I HAD to Make a Response to This...

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Sometimes when I have free time I like reading stuff. Well, in this case I must admit that all the reading took me into a full on rabbit hole. Are you ready to be drawn into the depth of intellectual incoherence? Let's get out of it together shall we?
link to the video I mention
• Reading the Past in An...
link to the original article I'm responding to
www.irishcentral.com/roots/hi...
The Celts (/kɛlts/, see pronunciation for different usages) or Celtic peoples (/ˈkɛltɪk/) were a collection of Indo-European peoples[1] in Europe and Anatolia, identified by their use of Celtic languages and other cultural similarities.[2][3][4][5] Major Celtic groups included the Gauls; the Celtiberians and Gallaeci[6][7] of Iberia; the Britons and Gaels of Britain and Ireland; the Boii; and the Galatians. The relation between ethnicity, language and culture in the Celtic world is unclear and debated;[8] for example over the ways in which the Iron Age people of Britain and Ireland should be called Celts.[5][8][9][10] In current scholarship, 'Celt' primarily refers to 'speakers of Celtic languages' rather than to a single ethnic group.[11]
The La Tène-style ceremonial Agris Helmet, 350 BC, Angoulême city Museum in France
The history of pre-Celtic Europe and Celtic origins is debated. The traditional "Celtic from the East" theory, says the proto-Celtic language arose in the late Bronze Age Urnfield culture of central Europe, named after grave sites in southern Germany,[12][13] which flourished from around 1200 BC.[14] This theory links the Celts with the Iron Age Hallstatt culture which followed it (c. 1200-500 BC), named for the rich grave finds in Hallstatt, Austria,[14][15] and with the following La Tène culture (c. 450 BC onward), named after the La Tène site in Switzerland. It proposes that Celtic culture spread westward and southward from these areas by diffusion or migration.[16] A newer theory, "Celtic from the West", suggests proto-Celtic arose earlier, was a lingua franca in the Atlantic Bronze Age coastal zone, and spread eastward.[17] Another newer theory, "Celtic from the Centre", suggests proto-Celtic arose between these two zones, in Bronze Age Gaul, then spread in various directions.[11] After the Celtic settlement of Southeast Europe in the 3rd century BC, Celtic culture reached as far east as central Anatolia, Turkey.
The earliest undisputed examples of Celtic language are the Lepontic inscriptions from the 6th century BC.[18] Continental Celtic languages are attested almost exclusively through inscriptions and place-names. Insular Celtic languages are attested from the 4th century AD in Ogham inscriptions, though they were clearly being spoken much earlier. Celtic literary tradition begins with Old Irish texts around the 8th century AD. Elements of Celtic mythology are recorded in early Irish and early Welsh literature. Most written evidence of the early Celts comes from Greco-Roman writers, who often grouped the Celts as barbarian tribes. They followed an ancient Celtic religion overseen by druids.
The Celts were often in conflict with the Romans, such as in the Roman-Gallic wars, the Celtiberian Wars, the conquest of Gaul and conquest of Britain. By the 1st century AD, most Celtic territories had become part of the Roman Empire. By c. 500, due to Romanisation and the migration of Germanic tribes, Celtic culture had mostly become restricted to Ireland, western and northern Britain, and Brittany. Between the 5th and 8th centuries, the Celtic-speaking communities in these Atlantic regions emerged as a reasonably cohesive cultural entity. They had a common linguistic, religious and artistic heritage that distinguished them from surrounding cultures.[19]
Insular Celtic culture diversified into that of the Gaels (Irish, Scots and Manx) and the Celtic Britons (Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons) of the medieval and modern periods.[2][20][21] A modern Celtic identity[22] was constructed as part of the Romanticist Celtic Revival in Britain, Ireland, and other European territories such as Galicia.[23] Today, Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, and Breton are still spoken in parts of their former territories, while Cornish and Manx are undergoing a revival.
Names and terminology
Celto-Latin stele from Galicia, 2nd century, referring to "CELTICA SUPERTAM(arica)"
Main article: Names of the Celts
#metatron #historyfacts

Пікірлер: 4 300

  • @metatronyt
    @metatronyt8 ай бұрын

    Use my code [METATRON] to get $5 off your delicious, high protein Magic Spoon cereal by clicking this link: www.magicspoon.com/metatron

  • @fetus2280

    @fetus2280

    8 ай бұрын

    I put down my Magic Spoon over 20 years ago mate. I cant go back :P

  • @stuartpenman6387

    @stuartpenman6387

    8 ай бұрын

    1 thing you have to keep in mind -Celtic history is heavily political the nonsense story of Scotland's western isles and coast was empty until the Irish came across is a perfect example of that

  • @fredashay

    @fredashay

    8 ай бұрын

    Could they have been Picts if not Celts? I'm not a history expert. I'm just asking a question...

  • @alpharius8264

    @alpharius8264

    8 ай бұрын

    A must-watch video for all individuals on Wikipedia who try to prove ethnolinguistic affiliations with haplogroups.

  • @memeticist

    @memeticist

    8 ай бұрын

    Well, sometimes migrating people do kill everyone - or at least all the men - and replace the indigenous people with their own DNA.

  • @stc3145
    @stc31458 ай бұрын

    Grandma always said. «I don’t care what they say in school, ancient Irish were black»

  • @JayStrun

    @JayStrun

    8 ай бұрын

    me grandmum always said "ah ain't it grand boyo, teh irish were always black. no matter what toughts tey try tah put in yer head at school"

  • @TheMollyPitchers

    @TheMollyPitchers

    8 ай бұрын

    High fives all around 👍💯

  • @WhiteIkiryo-yt2it

    @WhiteIkiryo-yt2it

    8 ай бұрын

    I give it 6 months at most before they try such a claim.

  • @Gaiden-Shinji875

    @Gaiden-Shinji875

    8 ай бұрын

    I thought I was looking a little darker lately. Turns out I was just in the shade. As soon as I stepped in the light I lit up like a Xmas tree 😂😂

  • @alchemicalalek7535

    @alchemicalalek7535

    8 ай бұрын

    LMFAO

  • @cthomaspeasant3059
    @cthomaspeasant30598 ай бұрын

    Peak journalism: When you're so wrong you disprove yourself while not understanding how you did it

  • @texasbeast239

    @texasbeast239

    8 ай бұрын

    "Fiery but mostly peaceful protests..."

  • @oddish2253

    @oddish2253

    8 ай бұрын

    Not surprisingly,the last article I read was: Oliver Cromwell's peacekeeping mission in Ireland.

  • @janetmackinnon3411

    @janetmackinnon3411

    8 ай бұрын

    I hesitate to compare this to some present "governments"...

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    8 ай бұрын

    You don't even get it. They don't _care....._ You say they're wrong? They say who gives a F0ck. It's so much worse than you portray. They were never interested in being right, only in being read.

  • @lindseylinck

    @lindseylinck

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@janetmackinnon3411 Some governments deserve that comparison, and may even look worse that "peak journalism". :P

  • @emmaforan5838
    @emmaforan58388 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this! ‘Celtic’ is used from a historian’s perspective to describe a cultural/linguistic group, so how on Earth somebody could claim analysis of skeletal remains undermine the Celtic tradition of Ireland is beyond me…

  • @favero4446

    @favero4446

    8 ай бұрын

    Well, the Article is CLEARLY stating "Celts", and not "Celtic" or "Celfified populations" for that matter... Metatron is simply overreacting on this one...

  • @bashkillszombies

    @bashkillszombies

    8 ай бұрын

    SILENCE! I will not hear your racism here. Dey wuz kangz n sheit! Although hopefully now American's will stop pretending they're "Celtic", celtic ancestry is near 0 in US stock.

  • @bashkillszombies

    @bashkillszombies

    8 ай бұрын

    Jokes aside, all this shit is about retconning UK history and EU history to turn everyone brown. Always has been.

  • @nicnaimhin2978

    @nicnaimhin2978

    8 ай бұрын

    @@favero4446No “overreaction” by the learned Metatron at all - merely statement of fact , despite strongly politically motivated objections from some who are unable to handle the truth! So it’s implied that there’s a hierarchy here - first : The Celts ; then the sort of Celtic ; then lastly mere “ Celtified Populations “, such as the Irish ! Really?! How little you know of the great ancient culture of Ireland, with the oldest vernacular literature in Western Europe ,after that of Classical Greece & Rome ….

  • @dangerousdiscourse

    @dangerousdiscourse

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@nicnaimhin2978ancient irish is far more ancient than anything roman

  • @doctorlolchicken7478
    @doctorlolchicken74788 ай бұрын

    So we found some bones under a pub parking lot, which probably means they got into a fight because one of them spilled someone’s pint or looked at his gf. And they lost, so quite possibly not even Irish. Maybe they were visiting from England for a flower arranging tournament or a bake off.

  • @grandmagrace9453

    @grandmagrace9453

    8 ай бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @tireachan6178

    @tireachan6178

    8 ай бұрын

    My Nan is always fighting in pub car parks so we plan to Bury her under one when she finally loses. As is our tradition

  • @luciam6098
    @luciam60988 ай бұрын

    Imagine someone in thousands of years finding a few native American skeletons and saying Americans didn't really come from Europe

  • @steeljawX

    @steeljawX

    8 ай бұрын

    I feel like it'd be more on par with either future anthropologists finding all the mixed bones in France from both World Wars and declaring that there was no such people as the French or archeologists finding AK rifles everywhere and declaring that Russia was a much larger nation that it actually was or finding all the various katanas and knock off katanas and deciding samurai and bushido were not Japan specific.

  • @tannerhuxtable6118

    @tannerhuxtable6118

    8 ай бұрын

    Well, Native Americans didn't come from Europe. European Americans came from Europe. It would be like them finding Native American skeletons and saying that Americans didn't speak English.

  • @greghoyt4061

    @greghoyt4061

    8 ай бұрын

    @@steeljawX​​⁠Lol! Or, future archaeologists finding Mall Ninja artifacts in ruins of Hot Topic and Spencer’s and coming to the conclusion that Samurai were actually virgin European mercenaries that Daimyos hired during the Warring States Period.

  • @nphoenixcrimefighter

    @nphoenixcrimefighter

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tannerhuxtable6118I think Native Americans did come from Europe or Asia.

  • @bryce4228

    @bryce4228

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@tannerhuxtable6118"American" is a specific ethnicity, meaning those descended from the British rebels. It's distinct from native Americans, who migrated here earlier, and different than modifier-Americans, who migrated here later.

  • @reshpeck
    @reshpeck8 ай бұрын

    "In Ireland you've got more pubs than you have homes!" - Metatron "That's offensive!" - Someone who isn't Irish

  • @SockieTheSockPuppet

    @SockieTheSockPuppet

    8 ай бұрын

    "It's offensive there isn't more." - Someone who is Irish

  • @DH-xw6jp

    @DH-xw6jp

    8 ай бұрын

    ​​the Irish people were reached out to for comment, None were sober enough to consent to an interview.

  • @ollikoskiniemi6221

    @ollikoskiniemi6221

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@SockieTheSockPuppetI thought pub was the irish word for home.

  • @miastupid7911

    @miastupid7911

    8 ай бұрын

    @@SockieTheSockPuppet Thank you! I grew up in an Irish neighborhood in BKLYN. And when I did in fact visit Ireland about 10 years ago, it was just as if I was back home (and I'm Greek now living in Greece). The only difference was that the Liffey ran through the middle of Dublin instead of the Hudson that ran at the edge of BKLYN (just two blocks away). And of course, the amazing live music (like the violin 🎻). Was amazing! And, I must add, the driving on the other side. I tried to enter the cab on the right-hand side and the cabbie who was waiting otiside, exclaimed "you want to drive?"

  • @janetmackinnon3411

    @janetmackinnon3411

    8 ай бұрын

    I think that was a joke about stereotypes...

