Western europe
The Celts never dominated Europe as they were not one people in the accepted sense, rather were they loosely formed tribes.They are variously described as Iberian or Berber Celts or Baltic Celts, either very short and swarthy or abnormally tall and ginger haired which tends to suggest that the early writers about them -the Romans were mistaking them for another group of people altogether, possibly a vanished Germanic tribe.The Iberian Celts similarly have vanished as a tribe or tribes, but some say that the dark, swarthy inhabitants of the Scottish highlands and small pockets on the Irish West coast islands resemble their desert forebears who came from North Africa.AnswerMany people get confused over this. Calling the gauls Celtic etc. But they were a tall Germanic people not Celtic. The Berber Amazigh Celts from north Africa never got across Europe. They made it to Iberia / Basque / Southern Ireland.
The Celts did not die out. The Irish and Scottish ethnic groups are among modern Celtic peoples.The Celts, did not die out. The modern Celts, are the Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Manx, Britons and the Cornish. It is believed that 15-20% of England has Celtic heritage. There are even some Celtic descents around mainland Europe, including Italy or France, or even at some point Asia Minor. I am an Irish Australian, and I consider myself Gaelic and Celtic.
It began in Europe
The Celts were a diverse group of tribal societies that flourished in Europe from around 800 BC to the Roman conquest in the 1st century AD. They reached their peak during the Iron Age, particularly between 500 BC and 1 AD, when they spread across large parts of Western and Central Europe. Their influence began to wane as the Roman Empire expanded and assimilated many Celtic territories. By the early Middle Ages, the Celts had largely been absorbed into the cultures of the regions they inhabited.
The Celts were in Europe.
The Celts
Ireland, where the Celts were.
Celts.
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.
the Celts
The Celts came from Europe (Including the British Isles).
vassal or celts
If you mean people born in Europe, then Europeans But if you mean the first nations, it is hard to say. I believe the first people there were the Celts and thus Celts would be more appropriate. As opposed to Celts, Native Europeans might work.
The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.The Celts were basically a middle European group of people. Gaul was a Roman name for a wide stretch of middle Europe and the people who lived there were called Gauls by the Romans, even though there were many different tribes. The Gauls were Celts as they belonged to the ethnic group of middle Europe.
The druids were part of the Celts. The Celts were a group of people who settled in Gaul (modern day France) Britain, Ireland and many other parts of Europe
I don't think so. The Celts are Nordics. And Germans and others in continental Europe north of the Alps are part Celtic. Some in some regions are heavily Celtic.