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  2. Ancient Celtic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Celtic_music

    Carnyx players (bottom right) on a panel from the Gundestrup Cauldron Sculpture depicting a bard with a lyre (Brittany, 2nd century BC). Deductions about the music of the ancient Celts of the La Tène period and their Gallo-Roman and Romano-British descendants of Late Antiquity rely primarily on Greek and Roman sources, as well as on archaeological finds and interpretations including the ...

  3. Gauls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauls

    Some deities were venerated only in one region, but others were more widely known. [30] The Gauls seem to have had a father god, who was often a god of the tribe and of the dead (Toutatis probably being one name for him); and a mother goddess who was associated with the land, earth and fertility [32] (Matrona probably

  4. Celts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celts

    She says some Roman and Greek writers wanted to show that the barbarian Celts lived in "an upside-down world ... and a standard ingredient in such a world was the manly warrior woman". [ 164 ] The Greek philosopher Aristotle wrote in his Politics that the Celts of southeastern Europe approved of male homosexuality.

  5. Mná na hÉireann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mná_na_hÉireann

    Davitt plays with the second couplet of each verse, reversing the meaning and turning the poem into the song of a womanising drunkard, who favours no particular woman (second verse), resorts to drink instead of avoiding it (third verse—though this may be ironic in the original), and whom his lover wants dead (first verse).

  6. Gallia Celtica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallia_Celtica

    The inhabitants of the Celtica region called themselves Celts [1] in their own language, and were later called Galli by Julius Caesar: All Gaul is divided into three parts, one of which the Belgae inhabit, the Aquitani another, those who in their own language are called Celts, in ours Galli, the third.

  7. Names of the Celts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_the_Celts

    Lhuyd was the first to recognise that the Irish, British, and Gaulish languages were related to one another, and the inclusion of the Insular Celts under the term "Celtic" from this time forward expresses this linguistic relationship. By the late 18th century, the Celtic languages were recognised as one branch within the larger Indo-European ...

  8. Galatians (people) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galatians_(people)

    In the aftermath of the battle the Celts settled in northern Phrygia, a region that eventually came to be known as Galatia. [7] The Seleucids built a series of forts at Thyatira, Akrasos and Nakrason and placed garrisons at Seleucia Sidera, Apamea, Antioch of Pisidia, Laodicea on the Lycus, Hierapolis, Peltos and Vlandos to limit Galatian raids.

  9. Waulking song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waulking_song

    Some waulking songs have a strict verse-and-chorus structure. In other songs, the vocables are sung at the end of each line of a verse. In a song like 'S Fliuch an Oidhche ('Wet is the Night'), also known as Coisich a Rùin ('Come on, My Love'), the last two lines of one verse become the first two lines of the following one. A tradition holds ...