Celtic IV

Most of the indigenous populations of Great Britain and Ireland today can be partially descended from the ancient people which lived these grounds a long time, before coming from the Celtic and late Germanic people, from the language and the culture. Little is known of their original culture and language, but the remainders can remain in the names of some geographical devices, such as the rivers Clyde, Tamar and the Thames, whose etymology is not very clear but derive almost certainly from a pre-Celtic substrate.


Celtic III

None the following historical upheavals of Europe - even of the wars and the catastrophic famines - seriously embossed the old model regulated by the surge of the farmers. Goths, huns and Romans came and went without any significant impact on gene the ancient chart of Europe. The modern genetic studies proved that the original diffusion of the modern man through Europe took place there is more than 20.000 years and Re-increased refuges after the last ice age approximately 10.000 years ago.


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