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| #Post#: 5961-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Ancient Origins of the Celts | |
| By: guest5 Date: April 29, 2021, 11:23 pm | |
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| Ancient Origins of the Celts - Ancient Civilizations DOCUMENTARY | |
| [quote]The Kings and Generals animated historical documentary | |
| series on the ancient civilizations continues with a video on | |
| the Celts, as we discuss their ancient origins, culture, | |
| religion, economic and political structures, with a focus on the | |
| Hallstatt and La Tene civilizations.[/quote] | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_QizTMIr-0 | |
| #Post#: 16768-------------------------------------------------- | |
| The Apocalyptic Downfall of Roman Britain | |
| By: guest78 Date: December 1, 2022, 3:02 pm | |
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| The Apocalyptic Downfall of Roman Britain | |
| [quote]Around 410 Britain become the first province of the Roman | |
| Empire to fall into barbarian hands. Following that the British | |
| isles would experience one of the worst downfalls in human | |
| history. This short history documentary is meant to contrast | |
| the severe differences between Roman and Post Roman | |
| Britain.[/quote] | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AsSem6JeQ9Q | |
| #Post#: 25757-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Turanian diffusion | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: April 5, 2024, 8:14 am | |
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| Differences between Non-Western Ancient Society and Western | |
| Ancient Society | |
| [quote]The most studied advanced chiefdoms include those of | |
| Tonga, Society Islands, Tahiti, Peru, and Hawaii. The population | |
| of some of these consisted of tens of thousands of members, | |
| headed by several, pyramidal grades of sub-chiefs, with a | |
| paramount chief at the top. In the 1960s and 1970s, it was | |
| commonly believed that chiefdoms in general were kin-based | |
| societies operating on the voluntary contributions of tribal | |
| members to do the work that was required for survival (Fried | |
| 1967). Chiefs were seen as organizers and coordinators of | |
| resources for the mutual benefit of various groups (Service | |
| 1975). In more recent years, however, the view has come to | |
| prevail, as we saw above, that chiefs were aggressive | |
| individuals willfully engaged in aggrandizing strategies, | |
| collecting surpluses from the commoners to establish and enforce | |
| their dominion over time and compete successfully with other | |
| chiefs. Chiefdoms, from what we currently know, were continually | |
| at war and leadership was vested in war leaders (Carneiro 1981). | |
| Then again, chiefs did undertake public activities, such as the | |
| building and maintenance of irrigation works, storage of food, | |
| conduct of long distance trade, and, of course, military | |
| protection and expansion, all which were simply too complex and | |
| important for individual households to handle. | |
| Gat says that the societies Julius Caesar wrote about in his The | |
| Gallic War (58 BC�51 BC) were already highly stratified, �with | |
| chiefs and �big men� transformed into a powerful aristocracy� | |
| (2006: 212). Caesar�s book, Gat says, is full of ethnographic | |
| observations on how the old tribal assemblies of Celtic society | |
| �has been reduced in significance, and ordinary men had all but | |
| lost their say.� The impression Gat leaves is that the Celts had | |
| ceased to be a �ranked� society led by big men. He cites Caesar: | |
| �The most powerful chiefs, and such as had the means to hire | |
| men, commonly endeavored to make themselves king� (212). The | |
| Celts were apparently on their way to becoming a state with a | |
| monarchical ruler. Gat also draws attention to the observations | |
| Caesar made about the Germans as a �more egalitarian tribal | |
| society� than that of the Celts. Gat then states that by the | |
| time Tacitus came to write his Germania (AD 98), he encountered | |
| chief-like Germanic societies that were not as developed as the | |
| Celts of the 1st century BC but were, nevertheless, ruled by | |
| powerful aristocratic chiefs who competed with each other as | |
| leaders of their own retinue of warriors. | |
| According to Gat, these German chieftains were close in their | |
| evolutionary development to the Celts referred to by the | |
| historian Polybius (203�120 BC). Again, Gat is under the | |
| impression that the Germans Caesar observed were members of a | |
| �transegalitarian� (or simple horticultural) society. They were | |
| not. The Indo-European cultures which spread throughout Europe | |
| (2800�1300 BC) were all �Bronze Age� chiefdoms. The Corded | |
| Ware/Single Burial culture that emerged in the North European | |
| Plain at the beginning of the 3rd millennium, the Bell Beaker | |
| phenomenon that spread across western Europe later in the 3rd | |
| millennium, the boat-building maritime heroic tradition that was | |
| visible around the North Sea during the middle of the 2nd | |
| millennium, the Urnfield Late Bronze Age culture (1300-800 BC), | |
| followed by the Hallstatt Early Iron Age culture (800�480 BC), | |
| and then by the La Tene culture (from 400BC to the Roman | |
| Conquest), were all chief-level societies of increasing | |
| complexity ruled by aristocratic elites (Cunliffe 2008: 167�69, | |
| 213�21, 267, 309�16). The Celtic culture Caesar observed was led | |
| by paramount chieftains directly controlling simple chiefdoms | |
| and indirectly controlling (through tributary relations) complex | |
| chiefdoms. | |
| As stated above, I use the term �aristocratic� to designate the | |
| continued presence of an ethos of egalitarianism at the top of | |
| the chiefly hierarchy. I suspect that Gat�s misidentification of | |
| Europe�s simple chiefdoms as �big man� societies was due to the | |
| strong egalitarian spirit still exhibited by these chiefdoms. | |
| The war leaders of the Germanic tribes Caesar observed, for | |
| example, were chosen ad hoc by the tribal assemblies for the | |
| duration of the military activity, and the chiefs (not �big | |
| men�), as Gat refers to them (213), were freely moving warriors | |
| who would compete to attract young warriors eager for adventure | |
| and individual renown. The relations between the members of the | |
| war bands, as Gat recognizes, were �largely egalitarian, | |
| �brotherhoods� of �fellows� � (220).[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| The Uniqueness of Western Civilization by Ricardo Duchesne page | |
| 389 - 390 | |
| #Post#: 31180-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Ancient Origins of the Celts | |
| By: Percussion Date: October 11, 2025, 1:55 pm | |
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| [quote]Celtic percussion and Indian percussion similarities | |
| Celtic and Indian percussion share several similarities, | |
| particularly in their use of drums and other percussion | |
| instruments. Both cultures have a rich history of using drums in | |
| religious and spiritual practices, with Celtic shamans and | |
| Druids using drums to aid in altered states of consciousness, | |
| and Indian percussion instruments like the tabla and mridangam | |
| used in rituals and ceremonies. | |
| The use of drums in both cultures is deeply intertwined with | |
| their religious and spiritual practices, reflecting the | |
| universal nature of drumming as a means of spiritual expression. | |
| Additionally, the combination of Celtic and Indian musical | |
| styles, as seen in projects like Celtic Connections, | |
| demonstrates the potential for cross-cultural musical | |
| collaboration and innovation. | |
| These similarities highlight the interconnectedness of musical | |
| traditions and the shared human heritage that underpins the | |
| development of percussion instruments and their use in various | |
| cultural contexts. [/quote] | |
| https://drumspy.com/academy/celtic-drumming-history-and-overview/ | |
| Celtic Connections combines Celtic and Indian music traditions | |
| [quote]Art has had an interesting history of both expressing the | |
| conventions of culture through folklore and rebelling against | |
| those conventions to create something revolutionary. It can both | |
| reinforce the envelope and push it.[/quote] | |
| https://ubyssey.ca/culture/celtic-connections-combines-celtic-and-indian-music-… | |
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