  • @NostalgiaBrit
    @NostalgiaBrit8 ай бұрын

    See, this video is just one more reason why I _love_ *Metatron,* and why I’m so glad that I found his channel! So-called news outlets should always ask themselves, "how would *Metatron* respond to this?" _before_ publishing any article!

  • @chadbassett8381

    @chadbassett8381

    8 ай бұрын

    100%

  • @TheArchangel314

    @TheArchangel314

    6 ай бұрын

    Sorry to break the divine Triple-1, but that response earned that right...Everyone should ask themselves that, if you ask Me. Not just the news, but everyone, especially the religious,.

  • @Daniel_876
    @Daniel_8768 ай бұрын

    as an Irish person myself I am very proud to be Celtic

  • @Finthefish-hr8ky

    @Finthefish-hr8ky

    5 ай бұрын

    As a celt, I'm very proud to be Irish .

  • @maluslikescoffee3690

    @maluslikescoffee3690

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm a descendant of irish immigrants, and I'm trying to study Celtic culture in my spare time.

  • @Grassdia

    @Grassdia

    21 күн бұрын

    Maithú

  • @martinkafka9510
    @martinkafka95108 ай бұрын

    "Discovery of bones under Dublin KFC branch proves Irish are actually descended from chicken." Wouldn't be surprised if they went with something like that next.

  • @jeremypnet

    @jeremypnet

    8 ай бұрын

    I didn’t know they used chickens in KFC. I thought they used some sort of large rodent or lizard or something.

  • @joylindadichamounix

    @joylindadichamounix

    8 ай бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣

  • @kaimagnus5760

    @kaimagnus5760

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@jeremypnetThat's Korean Fried BBQ. Easy mistake since they're only one letter off lol

  • @cheseburger0912

    @cheseburger0912

    8 ай бұрын

    Please don't give them the idea

  • @charlesberkley3460

    @charlesberkley3460

    8 ай бұрын

    😂😂😂😂BOY, u too much

  • @themissingpeace7956
    @themissingpeace79568 ай бұрын

    I think their strategy is “if you repeat a lie enough times people will start to believe it as true”

  • @BobT36

    @BobT36

    8 ай бұрын

    "And we’ve kind of got to tell a lie: we’ll go back into history and there will be black people where, historically, there wouldn’t have been, and we won’t dwell on that. We’ll say, ‘To hell with it, this is the imaginary, better version of the world. By believing in it, we’ll summon it forth." Yes, these people are evil. They literally want to re-write reality to confirm to what they demand you believe instead.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    8 ай бұрын

    I think it’s more the equivalent of people posting “first” in the comments section. It makes ignorant people feel clever & intelligent to be the 1st to break news that “shatters the norms”. They’re not as interested in being accurate as they are in being the 1st one to know about a thing that everyone else got wrong for so long. It ends up lying somewhere along the Dunning-Krueger spectrum. They’re parroting things that they think are intelligent because they’re too ignorant to think critically.

  • @sonofthebearking3335

    @sonofthebearking3335

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@koobs4549 you've missed the point. OP is quoting a certain mustache man, because his regime is now alive and well once again: just under a new management that stresses the 'oppression' cough I mean privilege of a certain color based on their appearance and not on their merit.

  • @koobs4549

    @koobs4549

    8 ай бұрын

    @@sonofthebearking3335 I’m familiar with the quote & you’re attributing it to the wrong guy. The “mustache man” didn’t say it, it was his head of propaganda, Joseph Goebles who said it. It’s not that I didn’t understand the quote or where it came from, I just disagree with his point for the reasons I stated in my comment.

  • @user-gu9yq5sj7c

    @user-gu9yq5sj7c

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@BobT36 There's people trying to rewrite history from all sides, including conservatives. If you truly cared about history and being against propaganda you would criticize all sides and not be biased. Idk if you are. I was speaking in general. For example, some conservatives and some people downplaying, justifying, or glorifying slavery. It's twisted. Brandon F made videos criticizing those people. Some conservatives also said women were never oppressed in history or now. When the taliban banned women from college. There's people who do honor killings on women and girls for not wearing a hijab. Even in western countries. Second Thought has a video called America's forgotten socialist history, where some conservatives tried to rewrite socialism out. Such as that MLK was a socialist.

  • @harrietharlow9929
    @harrietharlow99298 ай бұрын

    Being Scots-Irish, I wonder why do so many like to try to prove that we are not Celtic peoples? Thank you, Metatron for debunking this nonsense.

  • @ivanj.conway9919

    @ivanj.conway9919

    8 ай бұрын

    What is wrong with being descended from Celtic Peoples. My ancestry is Irish as far as I can tell, and because of this, Celtic as far as I can tell, and I have always, taken pride in this. Celtic culture is so rich and beautiful. Brutal in ancient times, but rich and beautiful as well. That being said; I could not speak a word of Gaelic if my life depended on it. I have a thoroughly, Anglicized tongue.

  • @harrietharlow9929

    @harrietharlow9929

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ivanj.conway9919 I'd like the answer to that myself. What a lot of English do not know or prefer to forget-take your pick-is that they also descend from Celtic tribes, such as the Iceni, the Briganti, etc. I'm proud of my Celtic heritage even if I speak no Gaelic. Six nations, one soul!

  • @ivanj.conway9919

    @ivanj.conway9919

    8 ай бұрын

    @@harrietharlow9929 : Hey, so are you First Nations as well? I'm Canadian so this is what we call Native American People. Well, everyone that lived in all of North America before the Europeans came here. I actually, prefer this term over Native Americans as I feel it more accurately describe the people that were here before we were, even if, maybe, it was coined by the white people in Canada, rather than the natives themselves. Actually, I'm not sure WHERE, it came from but I prefer it over Native American anyway. So you are part Celtic and part First Nations as well. Wow, wild. From what I understand Darling, and that understanding is limited to say the least; there are many similarities between Ancient Celtic Culture and First Nations Culture before European peoples came here. Maybe if Ancient Celts had come here instead of later Europeans, First Nations Culture would not have been destroyed to the same degree if at all, has we have seen happen over the past 500 plus years, regardless. Being white and of European ancestry myself; I am so, so, very sorry for everything my fore bearers did, and most certainly, do not support it at all, anymore than I support our attitude towards First Nations Peoples today. I guess, many English wish to distance themselves from this, because maybe, they erroneously, believe that they are descended from something better, as my understanding of Ancient Celtic Culture is that sadly, it was pretty, damn, brutal. But you take the bad with the good and learn from all of it, I guess. Despite that, the Ancient Celts created WONDROUS, beauty in their singing, and art and so forth, and even, in their language itself, which we can all take pride in. Interestingly enough though, Korean sounds very similar to Celtic. If you have ever, heard it spoken or sung you will detect the same lyrical quality to it. I love Korean singing, I find it absolutely, enchanting. I'm sure there are many First Nations languages that have a similar quality to them, as well. Much Love and Warmest Wishes. Be Well and Safe. Out. 🙂🖐🏼😌

  • @harrietharlow9929

    @harrietharlow9929

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ivanj.conway9919 I have some Choctaw.

  • @ivanj.conway9919

    @ivanj.conway9919

    8 ай бұрын

    @@harrietharlow9929 : Well Darling, you can take pride in all of it. I wish I knew my heritage so well.

  • @adriennedunne1748
    @adriennedunne17488 ай бұрын

    These skeletons may have been visitors or even slaves. Who says they were even native Irish? Thanks for your videos. Really enjoy them

  • @Jiub_SN

    @Jiub_SN

    2 ай бұрын

    Because they were under the ground in Ireland, duh. These people said the same shit about Africans in Egypt despite them being bordering groups so who fuckin knows

  • @rickardspaghetti
    @rickardspaghetti8 ай бұрын

    2:15 So Irish DNA existed in Ireland long before the arrival of the Celts, and this somehow means Irish people don't have Celtic ancestry? Is this what they're trying to say? If that is indeed what they're saying, that'd be as dumb as saying that because half of my DNA already exist in my father, I couldn't possibly be related to my mother since she is younger than he.

  • @fattiger6957

    @fattiger6957

    8 ай бұрын

    Journalist don't understand how immigration works apparently. The original inhabitants of Japan were the Ainu, an extremely gentically and culturally unique people who seemingly have no relation to the rest of East Asia. Going by the logic of this article, the current Japanese people must all be Ainu, despite the fact that there is clear evidence the ethnic majority of Japan (98%) are people descended from people who migrated from East Asia.

  • @noelienoelie8425

    @noelienoelie8425

    8 ай бұрын

    It doesn't make any sense anyway, Irish people have Gealic DNA. Celtic people came after and are Gealic and picktish mix, or Gealic and Welsh. And the Celt is just a roman word for outsider.

  • @alansmithee8831

    @alansmithee8831

    8 ай бұрын

    @Rickardspaghetti. This started to sound like a tale of Scots Irish family ties in the Appalachians. Anyone hear a banjo?

  • @sanjivjhangiani3243

    @sanjivjhangiani3243

    8 ай бұрын

    So, I guess if the English have Saxon DNA, they cannot be descended from the Normans 😂.

  • @alansmithee8831

    @alansmithee8831

    8 ай бұрын

    @@sanjivjhangiani3243 I live near Normanton and Bretton. This could get confusing.

  • @doms.6701
    @doms.67018 ай бұрын

    I was a research assistant, a glorified intern lol. But my researcher always showed us articles that took a study way out of context. A study made a small connection and articles run with it like it's a fact.

  • @kevinzhu6417

    @kevinzhu6417

    8 ай бұрын

    the worst are the people who run with those articles as fact and yet will question the integrity of academics the moment they disagree with them

  • @TrappedInFloor

    @TrappedInFloor

    8 ай бұрын

    Journalists do that for political reasons.

  • @3Kiwiana

    @3Kiwiana

    8 ай бұрын

    Archeologists also do stuff for political reasons as well, in fact a lot of these types of professions do.

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    8 ай бұрын

    @@3Kiwiana It's not the academics who are at fault usually, it's the pop sci writers, the newspaper editors and the like, who have zero training in the subject matter and who don't care to get things right. They just want to be read. This is why a lot of researchers refuse to sit for interviews for magazines and so on, because they know how often the words of experts are taken out of context in order to sell lies.

  • @soulie2001

    @soulie2001

    8 ай бұрын

    The studies are often not the greatest either if they make small connections in a vacuum. They're more Confirmation bias.

  • @Cropnik
    @Cropnik8 ай бұрын

    This exact kind of (faulty) logic is sometimes used in discussions about Slavic people, especially South Slavs such as myself. I've heard people on the Web (even some Slavs) saying that Croats or other South Slavs 'aren't Slavic' or 'are only semi-Slavic' because our DNA is a mixture of the pre-migration inhabitants of the Balkans and Slavic settlers that migrated into the region. What those people don't realize (or refuse to admit because it conflicts with their political agenda) is that the Slavs - just like the Celts - are an ethnolinguistic group, and there's no such thing as 'the Slavic gene'. Using genetics to prove someone's 'Slavness' is pointless. If you speak a Slavic language and your culture and folklore are Slavic, you are Slavic.

  • @sergeysergeev9117

    @sergeysergeev9117

    8 ай бұрын

    Hi, my Slavic brother. (from Russia) 🫡

  • @favero4446

    @favero4446

    8 ай бұрын

    Well, it is a matter of accuracy. You people are not trully Slavs, genetically speaking. Are you? For what I know, the balkan is a "ethnic basin", a great mixture of Slavic, Germanic and Italic (Celtic) peoples. Also, this is not a "recent" thing. The Illyrians were already a render of these populations in the Bronze age... Are we really going to propose that genes does not matter now? Do you understand how problematical a claim like this would evolve to?

  • @raics101

    @raics101

    8 ай бұрын

    If I remember right, that study said that Slovenians are the least Slavic of all Slavs in existence, and I can't fully disregard something that talks so much sense :)

  • @favero4446

    @favero4446

    8 ай бұрын

    @@raics101What are they then? Venetians?

