To get a complete picture of history.
All there cattle,friends and pets
The origin of the English people :Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Frisians(All Germanic tribes),Vikings(Mainly Scandinavians),Normans (Mainly French), Romans (Italians) and Celts ( the Indigenous (English/British) people themselves)
I think that they were the Vikings or Romans
Please be more specific. The Celts were an ethnic group or groups or people who lived all across western Europe and parts of Britain and Ireland. The Romans, at different times, fought many battles against them. In order to answer your question properly we have to know what battle you need info on.
A barbarian is a person who isnt civilized, according to romans and greeks, all except romans, greek and maybe egyptians were barbarians. The vikings were germanic warriors from far away who wanted to plunder, they were barbarians in the eyes of europe
there is not a lot of reasearch to prove that celts had any government. but what we do know is that the celtic tribes all had different leaders to make decisions for their tribes
Almost all. The Celts, the Greeks, the Romans, the Native Americans, the Egyptians, pretty much all of Asia, Africa, America, and the Pacific Islands.
Please clarify your question. If by Celits, you mean Celts, you should be aware that "Celts" is a name of a group of people that populated almost all of Europe and the British Isles. There were many tribes and ethnic groups. Please tell us which one you mean.
It is not known. Your question is extremely broad because there were many Celtic groups and the Celts were originally the biggest ethnic grouping in Western Europe. The Romans fought against many of them. They were attacked many times by the Gauls of northern Italy, who were, Celts and then fought them and conquered them in the 3rd century BC. They fought the Gauls of Gallia, who were also Celts, in the Gallic Wars (59-50 BC) when Julius Caesar conquered Gaul and in subsequent Gallic rebellions. Julius Caesar also carried out two expeditions in the southeast of England, which was inhabited by Celts. The Romans fought against the Celtiberians, the Celts of Spain, in the 2nd century BC. They fought against and conquered Noricum (most of Austria and Slovenia) which was inhabited by Celts, in 16 BC. They conquered southern England in 46 AD, Wales between 48 and 79 AD and northern England in 78 AD, all of which were inhabited by Celts. They pushed into Scotland a number of times, but withdrew and the Picts (Celts) of Scotland raided Roman Britain for centuries. As you can see from the above, it would be very difficult to estimate the number of Romans who died in many centuries of fights against Celtic groups.
No. The first people that came to Ireland were not Celts. They came from the north of Spain. Other peoples came to Ireland too, that make what is now the Irish people, including Vikings and Normans. So, like any country in the world, the people in Ireland have various origins.
The Celts lived all over Europe: but in the successive waves of invasions - the Romans, and after the fall of Rome a whole series of barbarians - they were driven further and further West, until the remained clinging to the edge of Europe in what is known as the Celtic fringe: Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Cornwall, Brittany. The Celts lived in central Europe: northern France, part of Holland, Belgium, England, and parts of Switzerland. These lands had long been settled by the warlike Celts. Soon after 500 BC, the Celts wandered east and west in search of fertile farm land. Around 390 BC, the Celts even invaded Rome and sacked the city. It took two hundred years for the Romans to drive the Celts from Italy.
It depends on what time in Celtic history you are talking about. Broadly, very broadly, before Romans became Christians and then brought Christianity to the Celts, they practiced their native Pagan religion(s). They have many gods, and it appears that for many, if not all Celts, Druids were their priests. During and after Roman colonization, Christianity spread until it became the dominant religion among the remaining Celtic peoples.