Whereas women commonly left home to join their husbands’ families upon marriage, the Durotriges, a Celtic tribe that lived in Dorset 2,000 years ago, bucked the mold with a system called ...
That lens appears to have been female-focused, which resonates with Roman descriptions of Celtic women. The researchers concluded in their study that "although classical depictions of conquered ...
Another line of evidence on powerful Celtic women comes from classical texts, from potentially unreliable narrators — the Romans. Julius Caesar wrote that British women could take multiple husbands.
Women were at the centre of early Iron Age British communities, a new analysis of 2,000-year-old DNA reveals. The research, ...
Female family ties were at the heart of social networks in Celtic society in Britain before the Roman invasion, a new analysis suggests.
The women stayed put in their communities ... They often speak a different language from their neighbors (in this case, Celtic) — evidence they probably migrated from somewhere else.
It’s only a few years since Glasgow City dominated the Scottish Women's Premier League. We’ve since seen both Rangers and Celtic break through to win the league title. That’s made the SWPL very ...
Friday night football under the lights awaits Elena Sadiku’s Celtic FC Women’s squad as they travel to take on Dundee United ...
in which women married outsiders — and their male partners moved in and left their homes behind. For these people, thought to be members of a Celtic tribe known as the Durotriges, the bonds of ...