Historical facts

Start proving what you say, please. Otherwise, move on. BTW, Celtic scholars and linguists on this forum (or anywhere else) do not agree with you. Obviously you have an agenda...denial?:innocent:

Look at the thread "Italo-Cetic expansion" otherwise move on. BTW, Celtic scholars and linguists do not agree with you. Obviously you have an agenda...denial ? :innocent:
 
Grizzly has a job in Spanish leader or Spanish origin, is something that as a French nationalist not withstanding, the Spanish leader also has cut the hopes of promotion and that is the source of their loathing and denial of any comparison or relationship Spain with the rest of Western Europe, is his little revenge on the frustration felt to be a superior work of Spanish origin.

You are bad in history, you are worse in psychology.
 
Although these towns shared certain common characteristics, they were not a homogeneous ethnic group and that differed in many respects. It is not known in detail the origin of the Iberians, although there are several theories that seek to establish:

One hypothesis suggests that arrived in the Iberian Peninsula in the Neolithic period, and their arrival is dated from the fifth millennium BC to the third millennium BC. Most scholars who adopt this theory is supported by archaeological evidence, anthropological and genetic view that the Iberians came from the Mediterranean regions further east.
Other scholars have suggested they may have originated in North Africa but it was confirmed that this theory was wrong. The Iberians would initially settled along the eastern coast of Spain and possibly later spread throughout the rest of the Iberian Peninsula.
Another alternative hypothesis states that were part of the original inhabitants of Western Europe and the creators / heirs of the great megalithic culture that arises in this whole area, possibly, a theory supported by genetic studies. The Iberians would be similar to the Celtic peoples of the first millennium BC in Ireland, Britain and France. Subsequently, the Celts would cross the Pyrenees into two major migrations: the IX and VII century a. C. The Celts settled mostly north of the River Duero and the River Ebro, where they mixed with the Iberians to form the group called Celtiberian.
 
Another alternative hypothesis states that were part of the original inhabitants of Western Europe and the creators / heirs of the great megalithic culture that arises in this whole area, possibly, a theory supported by genetic studies. The Iberians would be similar to the Celtic peoples of the first millennium BC in Ireland, Britain and France. Subsequently, the Celts would cross the Pyrenees into two major migrations: the IX and VII century a. C. The Celts settled mostly north of the River Duero and the River Ebro, where they mixed with the Iberians to form the group called Celtiberian.

The neolithic theory is plausible. But I don't believe in the Celtic expansion from the ouest. Inaccurate archaeologically and historically.
 
The neolithic theory is plausible. But I don't believe in the Celtic expansion from the ouest. Inaccurate archaeologically and historically.

Do you think that someone has invented?, when and why they invented?
 

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