Transcript
Page 1: Osher History Ireland Scotland Wales 1d

Celtic migrations into the Mediterranean world—Greeks record them as “Keltoi”, Romans refer to them as “Gauls”Migration begins in the early La Tene era, 400-200 BC

Maps from Barry Cunliffe’s The Ancient Celts

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Celts in Macedon and Greece

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Celts in Asia Minor—the Galatians

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The Dying Gaul, 3rd century BCCapitoline Museum, Rome

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Celtic warrior and wife, 3rd century BCMuseo Nazionale delle Terme, Rome

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Julius Caesar’s conquest of Gaul.Bust c. late 1st century BC, Vienna Museum of Art History

• Julius Caesar made proconsul of Gaul, 59-51 BC

• Arverni tribe and Vercingetorix

• Battle of Alesia, 52 BC• Gaul largely conquered

by 51 BC; ruled by Rome until 480s AD.

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Vercingetorix statue at Alesia, created 1865 by Aimé Millet. Vercingetorix coin, circa mid-1st century BC

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The Roman Conquest of BritainMap from Nora Chadwick, The Celts.

• Catuvellauni– Cassivellaunus, fl. 54 BC– Cunobelinus, fl. 42 AD– Caratacus, fl. 50 AD

• Iceni– Prasutagus, d. 61 AD– Boudicca, d. 61 AD

• Brigantes– Cartimandua, fl. 50-70 AD

• Boudica’s revolt, 61 AD– Burned Colchester, London,

and St. Albans• Britain “settled” by 84 AD;

ruled by Rome until 409 AD

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Boudica statue, by Thomas Thornycroft, 1905, near Houses of Parliament, London.

Silver coin associated with Boudica and Iceni tribe, mid-1st century AD


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