  • @raics101

    @raics101

    8 ай бұрын

    @@favero4446 Can't remember what the article said, but I'd imagine that it's similar to Austria. There was some Celtic presence there, and that's where the Germanic, Slavic and Magyar expansions stopped because nobody enjoys mountaineering in their best combat sandals, so your guess is as good as mine. And I don't think that they said that Slovenians are necessarily something else, just least Slavic and not by some huge margin. Anyway, it was meant as a joke, the running trope in former Yugoslavia was that Slovenians don't get too miffed when you don't put them in the same basket as the rest of the Slavdom.

  • @laughingmask3118
    @laughingmask31188 ай бұрын

    Omfg they literally described the bones as very possibly the Milesians, which were already claimed to be part of Irish ancestry all the way back in The Book of Invasions.

  • @davidweihe6052

    @davidweihe6052

    2 ай бұрын

    When did they say that they were northern Iberians (where the family of the Mil/Champion came from, before “invading” Ireland)?

  • @chrish1657
    @chrish16578 ай бұрын

    The biggest lesson I learned in doing an Archaeology degree is that the past is always used to justify the present.

  • @badlaamaurukehu

    @badlaamaurukehu

    8 ай бұрын

    This is a problem many agendas have in common.

  • @ProleCenter

    @ProleCenter

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@KALSKingdomYeah, but It shouldn't be used to spread false narratives.

  • @nicolaspace1182

    @nicolaspace1182

    8 ай бұрын

    @@KALSKingdomusing it to justify present injustices is what he means.

  • @gengashaunt3322

    @gengashaunt3322

    8 ай бұрын

    ​​@@KALSKingdomEssentially, to use the past ( without being educated of it ) to justify the present is dangerous because misunderstanding the past and then trying to apply this lack of understanding to whatever it is youre trying to justify, youre not only incorrect, but spreading misinformation which is also detrimental, makes it possible people pick up the uninformed perspective because justifying ones way of living is far easier than reevaluating how we see things and acting accordingly. Its not that using the past is bad, using the past when you dont actually understand, which the average person doesnt, can be bad. Not inherently as you stated, but itd be far more common. 3:49

  • @revilo178

    @revilo178

    8 ай бұрын

    @@KALSKingdom I guess it depends of what you mean by "justify". History _explains_ the present; it tells us how we got here. I wouldn't have said "justify", though.

  • @JustDaniel6764
    @JustDaniel67648 ай бұрын

    At this rate you could almost have a second channel, 'Reacting to cretins'

  • @lausdeo4944

    @lausdeo4944

    8 ай бұрын

    Just a playlist would work as well.

  • @oneproudbrowncoat

    @oneproudbrowncoat

    8 ай бұрын

    Definitely need to get more iodine into the public's diet. 😂

  • @edwardcullen1739

    @edwardcullen1739

    8 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @mrbaab5932

    @mrbaab5932

    8 ай бұрын

    Stop hating on the advanced Minoans from Crete.

  • @oneproudbrowncoat

    @oneproudbrowncoat

    8 ай бұрын

    @@mrbaab5932 Who's mentioning them?

  • @occamsrouter
    @occamsrouter8 ай бұрын

    My DNA test showed markers in the haplogroup that first occupied Ireland going back at least 6000 years BCE. The marker bounced back and forth between Ireland and Scotland, then completely vanished the Isles around 1000 CE, suddenly re-appearing in Norway. To this day the area is named after my relative's farm, which is still operating. Their local stave church kept decent records, and I was able to find entries of my relatives as early as 1298.

  • @SimpleMinded221

    @SimpleMinded221

    8 ай бұрын

    Ydna I2 ?

  • @Timbyte

    @Timbyte

    8 ай бұрын

    You are not your ancestors

  • @occamsrouter

    @occamsrouter

    8 ай бұрын

    @@branthomas1621 We used the 'Human Genome Project' NatGeo service back before they sold it off to AncestryDNA. It was a Helix co-branded kit, no longer available. The Helix kit was far more detailed. They did give us a subscription to AncestryDNA after the sale, but it doesn't go into details as the original did.

  • @occamsrouter

    @occamsrouter

    8 ай бұрын

    @@branthomas1621 Sorry, they sold it off to MyHeritage, not Ancestry...

  • @dinamycvideosgaming1597

    @dinamycvideosgaming1597

    8 ай бұрын

    I got R-M153

  • @Nanashicae
    @Nanashicae8 ай бұрын

    If only, the Irish mythology hadn’t idk had a creation story that was 7 invasions of 7 different cultures. I mean imagine my shock to digging up Fir Blog bones and be upset that they weren’t Sons of Mill bones….

  • @TOUGHEYES

    @TOUGHEYES

    8 ай бұрын

    Shout out to Lugh Lámhada, the best God ever.

  • @tempestvenator9809

    @tempestvenator9809

    8 ай бұрын

    Problem is that some people dismiss the book of invasions since it was written by Christians.There IS a chance that there were multiple migrations that inspired the stories in the Book of Invasions. I mean look at the Native Americans, we have evidence of several different migrations but most people think all Native Americans came from the beiring strait.

  • @brucetucker4847

    @brucetucker4847

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tempestvenator9809 It was _written down_ by Christians, based on much older oral traditions. Exactly how accurately it recorded those traditions is anybody's guess.

  • @jasonwhite7677

    @jasonwhite7677

    8 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Glad to see you know Irish mythology 👍

  • @tempestvenator9809

    @tempestvenator9809

    8 ай бұрын

    @@brucetucker4847 Yeah that do be the clincher. Everybody is assuming a Christian bias (as if modern historians aren't already biased) so they tend to get all huffy and claim we will never know the true Irish mythology.... when oral traditions DO change and what the Christians put down on paper may have been what they got from the oral speakers of that time since the Christians were one of the few groups who actually bothered to write stuff down.

  • @frankvandorp2059
    @frankvandorp20598 ай бұрын

    "It turns out that skeletons from the period of the Aztec empire are related to modern-day Mexicans, therefore modern-day Mexicans cannot descend from Spanish immigrants!"

  • @noelienoelie8425

    @noelienoelie8425

    8 ай бұрын

    Indigenous Mexican people are a thing, just like Indigenous north Americans.

  • @dannyboywhaa3146

    @dannyboywhaa3146

    8 ай бұрын

    No because Celtic is a meaningless term and incorrect to begin with - at least in the context it is being used here! It’s actually offensive to call Welsh ‘Celtic’... the original peoples of these islands are not Celtic - it is NOT a culture shared with the continent... that came later into Ireland when the Gaels invaded what later became Scotland...

  • @tiglishnobody8750

    @tiglishnobody8750

    8 ай бұрын

    @@dannyboywhaa3146 What? Also Gael doesn't invade Ireland, instead they only steady migrate to Ireland until they outnumber ancient people who build Newgrange and absorb them into Gaelic population No invasion, just steady of migration that build up steady population of Gaels I am Irish here and also Modern Welsh are celtic now as they are descendant of Britons who been force to place that became Wale by Angol-Saxon

  • @dannyboywhaa3146

    @dannyboywhaa3146

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tiglishnobody8750 no the Kingdom of Gywnd was always Welsh... the Cornish, Welsh, Cumbrians and Bretons are not Celtic originally - far older language group.

  • @tiglishnobody8750

    @tiglishnobody8750

    8 ай бұрын

    You should read history before you ranting Irish aren't call Celtic either yet we are in categories as Celtic Also Kingdom of Gywnd rise after Roman left and you can guess, they are Brtion and Brtion are celts You should understand what celt and history is. :/@@dannyboywhaa3146

  • @GothPaoki
    @GothPaoki8 ай бұрын

    That's like saying Persians weren't Persian genetically at the time of Alexander the Great because their culture had intermixed with the Hellenic one .

  • @gaychampagnesocialist7213

    @gaychampagnesocialist7213

    8 ай бұрын

    Persians were black. Greeks were black. They was all black kangs!

  • @game_boyd1644

    @game_boyd1644

    8 ай бұрын

    @@gaychampagnesocialist7213you can do without the racist jokes. Maybe people will take your criticisms more seriously then

  • @laurajaneluvsbeauty9596

    @laurajaneluvsbeauty9596

    8 ай бұрын

    @@game_boyd1644no actually they deserve to be made fun of. Their rhetoric is dangerous and dehumanizing of any and all white peoples which is one of the steps to genocide

  • @mramisuzuki6962

    @mramisuzuki6962

    8 ай бұрын

    @@gaychampagnesocialist7213oh there were black kangs plenty of them and it’s why you’re not!😊

  • @mramisuzuki6962

    @mramisuzuki6962

    8 ай бұрын

    @@libsoric6693 lol this isn’t true either the Persians are also a multiple ethnic group of Indo-European peoples.

  • @benjaminwilliams41
    @benjaminwilliams418 ай бұрын

    You're right, 'Celtic' is a reference to culture, not genetics. The first people in Ireland and the British Isles, were the neolithic peoples who built Scara Bray, Stonehenge, and New Grange. The second wave was the Bell Beaker people, whose DNA I share 100% of. These people were known as Celtic because of art, language and other cultural aspects.

  • @GholaTleilaxu

    @GholaTleilaxu

    8 ай бұрын

    Are you being raysist towards Mesolithic hunter-gatherers by not considering them "people"? :)

  • @minutemansam1214

    @minutemansam1214

    8 ай бұрын

    It's not even a reference to culture, it's a reference to a language family. The Celts of Anatolia were quite distinct from the ones from Gaul.

  • @GAMER123GAMING

    @GAMER123GAMING

    7 ай бұрын

    @@minutemansam1214 Where do you think the Tectosages, the Trocmii, and the Tolistobogii come from? learn the basic history before you comment on things. "The Celts of Anatolia" literally migrated there from Gaul. this is all reasonably documented as well

  • @johnbruce2868

    @johnbruce2868

    6 ай бұрын

    NO! The first people in Ireland and the British Isles were NOT "the neolithic peoples who built Scara Bray." As a retired archaeologist I assure you Palaeolithic stone tools manufactured by Homo heidelbergensis are commonly found in England. Just look up Clactonian tools and Acheulian sites in the UK. I found a Clactonian cleaver now in the British Museum in my back garden. These tools date to the end of the first Ice Age, about 450,000 years ago. The earliest evidence of humans in the UK are the footprints excavated at Happisburgh, Norfolk, dating to about 700,000 BP. There is a Neaderthal skull from Swanscombe in Kent. Humans disappeared from Britain during the Ice Ages, returning most recently about 10,000 years ago after the Devensian glaciation. Settlement was then made by the distinct Mesolithic culture which dates from the end of that Ice Age to about 4,300 years ago and is widely represented throughout the UK. (Look up Mesolithic tools in Yorkshire). So, sorry, you are very wrong. The first people in Ireland and the British Isles were not neolithic people.

  • @moon-pw1bi

    @moon-pw1bi

    5 күн бұрын

    its really a reference to both, its context specific

  • @RoyMcLellan
    @RoyMcLellan8 ай бұрын

    This is a topic that was interesting to me when I started trying to learn the Gaelic language. I always thought that the Celts were a unique ethnic group, only to find out that saying "Celtic" was more in line with saying "American". The Celts were so ethnically diverse as they spread across almost the entirety of Europe that not only is there no specific ethnic group for the Celts, there's barely a single cohesive cultural group for the Celts. The Celts of Scotland varied greatly from the Celts of Eastern Europe or France in terms of their religious and cultural practices. It's one of the reasons why J.R.R. Tolkien completely left Celtic language and mythology out of LotR. He was frustrated over how fragmented and incoherent Celtic mythology was that he just ignored ALL of it, even though it played a huge part in the development of English culture.

