The story told by the archaeological evidence is enhanced by historical texts, such as Julius Caesar’s well-known if rather murky vision of Britain. Underlying this narrative is the story of the sea, and Cunliffe paints a fascinating picture of early ships and sails and of the surprising sophistication of early navigation. Using the most up-to-date archaeological evidence together with new work on DNA and other scientific techniques which help us to trace the origins and movements of these early settlers, Cunliffe offers a rich narrative account of the first islanders–who they were, where they came from, and how they interacted with one another. Like the myth-making Celts, we too create stories about our origins, based on what we know today.Ĭunliffe here offers readers a vision of both worlds, looking at new myths and old, as he tells the fascinating story of the origins of the British and the Irish, from around 10,000 BC to the eve of the Norman Conquest. But as Barry Cunliffe reminds us in Britain Begins, an archaeologist writing of the past must be constantly aware that the past is, in truth, unknowable. Today, ideas of our prehistoric origins are more likely based on ocean core samples, radio-carbon dating, and archeological artifacts. The ancient Celts believed they were descended from Father Dis (Dis Pater), a god of the dead who resided in the west where the sun set.
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