Celts
There are 152 items in Celts:
Gaius Julius Caesar: Reconquest
Gaius Julius Caesar (13 July 100 - 15 March 44 BCE), Roman statesman, general, author, famous for the conquest of Gaul (modern France and Belgium) and his subsequent coup d'état. He changed the Roman republic into a monarchy and laid…Caesar on the Siege of Alesia
Gaius Julius Caesar (13 July 100 - 15 March 44 BCE), Roman statesman, general, author, famous for the conquest of Gaul (modern France and Belgium) and his subsequent coup d'état. He changed the Roman republic into a monarchy and laid…Caesar's Gallic War
Caesar's Gallic War: Caesar's reports on his conquests in Gaul. The Roman senator Cicero thought it was a splendid text, and although we can recognize the book's bias, it still is a remarkably efficient piece of writing.Introduction …Celtic Dacia
Dacia: country north of the Lower Danube, more or less identical to modern Romania. It experienced influences from the Thracians, Scythians, Greeks, and Celts (below) and became a powerful kingdom, added as a province to the Roman Empire, abandoned to…
![]() Model of a "Celtic Field" and a small village |
Celts
Celts: common name for the Iron Age civilizations of Western Europe, more or less identical to the La Tène culture.Names The…Chaussée Brunehaut ("Via Belgica")
Chaussée Brunehaut: French name of the Roman road that connected Amiens, Bavay, Tongeren, and Cologne. In Germany, it is called Agrippa-Straße and sometimes, the quasi-Latin name Via Belgica is used. …
![]() Chiusi, Helmet (Celtic type) |
![]() Ciumești, Celtic helmet |
Cluj-Napoca, National Museum of Transylvanian History
Archaeological collection, coverning Transylvania's Prehistory, the Scythians and the Celts, the Dacian kingdom, Roman Dacia, the Avars, and the Middle Ages. There are an Egyptian department and a lapidarium too. …
![]() Coin of Caesar, showing a Gallic captive |
![]() A Gallic chieftain on one of Caesar's coins |