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367 CE - Concentrated Attacks On Romano-British Provinces By Celtic and Germanic Tribes
by Iain MacAnTsaoir
Picts, Scots (Irish), Angles, Saxons and Jutes at the same time attacked the Romanized British. It is uncertain whether the effort was a matter of coincidence, or whether the initiative was indeed a concerted effort. The British, by this time, were more Roman than Celtic in culture and saw the invaders as true enemies. The effort was repulsed by Magnus Maximus, who met his end somewhere in northern Italy as he tried to set himself up as an emperor of Rome.
Sources:
The Battle For Gaul, Julius Caesar, David R. Godine Pub, (c)1980, ISBN 0-87923-306-0
The Celtic Empire, Peter Berresford Ellis, Carolina Acedemic Press, (c)1994,ISBN 0-89089-457-4
The World of the Celts, Simon James, Thames and Hudson Ltd., (c)1993, ISBN 0-500-0567-8
The Celts, Gerhard Herm, St. Martin's Press, (c)1977, ISBN 312-1205-7
The Celts, Jean Markale, Inner Traditions Intl, (c)1978, ISBN 0-89281-413-6
The Celtic World, Amanda Green, Routledge, (c)1995, ISBN 0-415-05764-7
Encyclopedia Brittanica15th Edition, Vol. 2, ISBN 0-85229-591X
History of the World, J.M. Roberts,Oxford Press, 1993, ISBN 0-19-521043-3
prepared by Iain MacAnTsaoir
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