The Origins of the British: The New Prehistory of Britain (81 page)

BOOK: The Origins of the British: The New Prehistory of Britain
11.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Strabo,
Geography
[Jones, H.L. (ed. and trans.) (1917–32),
The Geography of Strabo
. Vols 1–8, containing Books 1–17, Loeb Classical Library (London: Heinemann). See also
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Strabo/home.html
>].

Stuart, A.J. and Lister A.M. (2001), ‘The Late Quaternary extinction of woolly mammoth (
Mammuthus primigenius
), straight-tusked elephant (
Palaeoloxodon antiquus
) and other megafauna in Europe’, in G. Cavaretta et al. (eds),
The World of Elephants, Proceedings of the 1st International Congress
(Rome: Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche), pp. 571–6.

Sumkin, V.J. (1990), ‘On the ethnogenesis of the Saami: An archaeological view’,
Acta Borealia
, 7: 3–20.

Tacitus,
Agricola
[Church, Alfred John, and Brodribb, William Jackson (eds)
(
1942)
The Life of Cnæus Julius Agricola
(New York: Random House)].

Tambets, K., Kivisild, T., Metspalu, E., Parik, J. et al. (2000), ‘The topology of the maternal lineages of the Anatolian and Trans-Caucasus populations and the peopling of the Europe: Some preliminary considerations’, in C. Renfrew and K. Boyle (eds),
Archaeogenetics: DNA and Population Prehistory of Europe
, McDonald Institute Monograph Series (Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research), pp. 219–35.

Tambets, K., Tolk, H.-V., Kivisild, T., Metspalu, E. et al. (2003). ‘Complex signals for population expansions in Europe and beyond’ in P. Bellwood and C. Renfrew (eds),
Examining the Farming/Language Dispersal Hypothesis
, McDonald Institute Monograph
Series (Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research), pp. 449–57.

Tambets, K., Rootsi, S., Kivisild, T., Help, H. et al. (2004), ‘The Western and Eastern roots of the Saami: The story of genetic “outliers” told by mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosomes’,
American Journal of Human Genetics
, 74: 661–82.

Thomas, M., Stumpf, M.P.H. and Härke, H. (2006), ‘Evidence for an apartheid social structure and differential reproductive success in early Anglo-Saxon England’, in Shuichi Matsumura, Peter Forster and Colin Renfrew (eds),
Simulations, Genetics and Human Prehistory – A Focus on Islands
, McDonald Institute Monograph Series (Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research) (in press).

Thomas, M.G., Bradman, N. and Flinn, H.M. (1999), ‘High throughput analysis of 10 microsatellite and 11 diallelic polymorphisms on the human Y-chromosome’,
Human Genetics
, 105: 577–81.

Torroni, A., Bandelt, H.-J., D’Urbano, L., Lahermo, P. et al. (1998), ‘mtDNA analysis reveals a major late Paleolithic population expansion from south-western to north-eastern Europe’,
American Journal of Human Genetics
, 62: 1137–52.

Torroni, A., Bandelt, H.-J., Macaulay, V., Richards, M. et al. (2001), ‘A signal, from human mtDNA, of post-glacial recolonization in Europe’,
American Journal of Human Genetics
, 69: 844–52.

Treharne, R.F. and Fullard, H. (eds) (1976),
Muir’s Historical Atlas: Ancient Medieval & Modern
(London, George Philip & Son).

Ulijaszek, S.J. (2000), ‘Interpreting patterns of growth and development among past populations’,
Perspectives in Human Biology
, 5: 1–11.

Underhill, P.A., Shen, P., Lin, A.A., Jin, L. et al. (2000), ‘Y chromosome sequence variation and the history of human populations’,
Nature Genetics
, 26: 358–61.

Underhill, P.A., Passarino, G., Lin, A.A., Shen, P. et al. (2001), ‘The phylogeography of Y chromosome binary haplotypes and the origins
of modern human populations’,
Annals of Human Genetics
, 65: 43–62.

Untermann, J. (1961),
Sprachräume und Sprachbewegungen in vorrömischen Hispanien
(Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz).

