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Celtiberian culture was increasingly influenced by Rome in the two final centuries BC. From the 3rd century, the clan was superseded as the basic Celtiberian political unit by the oppidum , a fortified organized city with a defined territory that included the castros as subsidiary settlements.
The Hallstatt culture, which had developed from the Urnfield culture, was the predominant Western and Central European culture from the 12th to 8th centuries BC and during the early Iron Age (8th to 6th centuries BC). It was followed by the La Tène culture (5th to 1st centuries BC).
Titii (Celtiberian) Turboletae / Turboleti; Uraci / Duraci; Possible Celtiberian tribe Belendi / Pelendi – Belinum territory (Belin-Béliet), in the middle Sigmatis river (in today's Leyre) river area, south of the Bituriges Vivisci and the Boii Boiates; they may have been related to the Pellendones (a Celtiberian tribe).
Festivals celebrating the culture of the Celtic nations include the Festival Interceltique de Lorient , Ortigueira's Festival of Celtic World , the Pan Celtic Festival (Ireland), CeltFest Cuba (Havana, Cuba), the National Celtic Festival (Portarlington, Australia), the Celtic Media Festival (showcasing film and television from the Celtic ...
The Arevaci were of Celtic origin and part of the group of peoples known as the Celtiberians. [3] There is an overwhelming amount of evidence that the ancestors of the Celtiberian groups were installed in the Meseta area of the Iberian Peninsula from at least 1000 BC and probably much earlier. [4]
Example of a bronze hospitality token in the Celtiberian Celtic language. The most culturally advanced of the peoples of southern Celtiberia, the Belli were the first Celtiberian tribe to adopt coinage in the aftermath of the Second Punic War [7] and to post laws in written form on bronze tablets (Tabulae), using a modified Northeastern Iberian script (known as the Celtiberian script) for ...
Celtiberian or Northeastern Hispano-Celtic is an extinct Indo-European language of the Celtic branch spoken by the Celtiberians in an area of the Iberian Peninsula between the headwaters of the Douro, Tagus, Júcar and Turia rivers and the Ebro river.
A northeastern inland language attested at a relatively late date in the extensive corpus of Celtiberian. [2] This variety, which Jordán Cólera proposed to name Northeastern Hispano-Celtic , [ 3 ] has long been synonymous with the term Hispano-Celtic and is universally accepted as Celtic.