  • @kgoblin5084

    @kgoblin5084

    8 ай бұрын

    "It's one of the reasons why J.R.R. Tolkien completely left Celtic language and mythology out of LotR. He was frustrated over how fragmented and incoherent Celtic mythology was that he just ignored ALL of it, even though it played a huge part in the development of English culture." I'm going to debate this, as there are a few elements in The Hobbit & LOTR that clearly show an influence from either fairy or Arthurian legends, both of which are pretty hard to isolate from Celtic influence. In the case of Arthurian legend, it's hard to separate out b/c it was home grown in Britain, & generally theorized to have been inspired by shenanigans of an IRL Celtic warlord. In the case of the fairy stories... well we can see analogous legends & creatures down thru France & Spain... the common cultural heritage there being Celtic. These elements would include: * Hobbits - with a name derived from Hobs, a helpful house fairy, & with a lifestyle not in line with any Norse mythological creature * the goblins from the Hobbit, which were subsumed in LOTR into the greater category of Orc... but Hobbit predates LOTR. Clear influence from George MacDonald & the 'color' fairy books... although obviously connectable to the kobolds, dark elves, etc. of Norse myth as well * Aragorn's whole story just reeks of Arthurian influence rather than a Norse hero's tale, ala Beowulf or Siegfrid * the whole blessed islands home of the elves / afterlife for Frodo to emo out in is basically Avalon - so Arthurian * and of course, Tom Bombadil, more reminiscent of Robin Goodfellow or a Greenman than Loki. Mind, I'll buy that he may have pivoted with LOTR away from the Celtic influences, because it was a right mess... but clearly they were involved in the sausage making at some point & not fully excised.

  • @TraditionalAnglican

    @TraditionalAnglican

    8 ай бұрын

    And I thought it was because the devil gave up trying to learn Gaelic after needed 20 years to learn how to say, “No,” in Basque! 😅😂

  • @nodruj8681

    @nodruj8681

    8 ай бұрын

    Well we have no survival of scottish celtic religion and limited info to go off for most of the celts to you actually have no way of saying that the had no cohesion that's literally just an opinion.. you're literally no better than the disingenuous articles.

  • @Kevc00

    @Kevc00

    8 ай бұрын

    That's really not the case at all, Irish and British Celts shared extremely similar religious and cultural practices to the Gauls of France to the point we have accounts of pilgrimages to France from Britain and young Gallic men travelling to Ireland to be trained as druids, our gods are almost the same and our mythology is almost identical. Also JRR Tolkien did include Celtic mythology in LOTR, heaps of it. He didn't include Celtic languages, apart from some Welsh in Sindarin, because he hated the Irish language because he didn't like how it sounded.

  • @redwaldcuthberting7195

    @redwaldcuthberting7195

    8 ай бұрын

    How exactly did Celtic myth play a huge part in the development of English culture beyond the Medieval popularity of the fantasy of King Arthur? John Barleycorn is thought to be a representation of Beowa ( an old English agricultural figure/deity) which is Germanic, Beowulf is Germanic thought to be written in England and not brought of with Norse 'North Germanic' settlers. Sam Newton gives good case for it being an Anglo-Saxon tale and its origination in East Anglia before the Viking settlements. Some have linked Beowa to Beowulf, but Beowulf is made of two words Beo 'bee' and wulf 'wolf' this Bee-wolf, a kenning for bear. The Maypole is primarily found in Germanic areas of Europe so that probably is relic of Anglo-Saxon culture in Britain. Considering there was a 70 percent replacement on the east coast of Britain by Germanic incomers I doubt there was much influence by Celtic culture. See a 2022 study... Now what did have a big impact was Christianity spread by monks from Ireland.

  • @feasogachsionnach1872
    @feasogachsionnach18728 ай бұрын

    I'm a student who studies Celtic studies in University and I research Irish History/Archaelogy in my free time. Yer video is spot on more or less, journalists in this country tend to have a deconstructing race agenda to push which in turn makes them push these ridiculous notions. There are Gaelic cultural aspects (as in pre-Celtic) that pre-date the arrival of the Celts, the Celts didn't bring absolutely everything but they did influence aspects here and there. Hence why they're called Celtic, with a Gaelic twist to a degree. People have the idea in their head that Ireland was only settled by Celts, which is completely untrue since human settlement has been discovered dating far back as 8000BC. Then suddenly everyone died and poof, the Celts appeared. Its a stupid misconception that I wish would die out. Sadly, there are many people who will push such notions on purpose to "deconstruct" Irishness as they call it and so on. Rant aside, grand video.

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    His video is not spot on, it is actually completely wrong and outdated. Would you like to talk to me about it?

  • @IrishColin

    @IrishColin

    8 ай бұрын

    Ignore the idiot who commented above me, he thinks he knows more than those of us who have studied Ireland’s history for most of our lives. I don’t usually like to assume but I’m pretty sure he’s a leftist who is trying to push an agenda, I’m pretty sure I’ve seen other hot takes with no facts of basis in reality from him before. Edit: Now that I’ve seen what you think to be true I can address it, Iberia has no more claim on Celtic culture than Ireland because the people that brought that culture to Ireland also brought it to Iberia, it didn’t originate there.

  • @kekeke8988

    @kekeke8988

    8 ай бұрын

    Gaelic is Celtic.

  • @feasogachsionnach1872

    @feasogachsionnach1872

    8 ай бұрын

    @@kekeke8988 Current, medieval and primitive Gaelic is, yes. Gaelic before that (which we don't know much about minus some words) was not Celtic but I'm reaching back thousands of years so it's self explanatory. I think.

  • @saber2802

    @saber2802

    8 ай бұрын

    From my understanding, the Celtic culture dominated a good portion of Irish or Pre Celtic people culturally, so much so that there was a huge shift from pre-celt to celt style stuff. Specifically, the Celts that were living in iberia if I recall right.

  • @colbunkmust
    @colbunkmust8 ай бұрын

    This article is basically making an argument equivalent to claiming American colonists weren't originally European because there were Native Americans who lived in North America before the colonists arrived.

  • @GholaTleilaxu

    @GholaTleilaxu

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, the article is commiting a logical fallacy.

  • @BobHooker

    @BobHooker

    8 ай бұрын

    @@GholaTleilaxu you clearly know nothing about the status of historical research of Irish origins

  • @GholaTleilaxu

    @GholaTleilaxu

    8 ай бұрын

    @@BobHooker What is that status?

  • @BobHooker

    @BobHooker

    8 ай бұрын

    @@GholaTleilaxu Primarily 2 main debates: one is a western birth of Celtic culture with a movement east and the other is the other way around. This origin of the 'celts' is open to investigation and the discovery of this DNA evidence is a major piece in the emerging consensus that Celtic culture was not a fixed identity coming from central Europe. There is no evidence at all for a Irish invasion in 500 BC. Anyone who assumes that Celtic origins are known and that they have been known for 100 years knows nothing about what is known and not known.

  • @minutemansam1214

    @minutemansam1214

    8 ай бұрын

    @@BobHooker I don't think anyone is arguing that the Celts had a single united identity anymore than the Italic peoples did or the Germanic people.

  • @DarthSidian
    @DarthSidian8 ай бұрын

    My grandfather comes from Ireland. If I were to send this video to him, I am sure he would love it. I do too. You're speaking the facts, without the cringey historical revisionism.

  • @jrr2480
    @jrr24808 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making clear, that DNA isn't necessarily cultural.

  • @KarlKarsnark
    @KarlKarsnark8 ай бұрын

    “Celtic 'is a magic bag, into which anything may be put, and out of which almost anything may come... Anything is possible in the fabulous Celtic twilight, which is not so much a twilight of the gods as of the reason.” ― J. R. R. Tolkien

  • @angelachouinard4581

    @angelachouinard4581

    8 ай бұрын

    Excellent quote for the situation!

  • @watchmanschannelofdespair

    @watchmanschannelofdespair

    8 ай бұрын

    Brilliant quote and from the master author himself, no less.👍

  • @janetmackinnon3411

    @janetmackinnon3411

    8 ай бұрын

    Aye , well...

  • @martinjackman2943

    @martinjackman2943

    8 ай бұрын

    @@loairn The greeks referred to all those populations North of the Balkans as 'kelto'i which translates as hidden or unknown .. It would have included the people we now know (thanks to the romans) as Germanic, Galĺic Slavic ..

  • @drakron

    @drakron

    8 ай бұрын

    @@loairn Roman name for Ireland was Hibernia, they were well aware of its existence and even annex it (just forgot to actually send armies to take control of the place). Now the Roman name for the Irish raiders was Scotii, this actually lead for Ireland being known until the Middle Ages as Scotia and the Irish as Scoti, honstly this is a complex subject and ultimately irrelevant in the end because we are very aware of who lived in Ireland at that time and they werent Afro-Americans ...

  • @drip369
    @drip3698 ай бұрын

    (Rubs hands together)

  • @Amfortas

    @Amfortas

    8 ай бұрын

    Oy!

  • @PresterMike

    @PresterMike

    8 ай бұрын

    Exactly every single time

  • @drip369

    @drip369

    8 ай бұрын

    @@PresterMike really now? Sometimes I clap mine together while laughing out loud, and other times I stroke my beard and wait

  • @pickeljarsforhillary102

    @pickeljarsforhillary102

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Amfortas Vey!

  • @AroundElvesWatchUrselves96

    @AroundElvesWatchUrselves96

    8 ай бұрын

    Open borders for thee but not for me

  • @jschiek8054
    @jschiek80548 ай бұрын

    As to pubs in Ireland, I can attest that while visiting Dingle, the hardware store and the shoe store both had Guinness on tap. Moreover, the hardware “store” was a pub on one side of the room, and something like a cluttered (unattended) garage workbench on the other. It was fantastic.

  • @jfurl5900

    @jfurl5900

    5 ай бұрын

    When I was growing up and when I was a teenager those kind of pubs were normal in Ireland . they were always family run and were local hubs of business and information . They usually had a different kind of licence called a six day licence as opposed to a seven day licence and were always posted on a sign over the door.

  • @user-wq6lq4lb1f

    @user-wq6lq4lb1f

    4 ай бұрын

    A hardware store with guinness on tap? Sounds like my kinda shopping experience

  • @rhysgwynne680
    @rhysgwynne6808 ай бұрын

    Articles like these always give me hope. I hope I can be a historian of sorts someday so it's good to see how low the bar is set

  • @sonofthebearking3335

    @sonofthebearking3335

    8 ай бұрын

    The bar is only set that low if you are one of "them"

  • @SeeLasSee
    @SeeLasSee8 ай бұрын

    There is way too little actual journalism today. Sometimes these news outlets should be treated as a crime scene themselves.

  • @TheCoon1975

    @TheCoon1975

    8 ай бұрын

    They are mostly activists masquerading as journalists. They all have an agenda and that agenda has very little to do with truth.

  • @TechnoMinarchistBall

    @TechnoMinarchistBall

    8 ай бұрын

    It's churnalism.

  • @TechnoMinarchistBall

    @TechnoMinarchistBall

    8 ай бұрын

    Also there's a hidden comment here.

  • @TheCoon1975

    @TheCoon1975

    8 ай бұрын

    @@TechnoMinarchistBall it's mine

  • @Intranetusa

    @Intranetusa

    8 ай бұрын

    It is all about profit these days and they often hire the cheapest, person or get unpaid/poorly paid interns to write these article.

  • @mrrobertbates
    @mrrobertbates8 ай бұрын

    Destabilizing the sense of national identity in Ireland might be strategic in the near future for absolutely no reason I can imagine.

  • @arthurmarston7496

    @arthurmarston7496

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@guyledouche5812you're on the ball with this lad. Wanna go after all whites

  • @metatronyt

    @metatronyt

    8 ай бұрын

    It surely is political, but I don’t do politics, I just tell it how it is, so message disrupted I guess ;)

  • @gumbercules3925

    @gumbercules3925

    8 ай бұрын

    Shut it down!

