Ancestors of the Celts
Ancestors of the Celts
The following is a brief timeline of the history of the "Celts", drawing on information from Brittania and other online resources.
Overall Timeline | British Isles and Cultures Referred To |
10,000 BCE | Neolithic (new stone age) Period beings in Europe. |
5000 BCE | Neolithic Period begins in British Isles; first evidence of farming appears; stone axes, antler combs, pottery in common use. |
4500-2500 BCE | Kurgan culture. |
4000 BCE | Construction of the "Sweet Track" (named for its discoverer, Ray Sweet) begun; many similar raised, wooden walkways were constructed at this time providing a way to traverse the low, boggy, swampy areas in the Somerset Levels, near Glastonbury; earliest-known camps or communities appear (i.e. Hembury, Devon). |
3500-3000 BCE | First appearance of long barrows and chambered tombs; at Hambledon Hill (Dorset), the primitive burial rite known as "corpse exposure" was practiced, wherein bodies were left in the open air to decompose or be consumed by animals and birds. |
3000-2500 BCE | Castlerigg Stone Circle (Cumbria), one of Britain's earliest and most beautiful, begun; Pentre Ifan (Dyfed), a classic example of a chambered tomb, constructed; Bryn Celli Ddu (Anglesey), known as the "mound in the dark grove," begun, one of the finest examples of a "passage grave." |
2500 BCE | Bronze Age begins; multi-chambered tombs in use (i.e. West Kennet Long Barrow) first appearance of henge "monuments.; construction begun on Silbury Hill, Europe's largest prehistoric, man-made hill (132 ft). |
2500-1500 BCE | Most stone circles in British Isles erected during this period; purpose of the circles is uncertain, although most experts speculate that they had either astronomical or ritual uses. |
2300 BCE | Construction begun on Britain's largest stone circle at Avebury. |
2300-1400 BCE | Battle-Axe or Corded Ware culture; Beaker Folk identified by the pottery beakers (along with other objects found in their single burial sites). |
2000 BCE | Metal objects are widely manufactured in England about this time, first from copper, then with arsenic and tin added; woven cloth appears in Britain, evidenced by findings of pins and cloth fasteners in graves; construction begun on Stonehenge's inner ring of bluestones. |
1800-1200 BCE | Secular control of society passes from priests to those who control the manufacture of metal objects. |
1500 BCE | Farms (houses and separate, walled fields) in use on Dartmoor (Devon) and in uplands of Wales; stone circles seem to fall into disuse and decay around this time, perhaps due to a re-orientation of the society's religious attitudes and practices; burial mounds cease to be constructed; burials made near stone circles or in flat cemeteries. |
1500-1300 BCE | Únetice culture. |
1500-1200 BCE | Tumulus culture. |
1300-700 BCE | Emergence of a warrior class who now begins to take a central role in society. Some believe that these people, also known as the Urnfield civilization, are the "proto-Celts." |
1300 BCE | Proto-Celts arrive in Spain. |
1200 BCE | Proto - Celtic cultures in Gaul and Germania. |
1000 BCE | Earliest hill-top earthworks ("hillforts") begin to appear, also fortified farmsteads; increasing sophistication of arts and crafts, particularly in decorative personal and animal ornamentation. |
750 BCE | Iron replaces bronze, Iron Age begins. |
600 BCE | New Celtic invasion to Spain. |
600 BCE | Construction of Old Sarum begun. |
500 BCE | Evidence of the spread of Celtic customs and artifacts across Britain; more and varied types of pottery in use, more characteristic decoration of jewelry. There was no known invasion of Britain by the Celts; they probably gradually infiltrated into British society through trade and other contact over a period of several hundred years; Druids, the intellectual class of the Celts (their own word for themselves, meaning "the hidden people"), begin a thousand year flourish. |
450 BCE | Celtic tribes come to Italy. |
280 BCE | Celts arrive to the Balkans and Asia Minor. |
150 BCE | Metal coinage comes into use; widespread contact with continent. |
100 BCE | Flourishing of Carn Euny (Cornwall), an Iron Age village with interlocking stone court-yard houses; community features a "fogou," an underground chamber used, possibly, for storage or defense. |
133 BCE | Spain conquered by Rome. |
50 BCE | Gaul conquered by Rome. |
43 CE | Romans conquer Britain. |
250 CE | Ogham inscriptions in Ireland and Scotland. |
409 CE | Romans leave Britain. |
450 CE | Celtic migrations to Brittany. |
844 CE | Kingdom of Scotland. |
In addition to the titles linked above, you may also find The Celtic World by Miranda Green and Europe: A History by Norman Davies, to be of interest.
Page Information:
"Ancestors of the Celts." submitted by info-manager on 15 May, 2019. Last modified on 19 February, 2022.
Page URL: https://www.adf.org/training/resources/celtic-ancestors.html
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