![]() |
![]() |
#19 | |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: PR, USA
Posts: 679
|
![]()
Hi Guys,
Yep, I'm originally Galician. The interesting thing is that there are actually two Galicias, one in Northwestern Spain, and another in Poland/Austria. In fact, there are many toponimical names in Spain which are basically recreations of others in the Caucasus. To me, they represent the cultural footprints of our common ancestors. Yes, the celts migrations are a very interesting subject, they reached China, India and even America, long before Colon. An important detail is that these migrations took place in difefrent time periods, and the celtic groups involved were very different in terms of cultures, religion and even language. There was an old celtic deity, Galeach, the goddes of the earth. From her name arises that of many places and ethnic groups, the Gallegos or Galaics (Galici), the french Gales (Gallics), the Welsh (Wales or Gales). It seems that Celts and Vikings shared languages, since the Vikings that settled in Jakobsland (Spanish Galicia) did so just on account of that. When the local Celts went to confront their arrival, they reported the Vikings spoke an old version of the celtic language, an were thus family. Both sides hence coexisted peacefully. And that's a miracle by itself, since both groups were very war-prone. An interesting point is that the eldest celtic and even protoceltic items found have been in Spanish Galicia, not in the Caucasus. Modern Historians are actually rewriting the hsitory of the Celt's origings based on these modern day findings. Celts had very distinctive metallurgic knowledge and arts, some modern historians claim that the Gladius was not exactly a type of blade, but a type of alloy, and that Romans utilized this term to refer to antenna-type anthropomorphic swords, long swords, and falcatas made in Spain, not limiting same to the antenna-pommeled type exclusively found in La Tene's urn culture/necropolis. Well, nuff'sed... M Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
|
|