  • @ArgentWolf95

    @ArgentWolf95

    8 ай бұрын

    @@guyledouche5812 c'mon mate, I don't see how Jewish people are behind bad articles with political agendas.

  • @JohnFartblast

    @JohnFartblast

    8 ай бұрын

    time for more migrants

  • @dedf15
    @dedf158 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of the national geographic article where a "journalist" heard a professor say "workers in this city in Mesoamerica piled up rocks to create fountains", and then wrote a great expose how "ancient Incan ruins prove they definitely discovered flush toilets!"

  • @jacobnash9755
    @jacobnash97557 ай бұрын

    They conflated genetic groups with cultural groups and in their mind redefined Celtic as a genetic group instead of a culture.

  • @Anonymousduck161
    @Anonymousduck1618 ай бұрын

    The Irish have legends of the tuatha de danann who are said to be the original kingly fay people who inhabited the island. They receded into the woodlands as the spread of the continental peoples increased and they are directly what many fairy tales and fables are based on. Tolkien himself was heavily influenced by these legends and they resemble his sylvan elves.

  • @IkarusKommt

    @IkarusKommt

    8 ай бұрын

    Humans cannot live in forests; people go to forests to die. How nice of them to have a genocide tales.

  • @jamesyoung7560

    @jamesyoung7560

    8 ай бұрын

    Also there were the Fomorians, enemies of the Tuatha De Danann

  • @StarWarsomania

    @StarWarsomania

    8 ай бұрын

    So… then… according to Irish legends, the original inhabitants of the island should have *not* been major genetic contributors to modern Irish DNA. If they “receded into the woodlands”, that would indicate a dying ethnic group being supplanted by a new ethnic group…🤔

  • @qwmx

    @qwmx

    8 ай бұрын

    Oh, I think I read about it from reading about the movie "Secret of Krells". European mythology is underrated. Asian mythology interesr seems more in trend. Foreign Europeans have definitely lost their roots (e.g. Americans).

  • @robynmarler1951

    @robynmarler1951

    8 ай бұрын

    I think the Firbolgs were there before the Danaan were blown into Ireland by a magic wind.

  • @brettrichards2972
    @brettrichards29728 ай бұрын

    Dude you are without a doubt my favorite youtuberer, historical commentator, and Italian. I am in Irish Celt and since this narritive began they have used the weakest most ludicrous academic theories to discredit the entire possibility that there are in fact a Celtic people at all

  • @metatronyt

    @metatronyt

    8 ай бұрын

    Don’t worry, I tell it how it is. That’s my motto. The Irish are Celtic. No serious scholar thinks otherwise. The rest is just politics.

  • @m0-m0597

    @m0-m0597

    8 ай бұрын

    I wonder why someone would want to take that from the celts

  • @Carl_ATHF

    @Carl_ATHF

    8 ай бұрын

    It’s literally just zionist jews trying and succeeding at erasing Whites, they do the same to Palestinians also.

  • @antoniodesousa9723

    @antoniodesousa9723

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@metatronytwere celtic, now they are like everyone else in the EU, a minority.

  • @brettrichards2972

    @brettrichards2972

    8 ай бұрын

    Well thank you my friend and keep up the great scholarly work

  • @johnw9256
    @johnw92568 ай бұрын

    Yeah Celts! I am a proud Irish Celt and celebrate my Irish heritage. And yes, there does seem to be more pubs than houses in Ireland. - Kathy W

  • @rogervandusen8361
    @rogervandusen83618 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of a book I have on the Anglo-Saxon conquest of Britain by Guy Halsall. He uses DNA studies to show that the Saxons/Angles/ Jutes arrived in small numbers and subjugated the indigenous Britons with less brutality as was once thought.

  • @markiec8914

    @markiec8914

    8 ай бұрын

    Yeah, the phenomenon is called acculturation. It happed in the Golden Islamic era when Arab science, language, religion and literature became the dominant force in North Africa and non-Arab speaking Middle East. Or in lands such as Russia where an amalgam of Finno-Ugric, Norse, Slavic, Turkic, Iranian and Greek population became the modern day "Russians".

  • @colonelturmeric558

    @colonelturmeric558

    6 ай бұрын

    Yep. It was a long term cultural pressure for the most part, like how american culture permeates today. Difference in bloodprice for saxon speakers and celtic speakers after invasion also had an effect

  • @JustDaniel6764
    @JustDaniel67648 ай бұрын

    When I went to Ireland i visited a post office and it had a side door that led to a pub😂 Gotta love the Irish.

  • @metatronyt

    @metatronyt

    8 ай бұрын

    Gotta love the Irish indeed ☘️

  • @Halbared

    @Halbared

    8 ай бұрын

    @@metatronyt And their pubs.

  • @JustDaniel6764

    @JustDaniel6764

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Halbared Their pubs are amazing, Always packed, Full of the most interesting characters totally marinated in Guinness, Irish folk songs, They're just the best. I also find the accent quite sexy on a woman. The traditional old men also carry walking sticks which are used as weapons but i forget what their called now and I'd probably spell it wrong. A truly superb people.

  • @wiederganger1959

    @wiederganger1959

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@JustDaniel6764 Shillelagh, if I'm not mistaken.

  • @JustDaniel6764

    @JustDaniel6764

    8 ай бұрын

    @@wiederganger1959 Yes, Thats it. Spot on 👍

  • @IrishTechnicalThinker
    @IrishTechnicalThinker8 ай бұрын

    As a proud Irish man, this had my interest too. You did a great job illustrating the Celtic culture in our country.

  • @chadwickreno8499

    @chadwickreno8499

    8 ай бұрын

    Can you start posting more FE videos again

  • @LelakiKerdus

    @LelakiKerdus

    8 ай бұрын

    When you said "irish man", did you mean an actual irish living in ireland, or just a yank pretending to be one just because his great great great grandpa was irish?

  • @IrishTechnicalThinker

    @IrishTechnicalThinker

    8 ай бұрын

    @@LelakiKerdus Yes I'm actually Irish, living on the island of Ireland and speak Gaelic.

  • @LelakiKerdus

    @LelakiKerdus

    8 ай бұрын

    @@IrishTechnicalThinker Then there's no problem 😎👌

  • @shadowstep1375

    @shadowstep1375

    8 ай бұрын

    @@LelakiKerdus Were you genuinely going to let it bother you if he gave you an answer you didn't like? Because if so then you must be real fun at parties.

  • @clavicusvonhammar7479
    @clavicusvonhammar74798 ай бұрын

    the copy+pasting of articles also has another purpose, to flood the web with the illusion of a consensus on a particular issue or topic. if a normie sees 25+ articles all stating the same thing, they will simply take it as fact. they do it not only because they are lazy, but because it pushes their cause.

  • @duster.
    @duster.8 ай бұрын

    I am a Cornishman and proud of it. My Surname is of the Cornish language something like farm/settlement/village on a hill. My surname is, apparently the old name of Tintagel on the North coast of Cornwall. A few days ago I ordered a DNA test kit and I am looking forward to the results following the test. I suspect that my ancestors come from a Spanish origin, although I have my father's fair complexion whereas my late brother had the more swarthy colouration of my Mother's side of the family. We shall see. Great video, as always, and I think the old saying, "a sheep born in a stable is still a sheep and not a horse" holds well for the skeletons.

  • @PabloLFCX

    @PabloLFCX

    8 ай бұрын

    I was at Tintagel on Sunday. I’m from Liverpool myself with my surname meaning friend of the Norseman / Woodcutter.

  • @siogbeagbideach

    @siogbeagbideach

    8 ай бұрын

    I've not been to Cornwall, it looks like a beautiful spot. I'm from the Aran Is in Galway, I did an ancestry test which came bk 8% Scottish rest Irish. Like you half my family myself included look like we're from the Med If we get a tan, the rest sizzle and burn

  • @duster.

    @duster.

    8 ай бұрын

    @@siogbeagbideach Greetings, celtic cousin. Yes my father's side of the family are probably part lobster, any hint of hot weather and we turn bright red. Now at nearly 70, I have learned to wear a wide brimmed hat and to cover up when in the sun, or stay out of it altogether. Growing up in Cornwall and only being three miles from my local beach, I spent all of my summers on the beach with my friends, I am bloody lucky not to have been covered in skin cancers. I have been so badly sunburnt that I have had huge blisters all over, well nearly all over. Duw genes.

  • @siogbeagbideach

    @siogbeagbideach

    8 ай бұрын

    @@duster. Dydh da! Blisters in the sun 🌞 I know I know! Bk in the 80s as a teen, I remember burning the bk of my knees and not being able to walk for a few days, at least we've wised up! It'll be very interesting to see what comes bk on your dna test, if you remember come bk and tell me! the Scottish thing threw me for a minute but it was the loveliest surprise, I'd been using duolingo to learn a bit of Gàidhlig, it's not that different from Irish. Do you speak/ have knowledge of Cornish?

  • @duster.

    @duster.

    8 ай бұрын

    @@siogbeagbideach I wish I knew more of the Cornish language, Kernewek. Unfortunately the revival came too late for me to learn it. Obviously place names, surnames, like my own, gives you an insight as to what it is. I believe that the language has three genders, and tenses are difficult to wrap your brain around. The DNA, saliva test went off to the labs yesterday and they reckon on 6 to 8 weeks for a result, but yes I will definitely post back here.

  • @sparrow420500
    @sparrow4205008 ай бұрын

    Is it not also possible the skeletons they found were of a different people all together?? Maybe some traders, merchants, or just travelers who happened to die there and were buried?? Maybe these bones didn't belong to ANY permanent inhabitants of Ireland.

  • @soulsmith792

    @soulsmith792

    8 ай бұрын

    This here, this is one of the problems with modern science, the hubris of assuming they've already connected all of the dots.

  • @DracoDatura

    @DracoDatura

    8 ай бұрын

    But I guess the genetic makeup of the skeletons are in line with other skeletons from the area - and from all Europe from that time. There is nothing new about the fact that before the indo-european speaking people arrived there were farmers from the Mediterrain area living all over the continent.

  • @Arkaine197

    @Arkaine197

    8 ай бұрын

    @@soulsmith792 REEEEEEE!!!!! Are you saying that you don't trust "The Science"???????

  • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120

    @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120

    8 ай бұрын

    @@soulsmith792 Honestly this whole situation stinks of someone trying to sell a book or gain uni cred for a "axiom changing" discovery, it stinks of a retired professor counting his days and asking himself what he didin his life

  • @-jank-willson

    @-jank-willson

    8 ай бұрын

    @@DracoDatura people in southern ireland are actually very tan/olive skinned and resemble southern italians quite a bit...

  • @stephenbarrett8861
    @stephenbarrett88618 ай бұрын

    Actually, in Gaul, one small village still held out against the invaders.

  • @lupaswolfshead9971

    @lupaswolfshead9971

    8 ай бұрын

    awesome asterix, obelix, and getafix ahh good days

  • @mayu2242

    @mayu2242

    8 ай бұрын

    And love eating sanglier 🐗🐗🐗

  • @brodymader687

    @brodymader687

    8 ай бұрын

    I understood that reference

  • @EllaBee90

    @EllaBee90

    8 ай бұрын

    Un petit village gaulois entouré de camps romains. Ils sont fous ces journalistes ! *toc toc toc*

  • @geobloxmodels1186

    @geobloxmodels1186

    8 ай бұрын

    I came here to write almost the same thing. I grew up on those historical documents.

  • @mailthedragon
    @mailthedragon8 ай бұрын

    There is a fifth dialect of Gaelic, spoken in Breton in France. I've always considered it a very interesting language, even if it is unpronouncable (to me at least).

