ProMeTheus112
Prince
Thanks, I know that I'm more curious about the "noble savage" and "tree hugging hippie" stereotype stuff.
explain?
There are plenty of deserving civs that never made it to to the base game and unlike the celts were never added via DLC/expansion.
Italy for instance has never been in civ (though we have had Venice but is like putting in Saxony instead of Germany )
But the Celts were urbanized. Not so much in Britain, but the Gauls and Celtiberians were very urban. The Gauls had an advanced hierarchical social structure, trade networks, schools--in many ways, the Gaulish sociopolitical situation was comparable to a less literate pre-Alexander Greece. I'm certainly not arguing against their inclusion--quite the contrary--but I'd prefer a Gaulish civ focus on their accomplishments as craftsmen (Celtic iron was among the finest in Europe) and warriors, with perhaps spiritual secondary benefits like the Scythians' kurgans.Ok that's not what I was thinking about rather the non urbanized tribal lifestyle (though sedentary) without a centralized power.
Yes, but that's still more an argument to include the Gauls than the Celts. The brennus (brennus was a title rather than a name) who sacked Rome also did so long before Rome was a major center of power. But I do agree that the Gauls are the ideal candidates for representing pre-Roman Northern Europe.I would like to see the Celts in Civ6. Despite the fact that they never established big, organised Empire they had big influence in world history. The people who forced Rome to surrender (Brenus, and famous words Vae victi... ), the group of people that lived in modern Britain, Ireland, France, Northern Italy, parts of: Balkan, Anatolia, Ukraine, Portugal, Germany, Spain (remember that provinces with names Galicia or Galatia get this name because of them!), deserved to be included in Civ 6 game.
No centralized power as in the celts seemed to identify as a people at large without a leader for them all (tribe or clan as the unit). Non urbanized as in their towns were generally smaller and more spread out, made with more simple materials, leaving more space for nature and they lived with a closer bond to nature from what I remember about how they often did school outside with the druids and stuff, study plants among other things.
No centralized power as in the celts seemed to identify as a people at large without a leader for them all (tribe or clan as the unit). Non urbanized as in their towns were generally smaller and more spread out, made with more simple materials, leaving more space for nature and they lived with a closer bond to nature from what I remember about how they often did school outside with the druids and stuff, study plants among other things.
Anyway I like the Gauls that's where I'm from and really what I'm talking about, I don't know too much about the differences between them and other Celtic people, they seem to share a lot though. These ancient civs fit the context of a civ game really well in the early game especially. No opinion on whether Celt or Gaul would be more interesting, Gaul is pretty specific but no more than France I guess.
All of this, though I think the Insular Celts are best covered by city-states: while the cultural and intellectual contributions of Ireland in the Early Middle Ages can't be overstated, they were also brief, quickly diffused to the rest of Western Europe, and since then the Insular Celts have not been major players in European history, certainly not comparable to the Gauls in iron age Northern and Central Europe.Wanting things like Sweden or Italy over their ancient counterparts in the Vikings or Rome,
or having both incarnations in the game simultaneously is weird to me though.
If you think about them in contiguous terms, they're the same civs.
It doesn't hurt the brain to pick the ancient civ and see that as you progress past their IRL's cutoff date,
that they might develop and evolve into their more modern incarnation as well (Rome -> Italy), (Vikings -> Denmark, Sweden or Norway).
This only doesn't work when two peoples who share an overlapping region have completely different origins,
like say the Lydians and the Ottomans. Or Carthage and the Berbers.
But otherwise, I'm not interested in pointless balkanization of civs and outside of America and Brazil,
I'm definitely not interested in making the game about nations over civilizations.
As for Celts, I don't feel as radically about their merger into a Pan-Celtic civ as I would for say, the Pan-Native America civ in Civ 4.
At best, a separation of Insular Celts and Continental Celts would be a way to go.
Which makes sense to me and is distinct as say Ottoman Turks and Central Asian Turks.
They shared a common origin but developed differently enough to be considered separate entities.
