Alberro, Manuel, “The celticisation of the Iberian Peninsula, a process that could have had parallels in other European regions”, Études Celtiques 35 (2003): 7–24.
- journal article
[EN] The paper focuses on the celticisation of the Iberian Peninsula several centuries before the Christian Era. This process could have begun in Gallaecia, a region on the NW of Spain that had maintained social and commercial relations with Armorica (today's Bretagne) and the British Isles since the Neolithic. The gradual celticisation of most of the Iberian Peninsula could have developed from this area through a slow process of acculturation, or cumulative celticisation, and not as a result of waves of invaders as previously believed. This celticisation model, which probably took place over hundreds of years, could have been the same in the whole Atlantic Area and adjacent European territories. Current assumptions on the celticisation of Ireland support this theory.
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