  • @redwaldcuthberting7195

    @redwaldcuthberting7195

    8 ай бұрын

    Brezhoneg 'Breton' spoken in Brittany isn't Gaelic, it's P-Celtic and from Brythonic like Cymraeg 'welsh,' Kernewek 'cornish', and the dead language Cumbric. Gauls didn't speak Gaelic either but Gallic or Gaulish , and Gaulish is also classed as P-Celtic, where as Gaelic or Goidelic tongues are Q-Celtic. Romans supposedly used Gaulish interpreters to speak with the Ancient Britons. The Brittonic in Brittany is from Britons whom fled the Germanic migrations to Britain... There are only three types of Goidelic (gaelic) those being Irish Gaeilge'', Manx 'Gaelg' ' and Scots Gaelic 'Gàidhlig''.

  • @nizzle26
    @nizzle268 ай бұрын

    Your channel is a breath of fresh air in this age of clickbaits and uninspiring journalism. We need more of your type of videos based on facts and science.

  • @unbreakable7633
    @unbreakable76338 ай бұрын

    Three skeletons does not mean the Irish people aren't Celts. They could have been shipwrecked, early explorers, visitors. Many explanations. Leaping to conclusions is getting to be common now.

  • @slainemccool2875

    @slainemccool2875

    8 ай бұрын

    Or even slaves that shit was done everywhere in the world

  • @chrisnewbury3793

    @chrisnewbury3793

    8 ай бұрын

    But nobody sailed anywhere until Columbus sailed the ocean blue...

  • @3Kiwiana

    @3Kiwiana

    8 ай бұрын

    Agreed, its all part of this new woke multicultural narrative.

  • @pacmonster066

    @pacmonster066

    8 ай бұрын

    Metatron's point was that it wouldn't have mattered if the tested skeletons were fully representative of Ireland's early population. Being celtic is a cultural thing not a genetic one. It'd be like saying people in ancient Norway weren't Norse/Scandinavian because they didn't have Norse DNA. A similar misinformation but in reverse happens for the Incan and Mayan people. People commonly believe all of the people died out or disappeared but that's not what happened. They interbred with the Spanish colonizers and their culture was gradually overwritten by Spanish culture. DNA tests in Mexico and many central American nations still find lots of Aztec, Incan, and Mayan DNA present in the population. There is still a bit of mystery into the speed that cultural upheaval happened under but it's not the "this civilization died overnight" claim articles often claim.

  • @t2av159

    @t2av159

    8 ай бұрын

    Wrong. the world started in 1776. There was nothing before

  • @itatane
    @itatane8 ай бұрын

    Great video. As an historian, and genealogist for my family, I run into the whole parroting of bad information frequently. Usually it's different people with the same old stories repeated over and over again... and when you get to the bottom of it, they used the same bad source. I call it "sloppy copy". It can be truly tiresome to go over the same thing again and again, only to hear, "well, it doesn't matter anyway, because what can we really know about the past?" When that happens I have to restrain myself from strangling people with primary source documents.

  • @alexandermendez4653

    @alexandermendez4653

    8 ай бұрын

    Can I ask why the indefinite article before historian gets a n on the end. Shouldn't it be 'a' historian? Like a hand, a hat or a high five? I see 'an historian' everywhere and it's grammatically incorrect to me. Even my phone is telling me to correct it.

  • @jayoungr

    @jayoungr

    8 ай бұрын

    @@alexandermendez4653 It's a regional thing, possibly British? Some people do it and some don't. Depends on your accent and how strongly you aspirate the H, I guess.

  • @Taletad

    @Taletad

    8 ай бұрын

    And then you have people showing you a primary source that is just propaganda but they take it at face value

  • @harlequinems

    @harlequinems

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@jayoungrit is absolutely NOT a British thing 😂 normally basic grammatical errors like that are non English speakers making a mistake or americans.

  • @alexandermendez4653

    @alexandermendez4653

    8 ай бұрын

    @@harlequinems I see it all over the place to the point that I don't think it's in error.

  • @wolfmauler
    @wolfmauler8 ай бұрын

    One thing about the difference between P & Q Celtic languages, the Gaelic branches are from the Continent, wheras the other is considered "insular" and referred to as Brythonic. It's odd that the furthest Western Celtic outpost speaks the language of the Gauls, wheras the lands in between, modern day England & Wales and thought to be represented by Cornish and Welsh, spoke different languages altogether 🤔?

  • @lesialyls
    @lesialyls8 ай бұрын

    That I have to applaud basic logic and clear thinking is depressing in its own right. Bravo sir!

  • @SpasticSpelunker
    @SpasticSpelunker8 ай бұрын

    There’s becoming less KZreadrs who do detailed content with structured arguments that are beyond just 10 minutes. Thank you Metatron, may your content survive the attention span decrease of the next generation.

  • @harlequinems

    @harlequinems

    8 ай бұрын

    It's because KZread desperately wants to be tiktok, so they are actively punishing content creators who produce quality video by not pushing their channels 😒

  • @nietzchepreacher9477

    @nietzchepreacher9477

    8 ай бұрын

    There's objectively more than ever before you just aren't looking in the right places and it's confirmation bias

  • @SpasticSpelunker

    @SpasticSpelunker

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nietzchepreacher9477 I have a feeling though long content will be on the decline due to the push for fast pace consumption content. Attention spans of the next generation are getting shorter from short content. It’s best we identify and perhaps exaggerate the problem to get the point across.

  • @magyarbondi

    @magyarbondi

    8 ай бұрын

    True, but it's not just about the attention span. It's about people not being able to think coherently. Up till two decades ago, most of the internet was textual. You had to read a lot. You had to write on forums and email lists. Then broadband speeds made the internet audio-visual. Today a lot of people act like illiterates when it comes to digesting or writing text, and can't even understand arguments in audiovisual format anymore.

  • @FireStar-gz2ry
    @FireStar-gz2ry8 ай бұрын

    My father's Grandmother (who married a french man and is a story for another day) was an Irish woman.... If she was still alive today, i dont think the publishers of this article would deny her Gaelic culture for very long 😂 she taught my father to speak the old Irish when he was a young child, and i remember him and my Grandfather both saying that she was willing to fight anyone who insulted her heritage.... And this would have done it 😂😂😂

  • @IkarusKommt

    @IkarusKommt

    8 ай бұрын

    So she's basically proud of her ancestors being raped by Celtic invaders. A way to go.

  • @nicktecky55

    @nicktecky55

    8 ай бұрын

    What has Gaelic got to do with Celts?

  • @FireStar-gz2ry

    @FireStar-gz2ry

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nicktecky55 Gaelic is a collection of language types that belong to the tribes and villages of the Celtic peoples. Wasnt you paying attention?

  • @dreadcthulhu5

    @dreadcthulhu5

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nicktecky55 *facepalm*

  • @Jonjzi
    @Jonjzi8 ай бұрын

    You honestly seem like a really good dude. An intelligent, honest, interesting, and charismatic one at that. Too bad more dudes aren't like you, the world would be a better place.

  • @ehdrake
    @ehdrake8 ай бұрын

    This was fascinating! Thank you for the in-depth review.

  • @bobsmidt1451
    @bobsmidt14518 ай бұрын

    It is also important to remember the sample size. Three people are not enough to establish an ethnicity. Ireland has experienced several waves of setelment. Picts, Celts , Norse and Anglos are all part of the Irish genetic heritage.

  • @justinw1765

    @justinw1765

    8 ай бұрын

    Well yeah, like most lands and peoples, they are a mixed people genetically. With that said, there are certain halogroups and genetic patterns that predominate there.

  • @wisedragon173

    @wisedragon173

    8 ай бұрын

    @@justinw1765 Actually, he majority of cultures and groups were quite homogeneous back then; a few mixed outliers will not change that.

  • @cyborgchicken3502

    @cyborgchicken3502

    8 ай бұрын

    @@wisedragon173 when your land has been invaded multiple times by various other ethnic groups such as stated in the original comment, I don't think "mixed outliers" would apply anymore and best believe in ancient times there was a lot of invading going on, how do you think that almost all of East Asia, Central Asia, and Eastern Europe ended up with mongol DNA with many even being related to Temujin AKA Ghengis Khan himself?

  • @justinw1765

    @justinw1765

    8 ай бұрын

    @@wisedragon173 I agree with what Cyborgchicken wrote. Will point out that some groups were less mixed than others though. Scandinavians were generally less mixed, because there weren't too many other groups trying to invade their lands (though I think there was a Slavic group that did from time to time). However, they did bring back Celtic and other ethnic group folks, from when they would go raiding other lands and peoples, so there was some mixing going on. There was a while when the Jewish Hebrews really tried to avoid intermarriage with other groups because of some of the teachings in the Talmud which specifically forbade intermarriage with the "gentiles". But even then, not all Jews held as much to the Talmud--some considered the Torah much more important.

  • @AfroGaz71
    @AfroGaz718 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this. There has been what seems to be a concerted effort over the last 10- 15 years in academia and the media in Ireland to dilute what it is to be Irish. With multiple attempts to re-write Irish history.

  • @curiaregis9479

    @curiaregis9479

    8 ай бұрын

    Funny how it dovetails with the usual suspects' attack on race generally, and white identity specifically.

  • @arthurpendragon8192

    @arthurpendragon8192

    8 ай бұрын

    and it all sounds suspicious.

  • @wisedragon173

    @wisedragon173

    8 ай бұрын

    These liberal leftist scholars went after the English first, and now they are turning on the Irish, who have already been subjugated by the English and have been denied the right to practice their cultural heritage for a long time. In an effort to "dismantle the... myths" of English nationalism, Cambridge University is teaching students that the Anglo-Saxons never existed as a distinct ethnic group. Liberal academics have long been critical of the term's link with "whiteness." "...claimed that the study of Anglo-Saxon history is fraught with "inherent whiteness". So, the fact that the Anglo-Saxons were white is too much for liberal academics to bear. As a result, these intellectuals decided that the Anglo-Saxons are not allowed to exist and have to go. Nonetheless, many self-proclaimed educated and intellectual people fell for it, swallowing this nonsensical reasoning, mindlessly repeating it, and informing the English that they are not Anglo-Saxons.

  • @decanus8831

    @decanus8831

    8 ай бұрын

    @@arthurpendragon8192very (((suspicious)))

  • @curiaregis9479

    @curiaregis9479

    8 ай бұрын

    For your edification, my white brothers, and to join with the evidence already assembled over decades and even centuries, evidence from twin studies, expat data, IQ data, adoption data, crime statistics, socioeconomic data etc., I recommend these compilations of recent discoveries from the human genome project: 'A Troublesome Inheritance' by Nicholas Wade 'Human Diversity' by Charles Murray They propagandized the West into believing whites don't exist and race is irrelevant so they could destroy the West and forever dominate the world via banking and media. You know who.

  • @Adam-hs9ft
    @Adam-hs9ft8 ай бұрын

    The thing about analysing a painting with a microphone actually had me lmao

  • @amorencinteroph3428
    @amorencinteroph34286 ай бұрын

    My own initial thought with the claim that the bones are levantine is that they might have been traders, depending on the year they're dated too. Irrc, theres evidence that tin from the Brittish Isles was traded all the way to Egypt/Anatollia in the bronze age, so its not impossible that some traders arrived to Ireland and died, were buried, and managed to survive.

  • @TRUTHTEACHER2007
    @TRUTHTEACHER20078 ай бұрын

    3 random skeletons can form the ethnic origins of an entire nation? Like, how? Okay, back to the show.

  • @Madanth0ny

    @Madanth0ny

    8 ай бұрын

    I feel this way with evolution..some old monkey skeletons don’t mean humans evolved from monkeys

  • @TRUTHTEACHER2007

    @TRUTHTEACHER2007

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Madanth0ny That's because humans didn't evolve from monkeys. The theory states that great apes and humans had a common ancestor millions of years ago. Very different concept.

  • @leonardomarquesbellini

    @leonardomarquesbellini

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@Badabingqb that just means you don't understand evolution.

