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  2. Prehistoric Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Britain

    The sad but inevitable conclusion of this must be that Britain has little role to play in any understanding of long-term human evolution and its cultural history is largely a broken record dependent on external introductions and insular developments that ultimately lead nowhere. Britain, therefore, was an island of the living dead. [10]

  3. Timeline of prehistoric Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Timeline_of_Prehistoric_Britain

    The earliest human remains found in Britain. [8] c. 478,000 BP Anglian glaciation begins – the most extreme in the Pleistocene. Britain extensively covered by ice. c. 450,000 BP The Weald-Artois Anticline breaks for the first time after a glacial lake outburst flood. This landbridge to the continent was cut for the first time creating the ...

  4. Celtic Britons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_Britons

    The first inhabitants were the Britons, who came from Armenia, and first peopled Britain southward" ("Armenia" is a mistaken transcription of Armorica, an area in northwestern Gaul including modern Brittany rather than the geographically distant and ethnolinguistically non Celtic region in the Caucasus). [26]

  5. History of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_England

    Around this time the earliest mentions of Britain appear in the annals of history. The first historical mention of the region is from the Massaliote Periplus, a sailing manual for merchants thought to date to the 6th century BC, and Pytheas of Massilia wrote of his voyage of discovery to the island around 325 BC. Both of these texts are now ...

  6. Historical immigration to Great Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_immigration_to...

    Modern humans first arrived in Great Britain during the Palaeolithic era, but until the invasion of the Romans (1st century BC) there was no historical record. With the Fall of the Western Roman Empire , large numbers of Germanic speakers from the continent migrated to the southern parts of the island, becoming known as the Anglo-Saxons and ...

  7. Prehistoric settlement of the British Isles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_settlement_of...

    Prehistoric settlement of the British Isles refers to the earliest establishment and expansion of human settlements in locations in the British Isles. These include: Neolithic British Isles; Prehistoric Britain. Bronze Age Britain; British Iron Age; Prehistoric Ireland; Prehistoric Scotland. Prehistoric Orkney; Prehistoric Wales

  8. List of first human settlements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_first_human...

    Although visited earlier by Maldivians, Malays and Arabs, the first known settlement was a spice plantation established by the French, first on Ste. Anne Island, then moved to Mahé. It is the sovereign state with the shortest history of human settlement (followed by Mauritius). [122] East Pacific: Floreana Island: 1805: Black Beach

  9. Cro-Magnon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cro-Magnon

    The first wave of modern humans in Europe (Initial Upper Paleolithic) left no genetic legacy to modern Europeans; [1] however, from 37,000 years ago a second wave succeeded in forming a single founder population, from which all subsequent Cro-Magnons descended and which contributes ancestry to present-day Europeans.