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Article: Celtic Italy
From the Celtic History Newsletter:
While we normally think of the Celts in the British Isles, or northern Europe, an archeological site known as Monte Bibele in the province of Bologna, Italy revealed a picture of rural life in Celtic-ruled Italy. Unlike their northern relatives the "Italo-Celtic" people seem to have assimilated into a more "urban" life-style rather than the rural environments that they came prior to the Gallic invasion of north Italy.
The Monte Bibele site consisted of a village terraced into the hillside and made up of 40, or 50 buildings laid out in small groups, suggesting the settlement may have been planned, as opposed to simply growing with its population. Housing 200 to 300 people, the village was first settled between 400 and 200 B.C. Excavations of a cemetery show the early population (between 350 and 330 B.C.) was primarily Etruscan, with a gradual increase in Celtic influences over the course of time.
The houses were built of stone and timbers, some even appear to have had second floors, and were most likely roofed with thatch. Inside were earth floors with clay hearths. Water was supplied to the village by a well-constructed cistern which was fed by a nearby stream.
The village was destroyed by a fire about 200 B.C. which actually aided in preserving some of the wood and foodstuffs through carbonization. Excavations of a storehouse suggest a fairly varied diet when they revealed several hundred pounds of wheat, oats, broad beans, lentils, peas, flax, acorns, olives, nuts, apples and grapeseed. Other finds included pottery for storing or preparing food, loom weights and animal bones.
Although these Italo-Celts seem to have adopted many of the Roman/Italian ways of life, one of the things helped identify them was the weapons found in some of the male graves including the La Tene-style Celtic swords they continued to favor. In Googling around for more information about Monte Bibele I stumbled on to an artisan who was commissioned to make a replica of one of the swords, and a javelin found at Monte Bibele. Here is a Google translation of the Italian webpage describing the making of the replica sword: http://tinyurl.com/ykb7hp9 , and here: http://tinyurl.com/yb4xdvu for the javelin.
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How to Get Your Free Celtic MP3s Through the Celtic MP3s Music Magazine
I had an email the other day from a guy asking how to download the free MP3s I offer in this magazine. It is excellent question that I thought I would address here.
You will note that this email newsletter does not offer direct links to any MP3s. To access those, you must visit the website, either subscribe to the feed or head down to "Celtic CD Reviews and MP3 Downloads" and click the link. The blog that you will find there offers a mix of Celtic CD reviews and MP3 downloads. Pretty simple. However, the posts have not always been.
To help you distinguish which is which, the reviews are all listed as "Review:" followed by the album and artist name.
So for example, the lastest review posted reads:
Review: "Don't Count Me Out" by Kevin Flynn & The Avondale Ramblers
Now the MP3s were not so clear in the past. So for now on, I'm doing the same to them so that the latest MP3 download now reads:
MP3: "The Wanderer" by Anois
Below the subject is a wee bit of information about the artist along with a bolded link to the artist website, CD from which the song comes, and the song title preceded by "Download MP3:". Just right-click and save the MP3 to your hard drive and you are ready to go.
Now the goal of the magazine is to update you with the latest news and updates from the magazine, podcast, occasional Celtic music news, plus some of the stuff I am busy with at the moment.
I hope that helps you better access the great information at your fingertips, because we are changing the way you hear Celtic music.