Untermann, J. (1997),
Monumenta Linguarum Hispanicarum
, Vol. IV:
Die tartessischen, keltiberischen und lusitanischen Inschriften
(Wiesbaden: Reichelt).

Vennemann, T. (2003),
Europa Vasconica – Europa Semitica.
Patrizia Noel Aziz Hanna (ed.), Trends in Linguistics: Studies and Monographs, (138) Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.)

Vennemann, T. (2006). Germanische Runen und phönizisches Alphabet. Sprachwissenschaft 31(4): 367–429.

Viereck, W. (1998), ‘Geolinguistics and haematology: The case of Britain’,
Links & Letters
(Departament de Filologia Anglesa i de Germanística, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), 5: 167–79.

Villar, F. (1997), ‘The Celtiberian language’,
Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie
, 49/50: 898–941.

Villar, F. and Pedrero, R. (2001), ‘La nueva inscripción lusitana: Arroyo de la Luz III’, in F. Villar and M.P. Fernández Alvarez (eds),
Religión, lengua y cultura prerromanas de Hispania
(Universidad de Salamanca), pp. 663–98.

Vulpius, Christian August (1826),
Handwörterbuch der Mythologie der deutschen, verwandten, benachbarten und nordischen Völker
(Leipzig).

Wainwright F.T. (1962), ‘Picts and Scots’ and ‘The Scandinavian settlement’ in F.T. Wainwright (ed.),
The Northern Isles
(Edinburgh: Nelson), pp.116, 162.

Walter, G. (1911), ‘Der Wortschatz des Altfriesischen’,
Münchener Beiträge zur romanischen und englischen Philologie
, 53.

Watkin, I.M. (1966), ‘An anthropological study of eastern Shropshire and south-western Cheshire: AB0 blood-groups’,
Man
NS
1: 375–85.

Watkin, I.M. and Mourant, A.E. (1952), ‘Blood groups, anthropology and language in Wales and the western countries’,
Heredity
, 6: 13–36.

Weale, M.E., Weiss, D.A., Jager, R.F., Bradman, N. and Thomas, M. (2002), ‘Y chromosome evidence for Anglo-Saxon mass migration’,
Molecular Biology and Evolution
, 19: 1008–21.

Weber, Martin (1998), ‘Das Gräberfeld von Issendorf, Niedersachsen: Ausgangangspunkt für Wanderungen nach Brittanien’,
Sonderdruck aus Studien zur Sachsenforschung
, 11: 199–212.

Wells, R.S., Yuldasheva, N., Ruzibakiev, R., Underhill, P.A. et al. (2001), ‘The Eurasian heartland: A continental perspective on Y-chromosome diversity’,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
, 98: 10244–9.

Wilson, J.F., Weiss, D.A., Richards, M., Thomas, M.G. et al. (2001), ‘Genetic evidence for different male and female roles during cultural transitions in the British Isles’,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
, 98: 5078–83.

Wrenn, C.L. and Bolton, W.F. (eds) (1988),
Beowulf
(University of Exeter Press).

The Y Chromosome Consortium (2002), ‘A nomenclature system for the tree of human Y-chromosomal binary haplogroups’,
Genome Research
, 12: 339–48.

Yeats, W.B. (1902),
The Celtic Twilight
(London: A.H. Bullen).

Zerjal, T., Dashnyam, B., Pandya, A., Kayser, M. et al. (1997), ‘Genetic relationships of Asians and Northern Europeans, revealed by Y-chromosomal DNA analysis’.
American Journal of Human Genetics
, 60: 1174–83.

Zhivotovsky, L.A. (2001), ‘Estimating divergence time with use of microsatellite genetic distances: Impacts of population growth and gene flow’,
Molecular Biology and Evolution
, 18: 700–9.

Zhivotovsky, L.A., Underhill, P.A., Cinniolu, C., Kayser, M. et al. (2004), ‘On the effective mutation rate at Y-chromosome STRs with application to human population divergence time’,
American Journal of Human Genetics
, 74: 50–61.

Zohary, Daniel and Hopf, Maria (2000),
Domestication of Plants in the Old World: The Origin and Spread of Cultivated Plants in West Asia, Europe, and the Nile Valley
, 2nd edn (New York: Oxford University Press).

