their husbands joined their homes and families, and not the other way around. This further suggests Iron Age Celtic women were, perhaps, at the very heart of social networks in their communities ...
Talking on Iron Age settlements in the Jordan Valley, the professor Zeidan Kafafi noted that it has already been published ...
Celtic women’s social and political standing in Iron Age England has received a genetic ... on the coast of south-central England stayed in their home communities while their partners came ...
Little Tew, a hamlet of just 150 homes nestled in rolling countryside ... a type of fortified settlement dating back to the Iron Age. Although preliminary desk-based assessments have been ...
Genetic evidence from a late Iron Age cemetery shows that women were closely ... detected the opposite pattern — women leaving their homes to join their husband's family group — in other ...
As the veterans searched near the airfield, they discovered “long-lost” artifacts from the Iron Ages, likely part of the “famed Llyn Cerrig Bach” hoard which was originally discovered in the 1940s, ...
The DNA comes from human remains taken from a late iron age cemetery (circa 100BC—AD100) of the Durtriges tribe in Dorset. The researchers discovered a continuous line of descent of mtDNA ...
"There are less than 10 Iron Age helmets in Britain and every single one is unique," said Iron Age curator Dr Julia Farley, explaining the discovery's significance. Other insights included the ...