beingceltic

Nicholson

Nicholson has recently directed attention to the fact that some princes of ancient Gaul are represented with their faces tattooed on certain coins found in the west of France so far south as the regio

3 citations1 sources1 traditions

The subject is worked out in Nicholson's Golspie, pp. 100-8, also in the New English Diclioitary, where mention is made of a derivation involving (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter IV: Manx Folklore)

Nicholson has recently directed attention to the fact that some princes of ancient Gaul are represented with their faces tattooed on certain coins found in the west of France so far south as the regio (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)

Nicholson's treatment of the ILanaelhaiam inscription as Ali ortus Eimttiam hie iacti, where 1 should regard ^A' as standing for an earlier nominative..4/w-i, and intended as the Celtic equivalent for (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)

Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx

  • attestation: The subject is worked out in Nicholson's Golspie, pp. 100-8, also in the New English Diclioitary, where mention is made of a derivation involving (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter IV: Manx Folklore)

    "' The subject is worked out in Nicholson's Golspie, pp. 100-8, also in the New English Diclioitary, where mention is made of a derivation involving"

  • attestation: Nicholson has recently directed attention to the fact that some princes of ancient Gaul are represented with their faces tattooed on certain coins found in the west of France so far south as the regio (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)

    "Nicholson has recently directed attention to the fact that some princes of ancient Gaul are represented with their faces tattooed on certain coins found in the west of France so far south as the region once occupied by the ancient Pictones."

  • attestation: Nicholson's treatment of the ILanaelhaiam inscription as Ali ortus Eimttiam hie iacti, where 1 should regard ^A' as standing for an earlier nominative..4/w-i, and intended as the Celtic equivalent for (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter XII: Race in Folklore and Myth)

    "Nicholson's treatment of the ILanaelhaiam inscription as Ali ortus Eimttiam hie iacti, where 1 should regard ^A' as standing for an earlier nominative..4/w-i, and intended as the Celtic equivalent for Cefihas or Piltr:.^/i would be the word which is in Med."