I
LLUSTRATIONS
 

Figures

1.1 Where is the source of the Danube?

1.2 Early voyagers up the Atlantic coast: Pytheas and Himilco. [Pytheas’ route after Cunliffe (2004), figure 7.33.]

1.3 Which Celtic homeland? [Celtic tribal movements out of Central Europe after Cunliffe (2004), figure 8.3.]

2.1a Who were the Celts in Classical times? Caesar’s view. [Names of tribes in Gaul after Cunliffe (1988), figure 45, and Collis (2003), figure 55. Celtic arrows to Italy after Collis (2003), figure 46.]

2.1b Where was the evidence for celtic languages in classical times? [Data from Sims-Williams (2006),
figures 11.1
and 11.2. This is based on over 20,000 names analysed in a detailed one-degree square grid map. The contour lower cut-off misses some genuine celtic names outside the shading; percentages in northern France and Britain are under review.]

2.2 Gallo-Belgic coins and their British derivatives do not overlap later celtic stone inscriptions in the British Isles. [Celtic
inscriptions zones (
AD
400–1100) after Celtic Inscribed Stones Project (CISP) [
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/cisp/database/maps/bigmap_all.html
; Gallo-Belgic and British coin distributions after Cunliffe (1981b), figures 13 and 14.]

2.3 Ancient British tribal names, locations and capitals. [Multiple sources.]

2.4 Celtic confusion: alternative trees of celtic language origin based on the comparative method. [Tree structures after Schmidt (1998) and McCone (1996).]

3.1 A clean sheet for the British Isles. [After Oppenheimer (2003), Figure 6.2; vegetation zones and mapping of greater land area resulting from lower sea level based on Jonathan Adams, [
http://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/NEW_MAPS/europe1.gif
] and [
http://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/eur(22-.gif
].]

3.2 Human activity in Northern Europe through the Ice Age and Younger Dryas. [After Gamble et al. (2004), figure 1.]

3.3 Colonizing ‘Greater Britain’ after the Ice Age. [Vegetation zones and mapping of greater land area resulting from lower sea level after Jonathan Adams, [
http://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/NEW_MAPS/europe2.gif
] and [
http://www.esd.ornl.gov/projects/qen/eur(13k.gif
].]

3.4 Ancestor Vera, who gave the first clear genetic evidence of Ice Age refuges and early re-expansion from Iberia into the north-west. [After Torroni et al. (2001), figures 3b and 4a.]

3.5 The immediate impact of maternal re-expansions into north-west Europe from Iberia after the Ice Age from 15,000 years ago. [Mapping greater land area as for
Figure 3.3
; data from Pereira et al. (2005), tables 1 and 2, excluding Scandinavia.]

3.6 Male re-expansions into north-west Europe from Iberia immediately after the Ice Age. [Mapping greater land area as for
Figure 3.3
.]

3.6a Ruisko gene group (R1b). [Data from Tambets et al. (2004), table 3; Semino et al. (2000), table 1; and dataset in present study for extreme Western Europe.]

3.6b Rox gene cluster (R1b-9). [Dataset from present study.]

3.6c R1b-5 gene cluster. [Dataset from present study.]

3.6d Rory gene cluster (R1b-14). [Dataset from present study.]

3.6e R1b-15c gene cluster. [Dataset from present study.]

3.6f R1b-16 gene cluster. [Dataset from present study.]

3.7 Ivan (I gene group): male re-expansions into north-west Europe from the Balkans and Ukraine after the Ice Age. [Data from Rootsi et al. (2004), table 1, and dataset from present study for extreme Western Europe; Early Mesolithic coastline as for
Figure 4.2
.]

3.8 Ingert (I1c gene group), the earliest Balkan males to reach Britain? [Data from Rootsi et al. (2004), table 1, and dataset from present study for extreme Western Europe; Creswellian sites after Barton and Roberts (2004), figure 5; Early Mesolithic coastline as for
Figure 4.2
.]

Other books

Revenge by Joanne Clancy
Backup Men by Ross Thomas
Oh! You Pretty Things by Shanna Mahin
Bender by Stacy Borel
Anne Barbour by Escapades Four Regency Novellas