirror8563 Před 18 dny +1

    Living in California, I'm glad at least the gold rushes here were far more peaceful at least than what happened in Spain. Strange that the Spanish speakers were the ones who largely got pushed out this time, at least for a while.

    • @bustavonnutz
      @bustavonnutz Před 14 dny

      They were never that populous in California. Most Vaqueros & Californios in general were integrated after California was purchased by the US, as there was only a few thousand of them. Compared to the tens of thousands that would end up migrating to California in the 19th century, they were quickly drowned out demographically.

    • @alfonso87ful
      @alfonso87ful Před 10 dny

      They were not peaceful for the indians.. they were obliterated in just 40 years.. there were no spanish speakers as Spanish did not evolve for hundreds of years

  • @MusicShortsGlobal
    @MusicShortsGlobal Před 15 dny +2

    Does that mean that Mexicans might have Celtic-Iberian DNA because they have Spanish blood? I always wondered about that topic.

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Před 15 dny +5

      They would likely have at least some. However, many people in South and Central America are also to a greater or lesser degree mixed with the native American peoples. Probably Argentinians and Uruguayans might have the most, but I have not really looked into it seriously.

    • @renatopinto3186
      @renatopinto3186 Před 13 dny +1

      I also think it's possible. I'm Portuguese and have 12% Celtic ancestry. My DNA profiling shows faint connections to populations in Brazil and Chile, so it wouldn't be too farfetched for some Mexicans to share Celtiberian ancestry, I would say.

    • @teresasemanas5707
      @teresasemanas5707 Před 2 dny

      ​@@renatopinto3186normal, Portugal à découvert le Brésil, ou il n'y avait que des peuples indigénes... Et ce sont mélangés..

  • @CestLePanda
    @CestLePanda Před 12 dny

    I'm a little less than half Salvadoran Amerindian, some East Slavic ancestry, and the rest Basque, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Welsh... aka Celtiberian. 😂 Thanks for this.