Well, yes, except that the Celts didn't build Stonehenge, Tara, Newgrange, or the other megalithic stone structures of Northwestern Europe--those were built by the pre-Celtic bronze age inhabitants of the British Isles and the coast of France, usually referred to as the Megalith Builders. Genetically they were probably mostly the same people, but culturally and linguistically they were not Celtic and were probably not even Indo-European. Given that we have no positive evidence who the Picts were, one possibility is that they were related to the pre-Celtic Megalith Builders, although it's also possible they were P-Celts like the Britons.What he's trying to say is that you have completely bought into a fake history. You are imposing an imaginary vision you've been given through their modern cultural mis-representation onto a historic people who were comparable in terms of political complexity, economic activity and social development with the roman empire.
You really think Stone Henge was constructed without centralized power? It's literally aligned to the stars and constructed using stone from hundreds of miles upstream. They had such centralization and such a food surplus in their community that they could afford to dedicate serious amounts of time to astronomy, exploration, stone cutting, building heavy loading boats etc.
The only reason we see the celts as any less sophisticated today than the romans etc is because we have no record of a written language and they largely built using wood, which has since decayed. It was a more abundant resource in northern Europe, that's it.
But the Celts were urbanized. Not so much in Britain, but the Gauls and Celtiberians were very urban. The Gauls had an advanced hierarchical social structure, trade networks, schools--in many ways, the Gaulish sociopolitical situation was comparable to a less literate pre-Alexander Greece. I'm certainly not arguing against their inclusion--quite the contrary--but I'd prefer a Gaulish civ focus on their accomplishments as craftsmen (Celtic iron was among the finest in Europe) and warriors, with perhaps spiritual secondary benefits like the Scythians' kurgans.
Yes, but that's still more an argument to include the Gauls than the Celts. The brennus (brennus was a title rather than a name) who sacked Rome also did so long before Rome was a major center of power. But I do agree that the Gauls are the ideal candidates for representing pre-Roman Northern Europe.
Reading this post the Spinal Tap song 'Stonehenge' started playing in my head.
Zaarin, please, don't be offendedbut read this about the difference Between the Celts and the Gauls:
Celt is a term applied to the tribes who spread across Europe, Asia Minor and the British Isles from their homeland in south central Europe. Most archeologists date their emergence around 800 b.c., though some feel the date sould be extended backward to 2000 b.c. Celt comes from the Greek word Keltoi. The first evidence of its use is from quotes of the writings of the Greek historian Hecataeus of Miletus (his actual works being lost) in the later part of the 6th century b.c. and it is thought by some to be cognate with the Gothic word hildja (to fight). Caesar says the Gauls called themselves Celtae and this is where the confusion sets in. Gaul was a geographic area (modern France and northern Italy) and "Gauls" were the peple who lived there according to the Romans. Linguistically, the people who lived in Gaul were Celts, and this was athe main distinction made by the early historians. Tacitus says of the Cotini and the Osi "(they) are not Germans: that is proved by their language, Celtic in the one case, Pannonian in the other...". The bottom line is that there was no difference between the Celts and the Gauls, they were the same people.
Sources:
Dillon, Miles and Chadwick, Nora The Celtic Realms. New American Library, 1967.
Tacitus The Agricola and the Germania. (98 a.d.) Penguin Books, 1948.
Powell, T.G.E. The Celts. Thames and Hudson, 1958.
And, yes, I read from some sources that the "brennus" was a title and also from other sources that this was a mythic king. Anyway that doesn't matter. Of course that Rome wasn't world power at that time but the Celts were the European power. Their were founding cities even in my country: Belgrade Singidunum (Belgrade), Nais (Ni - bearthplace of Constantine The Great), some other minor cities...
In Zaarin's defence, he is using the word Gaul to specify one particular group in the mass that is commonly termed Celtic. The same particular group you picked out. The fact that they called themselves Celtae makes no difference to the fact that they are a distinct individual group, as you yourself point out by showing they are different to the germanic groups etc.
Celts and Gauls are not the same thing. The fact that the Gauls use the word Celtae to describe themselves just goes to show where we got the word from. It doesn't mean any other group we now call celts also called themselves Celtae. So to be particular about it, we could call the Gauls 'Celts', but this would be confusing to the majority group of those in society who recognise celtic as anything european outside of rome and greece. We can't however call Celts 'Gauls' for precisely the same reason. Celts have become something more than simply one people, and it becomes a huge conflating mess.
