e-Keltoi Vol. 5
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Warfare
According to the various written sources available to us, from the Greek and Roman writers to the mythological corpus of the insular tradition, the Celts were characterized by a "warlike disposition". Whether the interaction took the form of brawling in the context of a boasting match, service as a mercenary in Asia Minor or a fight to the death against another tribe's champion in the middle of a ford, armed conflict seems to have been a major part of the Celtic tradition. In more recent times we find Scottish, Irish and Welsh soldiers fighting across Europe, on the seas, and in almost all of the colonial territories of the British Empire. There are many ways in which the topic of Celtic warfare could be addressed by submissions to this issue:
- Military strategies, accounts and analyses of battles, from Alesia to Stirling Bridge
- Major military figures from a biographical and social-historical perspective
- Warfare and its effects on noncombatants in the Celtic world
- Archaeological evidence for Celtic warfare
- Arms, armor and the technology involved in producing the machinery of war
- Evidence for combat and defense and how these changes through time
Recent Submissions
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When the Specters of the First World War Return to the Anglo-Irish Estate: Elizabeth Bowen’s <em>A World of Love</em> and J. G. Farrell’s <em>Troubles</em>
(2019-08-09)In Elizabeth Bowen’s A World of Love and J. G. Farrell’s Troubles, the First World War’s dead reappear as specters within the Anglo-Irish estate. Through the lens of traumatology, this essay examines the symbolic function ... -
Analysis of a Celtiberian protective paste and its possible use by Arevaci warriors
(2007-03-13)This article presents an infrared spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis of residue adhering to a Celtiberian pottery sherd of late Iron Age date from the Arevacian site of Cerro del Castillo, in Ayllón (Segovia, ... -
Jacobite Past, Loyalist Present
(2003-10-05)This article is the first analysis of Gaelic sources relating to the involvement of Scottish Highlanders in warfare in North America from the opening of the French and Indian War to the end of the American Revolution. A ... -
Iron Age chariots and medieval texts: a step too far in "breaking down boundaries"?
(2003-09-28)Analysing “Celtic” chariots by using Iron Age archaeological material and Early Medieval Irish texts might seem to be more than just one step too far in breaking down boundaries. Considering the huge chronological and ...
