The Gauls were the people there and which country was Gaul from?

Updated on history 2024-03-01
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Ancient France. It is the ancestor of the modern French.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The ancient Romans inhabited France and Belgium in present-day Western Europe.

    Northern Italy, southern Netherlands, western Switzerland, and southern Germany on the Rhine.

    The Celts of the West Bank were collectively known as the Gauls. In later English, the word gaul (French: gaulois) may also refer to the people who lived in that area.

    More often than not, however, the term chaser refers to the lower Danube plains, which were once widely distributed in Central Europe, Western Europe, and Southeastern Europe. It even expanded into Anatolia between 285 and 277 BC.

    Those in the middle who speak Gallic (a branch of the Celtic language family). The ancient Roman word for Gaul was gallia.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The Gallic chicken is a symbol of France.

    The Gallic rooster was a symbol on the flag of the First French Republic and a symbol of the revolutionary consciousness of the French people at that time. Gaul is an ancient Western European place name.

    Gaul is actually the ancient name of France, but Gaul is not actually the self-name of France, but the name of France by the Roman Empire. The word gallus means rooster in Latin, and it took a long time for the Gallic rooster to become the name of the French.

    Geography Profile. Gaul is divided into three main regions:

    1) Southern Gaul, or Negaul, is the region of northern Italy between the south of the Alps and the Rubicon River basin.

    2) Northern Gaul, or Transgaul, is the Alps passing through the northern shore of the Mediterranean Sea and connecting the vast area north of the Pyrenees, corresponding to France, Belgium, and part of the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Switzerland, and Germany (on the left bank of the Rhine), which is also commonly referred to as Gaul.

    3) Narpo Gaul.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    First of all, let's clarify the definition of Gaul: Gaul (Gaulen), also known as Celtics, or translated as Celtics, refers to the same people. But to be precise, the Celts were not all Gauls.

    In 1000 BC, the Celts were widely distributed in most of present-day central and southern Europe, but only in France were they called Gauls. This is because the area was called Gaul by the Romans. Celtics, on the other hand, is the name given to their own nation by all Celts.

    In this part of the Gallic (French) region, the Celts (Gauls) were conquered by the Romans and the Franks, and the northern part was also conquered by the Vikings for a period of time, so the Gallic-Viking mixed race in the Normandy region is also called the Normans, and there is a dynasty called the "Normans" in Britain, that is, the dynasty established by the people of this region. In general, until now, the French have maintained Gallic ancestry as their main ancestry, and since the Romans, Vikings, and Franks were conquerors, their populations were far inferior to the native Gauls, so the French population was not massively assimilated.

    Nonetheless, the lineage composition of the French aristocracy was more complex. Due to France's long-standing Frankish-predominant, Norman-supplemented ethnic composition, and marriages with the English aristocracy (Anglo-Saxons and Normans), the traditional French aristocratic family remained largely in the hands of the Greater Germanic peoples (a large ethnic group that originated in Scandinavia, i.e., Northern Europe).

    Summary: The French plebeians inherited the Gallic blood relatively well, and it cannot be said that the French nobility did not have Gallic blood, but the French nobility is still mainly composed of Franco-Norman-Anglo-Saxon blood.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The French were of mixed Gaul and Germanic descent.

    Vikings are the ancient name for the Norsemen, sometimes referred to as the Normans. A part of the Vikings once occupied Normandy in France, since then the Normans refer exclusively to the Normans, this part of the Vikings and the indigenous Gauls assimilated, speaking French, they conquered the British Isles and Italian Sicily, but the conquest was only a rule, they did not leave too many descendants in these areas, for example, the Irish are still overwhelmingly descendants of the old Celts, and are little influenced by the Viking bloodline.

    I guess there is.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Because the area of ancient Gaul included present-day Western Europe, France, Belgium, northern Italy, southern Holland, western Switzerland, and the west bank of the Rhine in southern Germany, the present-day French were Gauls.

    Gaul is the name of the ancient Western European region, distributed throughout France, Belgium and parts of Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Germany. It got its name from the fact that its original inhabitants were Gauls (the Gauls called themselves Celts).

    Present-day France is predominantly North Gaul, that is, the Alps connect the vast area north of the Pyrenees through the northern shore of the Mediterranean, corresponding to France, Belgium, and part of the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Switzerland, and Germany (on the left bank of the Rhine), which is also commonly referred to as Gaul.

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