Pre-Celtic

 The pre-Celtic period in the prehistory of Central Europe and Western Europe occurred before the expansion of the Celts or their culture in Iron Age Europe and Anatolia (9th to 6th centuries BC), but after the emergence of the Proto-Celtic language and cultures. The area involved is that of the maximum extent of the Celtic languages in about the mid 1st century BC. The extent to which Celtic language, culture and genetics coincided and interacted during this period remains very uncertain and controversial.

Diachronic distribution of Celtic peoples:
  6th century BC, core Hallstatt territory
  275 BC, maximum Celtic expansion
  Lusitanian area of Iberia where Celtic presence is uncertain

LanguagesEdit

Proto-Celtic is mainly dated to approximately 800 BC, coincident with the Hallstatt culture, while the earliest possible divergence of pre-proto-Celtic dialects from Proto-Indo-European is mainly dated to between 3000 BC and 2000 BC.

In continental Europe, pre-Celtic languages of the European Bronze Age may be taken to comprise two distinct groups.

  • Non-Indo-European languages (i.e. pre-Indo-European languages); these include Basque,[1][2] RhaeticEtruscan,[3] Iberian, which may be related to Basque but is still unclassifiedAquitanian and Paleo-Sardinian. Some scholars group Etruscan, Rhaetic and Lemnian together in the hypothetical Tyrrhenian language family, which may have originated in the Aegean Sea or during the Neolithic north of the Alps.[4][5][6][7] Conversely, the Lemnian language could have arrived in the Aegean Sea during the Late Bronze Age, when Mycenaean rulers recruited groups of mercenaries from Sicily, Sardinia and various parts of the Italian peninsula.[8]
  • Indo-European dialects, such as Illyrian, possibly Lusitanian, the Proto-Italo-Celtic dialects, Belgian and "Old European".[9] However, Lusitanian and Belgian may turn out to be Celtic, while Old European may turn out to be either Celtic or non-Indo-European. The very existence of Indo-European in Western Europe before the arrival of the Celts is highly speculative.

It has been suggested that results of large-scale genetic surveys, undertaken since the late 20th century, show that the present-day speakers of pre-Indo-European languages may not solely represent relict populations. For instance, Basques show a dominance of the Y-DNA Haplogroup R1b,[10] which a majority of scholars now propose spread through Europe relatively recently, from the Eurasian steppe and/or southwest Asia in the late Neolithic period or early Bronze Age (4,000 to 8,000 years ago).[11][10][12][13][14][15] R1b replaced nearly all indigenous male lineages in Iberia from 4500 to 4000 BC.[16] However, present-day Basques also harbor some very rare and archaic lineages, such as the Paleolithic mitochondrial DNA Haplogroup U8a, and autosomal genetic analysis (the whole genome, not just Y-DNA) has shown that a majority of their ancestry derives from Neolithic farmers and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, pre-dating the arrival of speakers of Indo-European languages.[11][17][18][19]

ArchaeologyEdit

A simplified map of archaeological cultures of the late Bronze Age (c. 1200 BC):
  Terramare culture
  central Urnfield culture
  northern Urnfield culture
  Lusatian culture
  (in central Europe) Knovíz culture
  Danubian culture
  Atlantic Bronze Age
  Nordic Bronze Age

In the later Celtic areas there were many disparate archaeological cultures.

HistoryEdit

When the Celts were first recorded about 600 BC, they were already widespread across Iberia, Gaul, and Central Europe.

In Ireland, the Book of Invasions gives a legendary account of the arrival of incoming peoples.

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 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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