  • @SephoraBelle

    @SephoraBelle

    8 ай бұрын

    Did you not hear what the Professor out of TCD said? There was other remains that have been located, showing there where already people in Ireland predating the Celts (different genetic make-up), not just based on the three skeletal remains found under a pub. Given there are archelogical remains in Ireland that predate the arrival of the Celts, there obviously was an entirely different ethnic people living there already.

  • @TRUTHTEACHER2007

    @TRUTHTEACHER2007

    8 ай бұрын

    . @SephoraBelle Did you not read that I made this comment when I heard only 3 skeletons and then proceeded to watch the rest of the video?..... I'm just sayin....

  • @Just_Call_Me_Tim
    @Just_Call_Me_Tim8 ай бұрын

    I cracked up at the colors and microphone analogy. I need to remember that one. You’re dead on target again with this video. It may seem like all you efforts are thrown away by the willfully stupid masses, but they’re not without meaning. Don’t stop doing what you do, it’s refreshing and informative!

  • @TheZaphod1970
    @TheZaphod19708 ай бұрын

    I'm 60 years old and i can still remember how my history teacher described the Celts, he said " if you replace the word Celt with European it covers a lot of people and area with a lot of similarities but also slight differences culturally as they mixed with the indigenous people" .

  • @Jiub_SN

    @Jiub_SN

    2 ай бұрын

    A bit disingenuous, more like Americans

  • @TheZaphod1970

    @TheZaphod1970

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Jiub_SN why?

  • @yau6666
    @yau66668 ай бұрын

    I am a Korean learning classical Latin. Other than Latin, the only non-Korean languages I have learned are English and Esperanto. It is an undeniable fact that the more different the language you are learning from your native language, the more difficult it is to learn. Dr. Zamenhof, who invented Esperanto at the end of the 19th century, said that when he first learned English, he was amazed at the existence of such an easy language. I used to think English was a difficult language to learn. But now that I've learned Latin, I strongly agree with Zamenhof that English is obviously very easy to learn. I am comforted by the fact that you have learned Japanese well. Just as Latin is hard for me, Japanese is probably hard for you. If you could do it, it's not impossible for me either. I enjoy watching the linguistic videos you upload to this channel.

  • @djbillybopdjbillybop2817

    @djbillybopdjbillybop2817

    6 ай бұрын

    Learn Irish

  • @einsteincat5298

    @einsteincat5298

    5 ай бұрын

    @@djbillybopdjbillybop2817 No, no they shouldn’t. It’ll take a century.

  • @djbillybopdjbillybop2817

    @djbillybopdjbillybop2817

    5 ай бұрын

    @@einsteincat5298 True

  • @ComposedSage75
    @ComposedSage758 ай бұрын

    Ya know what’s really sad? People don’t do real fact checking the way they’re supposed to. They just take a Google search for its word don’t even bother to verify the validity of what’s posted. This is one of many reasons why there’s so much falsehoods out here and very few who call it out.

  • @slaapliedje

    @slaapliedje

    8 ай бұрын

    It is terrible... a great example was looking up EULAs, some sites say they are legally binding. Most say they are not. Or look up Hinduism. You can find articles that say they are monotheistic and some say polytheistic. Kind of hard to figure out when half the articles out there are in direct conflict with each are.

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    This video itself is a great example of that - the Irish are not actually Celtic, but this host keeps repeating that.

  • @IrishColin

    @IrishColin

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jboss1073 watch the video and try again, since you won’t I’ll paraphrase. BEING CELTIC ISN’T GENETIC IT’S CULTURAL and yes, we most certainly are Celtic. When you’ve studied Irish history for 15 years then maybe I’ll listen to you but I’m guessing you’d also say Cleopatra was black right? Or maybe your the type to say that there was such a thing as the Moroccan Empire which spanned through into America. You complain about people not doing their research yet you come in here and say words that you want to be believed with NO evidence to back it. Show your evidence. I’ll wait.

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    @@IrishColin The video is not the boss of nature. In nature there are different peoples who name themselves different names. The Irish and Scottish never named themselves Celts in ancient times - the ancestors of the Portuguese did. The video dispels the myth that the Irish are Celts, which they are not. That is a Victorian and Romanticist view which comes from Nordicism. I would never say Cleopatra was black. She was of an Amazigh ethnicity. There was no Moroccan Empire in America. I have plenty of evidence to show you if you want. Have you read Ancient Britons and the Antiquarian Imagination by Stuart Piggott where an academic first debunked this Victorian romanticist notion that British Islanders and Irish are Celts? What about its academic successor The Atlantic Celts - Ancient People or Modern Invention by Simon James, have you read that important work? Or how about The Celts - Origins, Myths and Inventions, by John Collis - a pivotal work for this discussion - have you read it? Do you know Patrick Sims-Williams is a Celtosceptic (meaning he rejects that the Irish are Celts) and he is the current President of the International Congress for Celtic Studies which regulates ALL academic Celtic Studies degrees? Did you know any of that and are you sure you are equipped to have this discussion? What do you really need me to cite for you specifically that you don't already know, assuming you're familiar with the few works I've cited?

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    @@IrishColin By the way here is a prefect response for your attitude, by another person who agrees with me: @kekeke8988 11 minutes ago (edited) @jboss1073 Then Somalis born in Sweden are true Norseman by Metatron's logic if only culture matters. I'm surprised he's against blackwashing. By the same token, Afro-British are just as Anglo-Saxon as everyone else. What's his issue with Englishmen representing English historical figures? You are defending the same "we can be Celts because culturally we're Celts" that the leftists defend in order to call Somali people "Swedish".

  • @Sidistic_Atheist
    @Sidistic_Atheist8 ай бұрын

    3 bodies (Skeletal remains) does not a nation make. D'oh!!! 🤯

  • @Markfr0mCanada
    @Markfr0mCanada8 ай бұрын

    I honestly hadn't seen these articles, but they seem like what I would expect.

  • @alediaz67
    @alediaz675 ай бұрын

    Good job, my man. All my respect and gratitude for your work.

  • @johnsmithe4656
    @johnsmithe46568 ай бұрын

    The author did this on purpose. They didn't 'misunderstand' -- they twisted the content they were relying on in order to create click bait out of nothing. That's all that is. We see it all the time with popular science articles, you get people writing these who know nothing about the discipline, nor do they actually care about the discipline, so they take things out of context on purpose and mislead their audience, on purpose, for clicks. I've seen this many times. Such authors should be called out as the conniving liars they are. They should have so little credibility after publishing such articles that they can never get paid to write another one again. Yet the system rewards them, because they get those clicks. And the typical person who may be interested in the subject but doesn't know any better comes away believing utter rubbish, so the next person they tell about it can inform them that they've been had. Embarrassment and controversy ensues. This is precisely why Ancient Aliens exists. My sis had been trying to get me to watch it, saying of course Aliens did it! I had to lecture her for an hour and tell her she was being fooled by people with bad motives, and she STILL doesn't believe me. It's so infuriating.

  • @fransbuijs808

    @fransbuijs808

    8 ай бұрын

    Bad information drives out the good. That's a downside of the internet: you can have stuff about ancient aliens next to a scientific article and you can't tell the difference. Or the scientific article is behind a paywall.

  • @varanid9

    @varanid9

    8 ай бұрын

    Agreed. Except that I'll raise you one: They're trying to make people lose belief in their own cultures on behalf of their globalist financiers, the same "movement" that influences the WHO and our politicians and corporations.

  • @MetuendusDominus
    @MetuendusDominus8 ай бұрын

    The funny thing is that the bones discussed were found in County Antrim, which was the last county to be majority Irish speaking, if that isn’t an extra bit of irony then I don’t know what is

  • @elizabethgutierrez9379
    @elizabethgutierrez93798 ай бұрын

    Wonderful teachings!

  • @Acesahn
    @Acesahn8 ай бұрын

    Nero Wolfe, an American detective from a book series used to make eggs "Italian style" for breakfast. It took him about an hour and involved a special kind of cream not available in the US.

  • @autisticscreechling4950
    @autisticscreechling49508 ай бұрын

    I am fascinated by this wave of arrogance in trying to discredit or outright deny an entire cultural heritage of a people using information based on assumptions rather than actual facts.

  • @charlesc.9012

    @charlesc.9012

    8 ай бұрын

    They went to marxist school, that is why

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    What cultural heritage? The Irish have only been incorrectly called "Celts" since the 16th century. Certainly no ancient Roman or Greek ever called them Celts, so again - what heritage?

  • @seanainohearcai3860

    @seanainohearcai3860

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jboss1073 I’m confused. Are you saying the Gaelic peoples aren’t a Celtic sub-group?

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    @@seanainohearcai3860 Yes. Gaelic people have nothing "Celtic" about their history. Their languages only started being called Celtic in the 17th century and only by a minority of scholars. John Collis, current Celtic Scholar, points out that languages are named after people, not the other way around. Hence Scottish and Irish cannot be called Celts even if they speak a so-called "Celtic Langauge" just like the Romans did not call themselves "Latini" for speaking Latin, they called themselves Romans after the place they came from, not the language they spoke, and the languages from the Romans today are called Romance, and their speakers today are not called Roman, so just the same Celtic speakers cannot be called "Celts". Irish people are Hibernians and speakers of Hibernian and Scottish people are Caledonians and speakers of Caledonian. The name "Celt" is not a part of the history of those peoples.

  • @seanainohearcai3860

    @seanainohearcai3860

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jboss1073 But isn’t Celt more of a cultural grouping? The Priteni are often considered the original Celts on the Isle and their language and culture is derived from the same Proto-Celtic as the Iberians and Gauls, hence the relationship

  • @Romance-Fantasy
    @Romance-Fantasy8 ай бұрын

    As someone with many Irish Relatives, I'm so glad that you are willing to stand up for the true unadulterated history of Ireland. Too often is Historical revisionism tolerated or even encouraged by the mainstream Media and Hollywood. Seeing someone like you who stands for truth above Profit is amazing.

  • @gallowglass2630

    @gallowglass2630

    8 ай бұрын

    Its the agenda thats the problem.I am irish while my identity is not predicated on how celtic we are ,i still think there is a clear agenda to water down native irish ethnicity to fit in with diversty ,multiculturalism and inclusion.

  • @kingjamestres

    @kingjamestres

    8 ай бұрын

    Do tell me about the dastardly Hollywood revisionist history of * checks notes * Ireland😂.

  • @LukeDay-pv7qw
    @LukeDay-pv7qw8 ай бұрын

    As an Irishman with Norse Gael Heratige from my Nanny's side of the Doyle Clan I appreciate this video you are a very wise man thank you Eiren Go Bragh

  • @adamtaylor7412
    @adamtaylor74128 ай бұрын

    I really like these videos, truth and fact's, spoken in clear and well spoken manner. Please keep them coming, this is exactly what rational and sane people need in their programming.

  • @irishwoman3975
    @irishwoman39758 ай бұрын

    I was born in Ireland and had a discussion with a professor of Irish history who married into the family. He agreed with what you were saying but asked me to not discount the Viking input to our genetics. I am a carrier for Haemochromatosis and passed it on to my son, its common amongst the Irish and those with Irish ancestors.

  • @graceygrumble

    @graceygrumble

    8 ай бұрын

    Yep!

  • @IVIRnathanreilly

    @IVIRnathanreilly

    8 ай бұрын

    Got it too

  • @tiglishnobody8750

    @tiglishnobody8750

    8 ай бұрын

    I am descednant of Norman but my father side is also Gaelic and yet I born and raise in Ireland so I am Irish Blood aren't everything to make Irish as heck I am 1/4 French by genetic yet I never speak French or even understand France more than what Irish can general know

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    The Irish are not Celtic, my friend. No ancient historian ever called them Celts. They were known as Hibernians.

