Around 2,000 years ago, before the Roman Empire conquered Great Britain, women were at the very front and center of Iron Age ...
Scientists analysing 2,000-year-old DNA have revealed that a Celtic society in the southern UK during the Iron Age was ...
Some scholars have suggested that the Romans exaggerated the liberties of women on the British Isles to imply that this was a ...
Genetic evidence from a late Iron Age cemetery in southern Britain shows that women were closely related while unrelated men ...
DNA analysis indicates that a Celtic tribe in Iron Age Britain was matrilocal, meaning men relocated to live with women’s ...
An international team of geneticists, led by those from Trinity College Dublin, has joined forces with archaeologists from Bournemouth University to decipher the structure of British Iron Age society, ...
Celtic women’s social and political standing in Iron Age England has received a genetic lift.
DNA extracted from 57 individuals buried in a 2,000-year-old cemetery provides evidence of a "matrilocal" community in Iron ...
A new DNA-based study challenges the conventional understanding that Iron Age Britain society was dominated by men.
The site belonged to a group the Romans named the “Durotriges,” researchers said, and this ethnic group had other settlements ...