Genetic evidence from Iron Age Britain shows that women tended to stay within their ancestral communities, suggesting that social networks revolved around women ...
said the research was “fascinating,” especially given how little is definitively known about this time period in Britain, when many different chiefdoms or tribes of Celtic peoples existed.
"They leave their home upon marriage, and they go join the village, the community of their husbands." This is why Cassidy and her colleagues were surprised to find remains of a Celtic tribe that lived ...
The work supports growing archaeological evidence that women had high status within Celtic societies across Europe, including Britain ... remains of the Durotriges tribe have been unearthed ...
For millennia, couples have had to decide where to live. "For the vast majority of human history," says Lara Cassidy, a geneticist at Trinity College Dublin, "societies were centered around ties ...
This is why Cassidy and her colleagues were surprised to find remains of a Celtic tribe that lived during the Iron Age in Britain from around 100 BCE to 100 CE where it appeared, after studying ...