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  2. Ancient Celtic warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Celtic_warfare

    Endemic warfare appears to have been a regular feature of Celtic societies. While epic literature depicts this as more of a sport focused on raids and hunting rather than an organized territorial conquest, the historical record is more of different groups using warfare to exert political control and harass rivals, for economic advantage, and in some instances to conquer territory.

  3. Gaelic warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_warfare

    Gaelic warfare was anything but static, as Gaelic soldiers frequently looted or bought the newest and most effective weaponry. Although hit-and-run raiding was the preferred Gaelic tactic in the Middle Ages , there were also pitched battles to settle larger disputes.

  4. Category:Ancient Celtic warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Category:Ancient_Celtic_warfare

    Category for topics on ancient Celtic warfare. For medieval Gaelic warfare, see Gaelic warfare. Subcategories.

  5. Trimarcisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trimarcisia

    Trimarcisia (Ancient Greek: τριμαρκισία, trimarkisia), i. e., "feat of three horsemen", [1] was an ancient Celtic military cavalry tactic or organisation; [2] it is attested in Pausanias' Description of Greece, in which he described the use of trimarcisia by the Gauls during their invasion of Greece in the third century BCE.

  6. Kern (soldier) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kern_(soldier)

    The word may derive from a conjectural proto-Celtic word *keternā, ultimately from an Indo-European root meaning a chain. [2] Kern was adopted into English as a term for a Gaelic soldier in medieval Ireland and as cateran, meaning 'Highland marauder', 'bandit'. The term ceithernach is also used in modern Irish for a chess pawn.

  7. Celtic settlement of Southeast Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_settlement_of...

    After the death of Alexander the Great, Celtic armies began to bear down on the southern regions, threatening the Greek kingdom of Macedonia and the rest of Greece. In 310 BC, the Celtic general Molistomos attacked deep into Illyrian territory, trying to subdue Dardanians, Paeonians and Triballi. However Molistomos was defeated by the Dardanians.

  8. Women held keys to land and wealth in Celtic Britain

    www.aol.com/surprising-power-celtic-women...

    Women in Britain 2,000 years ago appear to have passed on land and wealth to daughters not sons as communities were built around women's blood lines, according to new research.

  9. Highland charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland_charge

    The Scottish and Irish warrior Alasdair Mac Colla is sometimes credited with inventing the Highland charge during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms [1] to meet a particular set of battlefield challenges. [2] It was initially known as the Irish charge, due to the Irish component of Alasdair Mac Colla's Royalist military invasion of Covenanter Scotland.