Read The Origins of the British: The New Prehistory of Britain Online
Authors: Oppenheimer
genetic drift
133
refuge regions
117–18
,
122–3
,
124
,
125
,
125–6
,
146
Late Copper/Early Bronze Age
284
Late Glacial
116
Late Upper Palaeolithic (LUP)
expansion in
118–19
,
122–3
,
132
,
164
North Sea–Creswellian links
148
Leeds, Edward
399
lexico-statistics
92–3
LGM
see
Last Glacial Maximum
Lhuyd, Edward
26–7
,
28
,
30
,
62
,
65
,
66
Celtic ‘label’
28
and ‘Celtic’ term
8–9
Cornish study
70
insular celtic view
105
Lindsey
404
Linearbandkeramic
(LBK) pottery
16–17
,
200–1
,
219
,
227–8
,
298
‘LBK line’
229
linguistic reconstruction
73
Longue Durée
475
Low German
345
Lowland Scots (Lallans)
355
,
356
LUP
see
Late Upper Palaeolithic
Lusitani tribe
64
Lusitanian language
63
Maes Howe
258
mammoths
154–5
Maritime Bell Beakers
103–4
,
111
,
266
,
268
,
473
Marseilles: Greek colony of
45
McEvoy, Brian
475
McMahon, April and Robert
97
,
299
,
300
,
347
Mediterranean
Irish invasions from
8
menhirs
255–8
Meso-Europeic languages
293
,
296
,
298
Mesolithic
Basque founding genes
5
beginning of
156
burial rituals
162
European mtDNA intrusions
163
expansion in
119
,
122
,
124
,
161–2
,
162
pottery
201
see also
Atlantic Mesolithic; Danish Mesolithic; Late Mesolithic
Middle Upper Palaeolithic
125
migration
problems with
290
sceptics
17
mitochondrial DNA
see
mtDNA
Modern English
338
mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA)
ancient samples
240–1
European founding lines
126–37
LUP re-expansions
122–3
Mesolithic founding genes
5
,
165–6
Neolithic intrusions
212–18
,
442
pre-Viking ponies
277–80
,
278–80
Scandinavian intrusions
181–2
N3 (TAT) Y-chromosome line
185–6
N1a mtDNA group
241–2
names
English types
465–6
as Norman indicator
464–6
see also
personal names; place-names
Nazi ‘racial anthropology’
17
,
51
Near East
spread of farming from
198
,
200
,
204
,
219
,
236
,
285
Neolithic
acculturation vs migration
200
,
218
,
241–2
,
245–6
,
271–2
agriculture spread
16
,
104
,
111
,
123
,
197–8
artefacts
272–3
cultural expansion
16
delayed British take-up
213
diet changes
205–6
megaliths
252–60
north–south separation
481
see also
British Neolithic; Early Neolithic; European Neolithic; Late Neolithic
Netherlands
146
network method
110
Newton, Sam
393–4
Norfolk
147–8
,
149
,
192
,
396
,
420
,
451
Norman invasion
effect on written English
466
immigration levels
401
,
463–4
,
485
Normans
French language
325
Viking roots
467
North Africa
183
North Sea
Ice Age changes
115
post-LGM British intrusions
147–8
post-LGM physical changes
143
north-west Europe
Baltic influence
423
Bronze Age gene flow
276–7
genetic similarity study
423–5
Iberian influence
128–9
,
307–8
,
423
LGM sterility
115
LUP gene contribution
122
male British intrusions
194
Mesolithic in
161
Scandinavian/Baltic influence
423
tool-making variations
161
Northern Europe
British Bronze Age links
277–80
Franco-Spanish repopulation
183
Northern European Plain
261
Norway
Scottish intrusions
243
Viking raids on Britain
444–5
,
446–8
,
455–6
,
480
Y chromosome incursions
186–7
Ogham inscriptions
83
,
85
,
335
,
368
,
461
Old English
Common Germanic theory
354
dissimilarity from neighbours
345–6
Germanic separation
351–2