Read The Origins of the British: The New Prehistory of Britain Online
Authors: Oppenheimer
12.3a The largest Viking gene cluster, I1a-3.
12.4 Matching male gene type intrusions from Norway. [Data from present study.]
A1 Tree of the main maternal gene groups (haplogroups) used in the analysis in this book in the broader context of the West Eurasian mitochondrial DNA tree. [Updated from Oppenheimer (2003),
figure 3.3
; additional dates from Richards et al. (2000), Pereira et al. (2005) and Achilli et al. (2004, 2005).]
Plates
1 ‘The Dying Gaul’ sculpture. [akg-images/Nimatallah.]
2 The Battersea Shield. [Werner Forman Archive/British Museum.]
3 Frame from
Asterix in Britain
by Goscinny and Uderzo. [Copyright © Les Éditions Albert-René/Goscinny-Uderzo.]
4 13,500-year-old rib engraved with a hunted horse, from Robin Hood cave, Creswell Crags. [The British Museum.]
5 The Neolithic settlement of Skara Brae in Shetland. [[
http://www.doughoughton.com
].]
6 5,300-year-old Newgrange passage grave in Ireland. [Mark Hannaford/John Warburton-Lee Photography.]
7 West Kennet Long Barrow burial mound. [Skyscan/Science Photo Library.]
8 The Amesbury Archer beaker burial. [Wessex Archaeology.]
9 Seahenge on the sands of Norfolk. [English Heritage/HIP/TopFoto. co.uk.]
10 The burial mound entrance passage at Maes Howe in Orkney. [[
http://www.doughoughton.com
].]
11 The Folkton Drums. [The British Museum/TopFoto.co.uk.]
12 The Bronze Age Battersea cauldron. [The British Museum/HIP/TopFoto.co.uk.]
13 Bronze Age flesh-hook from Dunaverny, Northern Ireland. [The British Museum/HIP/TopFoto.co.uk.]
14 Helmet from the Sutton Hoo boat burial. [The British Museum/Bridgeman Art Library.]
15 Shoulder clasps from the Sutton Hoo boat burial. [The British Museum/Boltin Picture Library/Bridgeman Art Library.]
16 Torc from the Snettisham Hoard. [The British Museum/Boltin Picture Library/Bridgeman Art Library.]
17 The original excavation of Sutton Hoo. [Topham Picturepoint/TopFoto.co.uk.]
18 The Oseberg Ship of Norway. [Werner Forman Archive/Viking Ship Museum, Bygdoy.]
19 Longship at sea (scene from the Sturla Gunnarson movie
Beowulf and Grendel
). [Sturla Gunnarson.]
20 Beowulf enters the court of Hrothgar (scene from the Sturla Gunnarson movie
Beowulf and Grendel
). [Arclight Films/Photofest.]
21 ‘Up Helly Aa’ Norse festival in Shetland. [[
http://www.doughoughton.com
].]
22 Faces of our time: a Scotsman, an Irish mother, an English woman and a Welsh choral singer. [Collections/Graham Burns; Collections/Michael Diggin; Eye Ubiquitous/Nancy Durrell-McKenna; Collections/Brian Shuel.]
Note
Unless otherwise stated, all ages/dates derived from radiocarbon dating in captions to figures and plates and in the main text are given as ‘years ago’, meaning that they are already corrected or calibrated in primary cited literature sources. There are self-identified exceptions, e.g.
Figure 6.1a
, where raw radiocarbon dates were used in the source reference.
acculturation
Bronze Age
272
LBK spread
240
runic script spread
382
Adams, Jonathan
297
agriculture
see
farming
Ahrensburgian culture
178
All-Over Corded (AOC) Beakers
264
,
265
amber
264
Ambiani tribe
331
Ambrosius Aurelius (King Arthur?)
365
,
376
Amos, Bill
430–1
Anatolia
Celtic invasion theory
64–5
Indo-European source
287
Neolithic spread from
236
,
262
,
293
Ancient Britons
as celtic-speakers
10
,
25
,
67
,
69–70
possible types
12–15
Angles
as invaders
10
,
364–6
,
377
,
390
,
477–8
,
480
political spread
381
Anglian language
391
Anglo-Jutes
370
Anglo-Saxon ‘invasion’
Anglian intrusion rate
478
archaeological evidence
438–9
,
478
cultural continuity view
397
,
402–5
,
430–1
,
478
gene type matching
432–8
lack of founding events
432
,
443
limited scope of
214–15
,
438–9
,
477–8
,
485–6
phylogeographic approach
417
,
428–9
‘wipe-out’ view
15
,
70
,
233
,
306
,
337
,
398
,
420
,
438
Anglo-Saxons
effect of Normans on
463–6
homeland definitions
403
,
435
,
438
longhouses of
403
perceived Norse roots
391
‘Saxon coast’ matches
439–40
animals
domestic cattle
197
for traction
256
see also
horses/ponies; mammoths
antler artefacts
153
Arbois de Jubainville, Henri d’
53–4
,
56
archaeology
as Celtic ‘evidence’
54–5
fashions
261–2
pre-carbon-14
55
Arras Culture
13
art
cave art
120
as Celtic ‘evidence’
54–5
,
64
,
66
Iron Age
55
Late Upper Palaeolithic
120
pre-Saxon England
15
Stone Age
125
Asleifarson, Svein
460
Atkinson, Quentin
97
,
99
,
292–3
,
298
,
299
,
347
Atlantic Celts
Welsh as
11–12
Atlantic coast
cultural continuity
2–5
Iberian contribution
149
Mesolithic culture
161–2
post-LGM colonization
143–5
Atlantic language
249
Atlantic Mesolithic
161–2
Atlantic Modal Haplotype
140
,
167
,
224
Atrebates tribe
12
,
59
,
78–9
,
320
,
322
Austria
76
Badegoulian culture
126
Badon Hill, battle of
365
,
373
,
375
Balkans
as Scandinavian source
198
two-route migration
297
as Y gene source
146
,
147
,
189
,
228
,
423
Basque Haplotype
140
Basque language in British Isles
151
Basque region
British gene retention
418
bypassed by Neolithic
215
,
218
,
235
,
282
language of
282