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Proto-celtic language wasn't developed in close proximity to italic. They had the same ancestor, just like Germanic has the same ancestor with balto-Slavic
But that has nothing to do with genetics, as italic speakers just like all IE speakers of southern Europe have assimilated native non-IE neolithics, which is the reason that they don't plot near modern Germanic and Celtic speakers
I haven't seen samples from celts of Spain or Portugal but I am pretty confident that they would plot in Southern Europe, and they still were Celts
Last edited by brennus dux gallorum; 04-27-2020 at 08:58 PM.


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Summarizing, the op is wrong, as he concludes "celts were north European" as if there was any Proto-IE population which was not equally "northern European". Southern European admixture technically means non-IE neolithic
He further makes the mistake to generalize La tene results to all historical Celtic populations of all periods. I haven't seen sample from Celtic speakers of Iberia, but I am sure that this 52% neolithic in modern Iberia didn't come out of nowhere, it was there when the majority of its population was speaking a celtic language. Celts can't be seen as a genetic/racial group, but as a linguocultural group
Fact remains that northern European celts had the same ancestor with the genetically equally northern European Italics who gave the language and civilization to modern Latin-speaking countries
in spite of posting from my mobile phone i was able to find the most famous IE tree. there are several alternatives (I have seen for example in some authors proto-Greek being originated from Italo-celtic or Thracian from Germano/Balto-slavic) but all of them have one thing in common: Celts with italics and Germanics with Balto-slavs. I will post even more links and sources tomorrow from my pc


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There is no such consensus, again if you have actual arguments bring them, arguments from fictitious authority are boring and pointless as you use your limited experience on the topic to dictate what linguistics think when we all know there are almost no definitive answers and everything is being questioned for a reason or another. Only scholars should have a voice in determining what the consensus or not, given they actually engage more than any of us on the topic.





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1. Correct me if i wrong, evolution of Germanic languages has very similar history with Proto-Celtic, if Jastorf and Nordic Bronze Age cultures are associated with it. From Corded ware culture to Nordic Bronze/Jastorf (proto-Nordic) around 1000-1500 years and they're also separated by sea and spread over a large geographic area. Proto-Celtic evolved from Late Neolithic/Bell Beaker and by 1000-500 BC began separating into different branches. Seaways are better means of communiactions than ground movements btw.
2.it's impossible to state categorically where exactly lived that group of people who have caused proto-Celtic. But the version with Atlantic seashore contains much less controversy, than others and allayed many problems.
3. In that case Koch's version would be destroyed by other linguists long time ago. Particularly since Celts were the closest neighbours of Tartessians and even supposed to be related
4.Yes, i agree. There're still many problems and blank pots, just like with Central European hypothesis by the way. But Halstatt in fact doesn't look like huge monolitic culture that cover half of Europe as shown in Wiki, in contrast it's a limited area around Alps and La Tene is too late for that. Yes Western Halstatt was probably Celtic and La Tene was 100% Celtic culture, but that's just eastern periphery of Celtic world
Last edited by Fantomas; 04-28-2020 at 10:03 AM.
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Yeah, Halstatt looke like multicultural supranational culture based on trading river system, mineral extraction and prestigious goods. They willingly took new foreign ideas, prestige metal works ,wine, new types of carts, architecture from Greece and Italy, funeral customs for the nobility from Scythians and who knows, maybe pants also. Thus presence of "Scythinans" there would make sence.
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