The site belonged to a group the Romans named the “Durotriges,” researchers said, and this ethnic group had other settlements, including a site near Dorset nicknamed “Duropolis” by the archaeologists ...
Female tribal leaders Cartimandua ... divorce and lead the Celtic armies. Julius Caesar himself noted the seemingly exotic practice of British women taking more than one husband in his book ...
Micheál Martin (a day later than scheduled because of some stormy weather in the Dáil) the man who many pundits once predicted would be the first Fianna Fáil leader never to become Taoiseach became ...
Instead, it was widespread in Celtic British society ... and Cartimandua, a tribal leader. Although Roman writers often exoticized these societies, the genetic evidence shown by Cassidy and ...
DNA recovered from an Iron Age burial ground in southern England reveals a Celtic community where husbands ... Julius Caesar wrote that British women could take multiple husbands.