Read The Origins of the British: The New Prehistory of Britain Online
Authors: Oppenheimer
post-LGM mtDNA source
122
,
126
,
128
,
132
,
165–6
Y chromosome founding genes
123–4
,
133
beachcombing
founding routes
144
increase in
157
in Ireland
159–60
in S. England
160
Beaker pottery
103–4
,
111
,
248
,
253
,
268
Bede, Venerable
386
on ‘Angle invasion’
10
,
364–6
,
376
,
477
on Hwicca
373
on indigenous languages
82–3
Belgae
British closeness of
313
,
330–1
,
331–2
celtic language theory
314
Continental links
78–9
as Germanic
314–15
personal/place-names of
320
in SE England
482
Bell Beaker Pottery
103
,
111
,
248
,
253
,
266
,
268
Beowulf
date of
448
English-Scandinavian links
391
Germanic language
10
Berbers
183
Bernicii tribe
77
blood group analysis
dating not possible
409
dialect theory
407
and migrations
409–10
Bohemia
46
Boii tribe
46
Bosporus threshold
218
Bradley, Dan
475–6
Breton
and Gaulish
98
Brigantes tribe
28
,
75–7
,
80
,
81
,
86
Brigantia tribe
28
Brigantii
76
Brigantinus Portus (Brigantium Hispaniae)
76
Britain
Danish gene matches
450–5
European land bridge
2
,
115
,
142
,
144
,
147
,
192
,
469
Gallo-Belgic coins
331
indigenous languages
82
insular celtic in
250
lexical diversity
353
north–south divide
480–1
Norwegian genes in
454–6
Viking colonization
449
see also
eastern Britain
British
Belgic similarities
313
classical views of
311–14
British Columbia
161–2
British Isles
Basque founding genes
132
,
141
,
165–6
,
475
celtic languages in
28
,
98–9
,
99
,
104
Continental influence
267
Frisian genes absent
440
‘Gallic dialects’ in
28
Iberian influence
139–40
,
163–4
,
165–75
,
307–8
,
437
Insular Celts in
62
LUP/Mesolithic incursions
163–4
male Scandinavian input
187
Mesolithic incursions
163–4
,
173–5
,
199–200
modern ‘Celtic’ in
24
Norwegian influence
188
,
195
,
461
Norwegian Viking raids
446–7
oldest language of
151
pre-Neolithic roots
471
pre-Younger Dryas genes
154
spread of Celtic languages to
229
two-source colonization
3–4
,
114
,
204–5
,
269
,
297
,
301
,
428–9
,
481
British Neolithic
date of adoption
198
duration of
247
genetic re-expansions
200
,
221–5
megaliths
252–60
non-celtic languages
249–52
northern gene line
229–35
Norwegian male intrusion
188
two-source inputs
198
,
204–5
,
243
,
308–9
Brittany
metal industries
111
Neolithic migration
308
relatedness of language
8
Broca, Paul
51
Bronze Age
acculturation in
272
British–Continental interchange
271–5
,
309
European trade
271–5
expansion in
122
genetic inflow
309
Goidelic/Bryonic split
97
see also
Early Bronze Age; Late Bronze Age
bronze axes
276
areas of influence
81
in Brittany
71
Brythonic/Goidelic split
96–7
,
99
,
110
as P-celtic
87–8
burials
beaker burials
264
horses
396
Mesolithic
162
at Stonehenge
267–9
Caesar, Julius
on Belgic/Germanic tribes
316–18
,
322
,
363
on British
313
on Gaul
12
cairn graves
255
Cambodunum (England/Austria)
76
Campbell, Ewan
85–6
Cantiaci tribe
363
Capelli, Cristian
419–23
,
426
,
430
,
437–8
,
439
,
476
Carausius
358–9
Cardial Impressed Ware
6
,
104–5
,
201–2
,
215
,
228
,
229
,
298
Cassiterides
36
Catuvellauni tribe
328
Cavalli-Sforza, Luigi Luca
284
,
285
,
287–90
Celtae
12
Celtiberi
44
Celtiberian language
59
,
62–3
,
90
celtic languages
229