  • @tiglishnobody8750

    @tiglishnobody8750

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jboss1073 Well me as Irish you got wrong We use term Gael and it just mean Celtic and we are celtic as heck it even mention almost everywhere in Irish media

  • @markcreemore4915
    @markcreemore49158 ай бұрын

    Professor Cunliffe is an absolute TITAN of prehistoric archeology. One needs big balls indeed to challenge him.

  • @KarlKarsnark

    @KarlKarsnark

    8 ай бұрын

    He's also an idiot that doesn't know anything about genomics. He's just a name. Nothing more.

  • @johndorilag4129

    @johndorilag4129

    8 ай бұрын

    Basketball or baseball

  • @andyking957

    @andyking957

    8 ай бұрын

    Mostly they are challenged by outsiders not dependend from them. THIS is science - question any so called authority if needed.

  • @lupaswolfshead9971

    @lupaswolfshead9971

    8 ай бұрын

    medicine@@johndorilag4129

  • @KornPop96

    @KornPop96

    8 ай бұрын

    I challenge him to a match of naked wrestling.

  • @ur1cat
    @ur1cat8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the explanation of difference between genetic and cultural heritage. I have been puzzled about this and not understood it for years.

  • @mizaeldiaz8325
    @mizaeldiaz83258 ай бұрын

    Excellent as always Metatron. I would love for you to conduct a similar analysis of the Spanish. Being from Northern Spain we have always viewed ourselves as a combination of Celts and Visigoths. Just curious to get your input. 👍🏻

  • @elvinbi1367
    @elvinbi13678 ай бұрын

    Of course it’s someone from Oxford…

  • @janetmackinnon3411

    @janetmackinnon3411

    8 ай бұрын

    "emeritus" means "retired".

  • @Dowlphin

    @Dowlphin

    8 ай бұрын

    @@janetmackinnon3411 They should have said emeritus to avoid phonetic confusion. 🤡

  • @ArgentWolf95
    @ArgentWolf958 ай бұрын

    The war on bad journalism seems to never end, but on the bright side, it presents a good opportunity for the noble Metatron to teach some good history! It's always appreciated and you always have interesting nuances unique to your channel.

  • @edwardscott3262

    @edwardscott3262

    8 ай бұрын

    Your definition of a bad journalist and a journalist's definition of a bad journalist are two totally different things. Journalists see it as their job to shape culture. To manufacture consent. To lie to people but still get them to believe it no matter how many times they get caught. To them those lies are no different than spinning a big political story. Or no different than telling the audience after the break they're going to "interview" a new up and coming author about their new book. See those "interviews" are paid advertising. They know whoever they have on to talk to paid a whole lot money of money to be there and they're going to be angry if they don't get their money's worth. Yet to do all this stuff they know good and well they have to maintain the public's "trust". So they tell lies about journalistic integrity and all sorts of other bullshit. Occasionally they'll have to fire someone who gets really badly caught but they make sure they just bounce to another news joint. The only real sin in journalism is telling the truth when you ain't supposed to. So like I said. Your definition of a bad journalist is very different than a journalist's version.

  • @balazsvarga1823
    @balazsvarga18238 ай бұрын

    As always, very logical and thorough analysis.

  • @Malumultimus
    @Malumultimus8 ай бұрын

    Growing up I thought when people talked about the Celts on continental Europe, they were saying it was populated by genetically Irish-adjacent peoples who were wiped out by the Romans or Germans. I didn't know this wasn't the case until I read The History and Geography of Human Genes by Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza, et al. I was surprised about all the "new" information I learned. Related to that, reading other things as well, I realized that most people just assume when one group invades and conquers an area, they always either mix with the locals or genocide them, but those are actually not the most common outcomes. Conquerors don't usually bring a retinue of peasants with them. So, you hear France (Gaul) was populated by Celts, then conquered by Romans, then conquered by Franks, and you're asked to guess who the French today are most genetically similar to, and the answer is: the same exact people who were there 6000 years ago, for the most part.

  • @Enki1013
    @Enki10138 ай бұрын

    Thanks for covering this. Also thanks for reminding me of yet another reason why I quit Facebook a few years ago.

  • @ProleCenter
    @ProleCenter8 ай бұрын

    I think Lepontic is the oldest Celtic language, based on inscription evidence, and it is P-Celtic. Also, Welsh has far more everyday speakers than Irish. It is much more of a living language that has been in continuous use for thousands of years. It's also the only Celtic language that is not endangered.

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    Oldest Celtic language is Lusitanian, as shown by its retention of the initial-P.

  • @mandowarrior123

    @mandowarrior123

    8 ай бұрын

    Ireland has far more Irish-only speakers. Good luck finding a non english speaking welshman

  • @ProleCenter

    @ProleCenter

    8 ай бұрын

    @mandowarrior123 It's bad to be multilingual?

  • @IrishColin

    @IrishColin

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ProleCenter Don't listen to jboss1073, he is spreading false information. He thinks Cleopatra was a Amazigh (Berber). The term Celtic was used by the Greeks to describe a culture that a bunch of tribes in southern Gaul (modern day France). These tribes spread that culture to Iberia and Ireland amongst others. It doesn't matter what they called themselves, what matters is that they adopted the culture that was known as Celtic. What you self identify as does not change facts or reality, I can't self identify as a monkey and have it come true. Using his logic then the Mexican and Southern American people wouldn't be Spanish if they didn't call themselves Spanish but hat wouldn't be true. They have the language and the culture as well as shared lineage from intermixing of the populations so therefore they would be Spanish no matter what they called themselves. A good example is you can be Columbian and Spanish at the same time, one is a cultural identity and one is an ethnic identity. The same goes for the Irish. Gaelic is heavily influenced by the Celtic culture.

  • @lrdr5404

    @lrdr5404

    8 ай бұрын

    @irishcolin By this argument the Irish and the Welsh are English. Is that your view?

  • @juanpablogonzalezs.v.8319
    @juanpablogonzalezs.v.83196 ай бұрын

    On the added u mentioned somethings that could also solve the issue that cereal is looking to solve and it made itbsound so much more appetizing. Why. Because i would be thinking about it anyways and there for rhinking the product is dumb but since its acknowledged tells me "hey this is good in protien and its yummy, u can have it just because its good" and having something that is good always makes sense than i think of the added benifits cereal that is probably better than regular cereal. Now my concerns r expense, convince, and does it have that weird protein taste things get when protien is added to. It was a very metetron comercial and I appreciate it. Like this video.

  • @robertocatrone715
    @robertocatrone7158 ай бұрын

    You are outstanding and a breath of fresh air using Actual Quantifiable facts. Thank you

  • @wolftal1178
    @wolftal11788 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for mentioning the Cornish as many people over look us. Nevertheless, there is a Celtic gene but as you say, it is not 100% needed for the Celtic culture to exist there, but all the Celtic nations have the same ancestry, although it can vary from its sources. For example, many people said that the Irish were not the same as the British Celtic people because the Irish actually came from Spain, and therefore were not Celts. However, what they failed to realise, was when the first great Celtic migration went west, a large group travelled south and headed towards North Spain, which is now Galicia (one of the Celtic Nations). Some settled in the northern hemisphere of Spain, while surprisingly others started travelling by ship or boat north towards Ireland. Whereas other Celts went west through Gaul and then Northwest into Britain. In reality, the same amount of countries are traveled to get to Ireland. Some had a cross Gaul and Britain, whereas others had to go across Gaul and Spain to Ireland.

  • @Lii170

    @Lii170

    8 ай бұрын

    Not only Galicia, in certain parts of Catalonia and Occitania they even became the majority for a while, however the already existing culture was more powerful so they didn't make as big as an impact as in some other places.

  • @wolftal1178

    @wolftal1178

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Lii170 oh I know, but nevertheless, in small pockets, the Celtic culture still does endure.

  • @AndyJarman

    @AndyJarman

    8 ай бұрын

    You seem to have misunderstood the whole point of this video. Celtic is a cultural style, not a race. It's nothing to do with genes or ancestry and everything to do with politics and cultural beliefs and priorities. English people with genes that come from Africans transported as slaves to the Carribbean are English - despite their genes. Englishness is cultural not genetic. Just as Celtic is cultural not genetic.

  • @wolftal1178

    @wolftal1178

    8 ай бұрын

    @@AndyJarman you’re right it doesn’t necessarily have to rely on genes but nevertheless there is Celtic genes because when they did DNA tests on Britannic Celtic peoples and the English which were Saxons, they discovered the genes were not closely related at all. You are right the Celtic people were a culture, but also there was genetic identity’s as well. The group will often be genetic and cultural together, and by removing the identity of one can often erode the other. Nationality can wear many hats. The people who arrived in England from African and asian countries are considered part of the nation today, but they are not connected to the historical origins. For example, if someone was doing a dark age, Arthurian story, they would not put Asian or African individuals into it.

  • @ikenosis8160
    @ikenosis81608 ай бұрын

    Thank you for always being level headed and thoughtful and deeply cynical. Your exposure of the myth of salting the earth in Carthage has blown my mind since I learned it. I've passed that one along to several other people. Well done with this too.

  • @metatronyt

    @metatronyt

    8 ай бұрын

    My pleasure and thanks for watching. More to come

  • @stuartnetherclift7566
    @stuartnetherclift75668 ай бұрын

    Brilliant - we need more folk like you!

  • @theophrastusbombastus1359
    @theophrastusbombastus13598 ай бұрын

    What are your thoughts to the similarities between the Phoenician language/script and the Irish language? Another good video as always. Thank you

  • @vladtheimpala5532
    @vladtheimpala55328 ай бұрын

    Some of my favorite videos are the ones that debunk stupidity. The sad thing is that, as you mentioned, now there will be lots of articles which all stem from this one and give this idea unearned and undeserved credibility.

  • @themostbestwizard
    @themostbestwizard8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for pointing this out. It disgusts me when stupid people simplify the histories of nations to mere DNA.

  • @Kavika-xh1qj
    @Kavika-xh1qj8 ай бұрын

    @metatron thank everything that is good for your no nonsense history work.

  • @DeeN4sty
    @DeeN4sty8 ай бұрын

    Perfect Dark game box right there in the back. Respect !

  • @metatronyt

    @metatronyt

    8 ай бұрын

    Unopened :) I also have a loose copy to play

  • @DeeN4sty

    @DeeN4sty

    8 ай бұрын

    @@metatronyt The nostalgia is strong with this one.

  • @OldSloGuy
    @OldSloGuy8 ай бұрын

    A thought experiment: An infant boy survived a shipwreck and was raised by the locals. He was accepted by the community and matured to some local importance. Upon his death, his grave goods were appropriate for that local culture. Centuries later, the grave is rediscovered and dna analysis reveals the the man was not from that region. A further analysis of the mineralization of his teeth showed the man had been in that local area all his life. Obviously, the local people must be later immigrants who adopted the local culture. An obvious but wrong conclusion.

  • @maxlutz3674

    @maxlutz3674

    8 ай бұрын

    The boy could be considered a later immigrant. Press might generalize and publish before soemone else is faster. And they might even embelish the story a bit. I have seen that on occassion in fields I am more familiar with. Scientists tend to be more careful with their statements. Just like the profdessor who stated what they know and what they don´t know.

  • @jboss1073

    @jboss1073

    8 ай бұрын

    We can't make theories around off chances.

  • @alkemystica

    @alkemystica

    8 ай бұрын

    happened all the time in history in fact, what you are saying 👍

  • @bojangles2492

    @bojangles2492

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@jboss1073and we can't make them around three sets of skeletal remains.

  • @Nizzet

    @Nizzet

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bojangles2492 That's true, this whole episode is a good illustration of why archeological evidence has to be take with a whole lot of skepticism. Especially when its tainted by political agendas.

  • @alexandros.yiannis
    @alexandros.yiannis8 ай бұрын

    As a fellow historian, I salute you sir! Salve!

  • @josephmummerth2516
    @josephmummerth25166 ай бұрын

    I`ve had to explain this to a few people over the years ! and you are 100% correct !