Well, Greek city-states are not the large metropolises we envision them as, either. A city-state involves a centralized administrative center and a lot of farms. Yes, a Greek polis was larger than a typical Gaulish polis, but the concept is the same.I just looked up a definition of tribe lol
"A unit of sociopolitical organization consisting of a number of families, clans, or other groups who share a common ancestry and culture and among whom leadership is typically neither formalized nor permanent."
It fits for Gauls, I guess Celts.
Now urban : "Of, relating to, or located in a city."
City : "A center of population, commerce, and culture; a town of significant size and importance."
Well sure Celts and Gauls had towns, whether or not we can call them cities seems pretty open. Whenever I saw examples of Gaul towns they were really not city-like, very low density, lots of space, totally not the scale of a city state such as Athens, Sparta or Rome or the like. So that's why I called them non urbanized. There are differences but for sure there was a lot of organization and settling of land and towns.
Gauls are Celts, Celts are not Gauls. There were many Celtic groups: Galatians, Gauls, Lepontii, Belgae (who seem to have been a mix of Gauls and Germans), Cisalpine Gauls, Celtiberians, maybe Lusitanians, Britons, Gaels, maybe the Picts--"Celt" is a term for a wide group of linguistically and culturally related peoples, one particular set of whom were the Gauls. It's also something of a wastebin category for non-Germanic, non-Italic Indo-European peoples of Western and Central Europe, and the idea of a Celtic language family is increasingly coming under scrutiny--especially since the relationship between the Continental Celtic and Insular Celtic languages is opaque to say the least, and efforts to link them have been controversial.Zaarin, please, don't be offendedbut read this about the difference Between the Celts and the Gauls:
Celt is a term applied to the tribes who spread across Europe, Asia Minor and the British Isles from their homeland in south central Europe. Most archeologists date their emergence around 800 b.c., though some feel the date sould be extended backward to 2000 b.c. Celt comes from the Greek word Keltoi. The first evidence of its use is from quotes of the writings of the Greek historian Hecataeus of Miletus (his actual works being lost) in the later part of the 6th century b.c. and it is thought by some to be cognate with the Gothic word hildja (to fight). Caesar says the Gauls called themselves Celtae and this is where the confusion sets in. Gaul was a geographic area (modern France and northern Italy) and "Gauls" were the peple who lived there according to the Romans. Linguistically, the people who lived in Gaul were Celts, and this was athe main distinction made by the early historians. Tacitus says of the Cotini and the Osi "(they) are not Germans: that is proved by their language, Celtic in the one case, Pannonian in the other...". The bottom line is that there was no difference between the Celts and the Gauls, they were the same people.
Sources:
Dillon, Miles and Chadwick, Nora The Celtic Realms. New American Library, 1967.
Tacitus The Agricola and the Germania. (98 a.d.) Penguin Books, 1948.
Powell, T.G.E. The Celts. Thames and Hudson, 1958.
And, yes, I read from some sources that the "brennus" was a title and also from other sources that this was a mythic king. Anyway that doesn't matter. Of course that Rome wasn't world power at that time but the Celts were the European power. Their were founding cities even in my country: Belgrade Singidunum (Belgrade), Nais (Ni - bearthplace of Constantine The Great), some other minor cities...
Wanting things like Sweden or Italy over their ancient counterparts in the Vikings or Rome,
or having both incarnations in the game simultaneously is weird to me though.
If you think about them in contiguous terms, they're the same civs.
It doesn't hurt the brain to pick the ancient civ and see that as you progress past their IRL's cutoff date,
that they might develop and evolve into their more modern incarnation as well (Rome -> Italy), (Vikings -> Denmark, Sweden or Norway).
This only doesn't work when two peoples who share an overlapping region have completely different origins,
like say the Lydians and the Ottomans. Or Carthage and the Berbers.
But otherwise, I'm not interested in pointless balkanization of civs and outside of America and Brazil,
I'm definitely not interested in making the game about nations over civilizations.
As for Celts, I don't feel as radically about their merger into a Pan-Celtic civ as I would for say, the Pan-Native America civ in Civ 4.
At best, a separation of Insular Celts and Continental Celts would be a way to go.
Which makes sense to me and is distinct as say Ottoman Turks and Central Asian Turks.
They shared a common origin but developed differently enough to be considered separate entities.