Gaul’s population of possibly ten million—a mix …

Years: 81BCE - 70BCE

Gaul’s population of possibly ten million—a mix of Celtic immigrants and invaders of past centuries mingled with the native Ligure of the Alps, Iberians of the Pyrenees, and numerous folk elsewhere who were often of Phoenician, Greek, or Roman stock—possesses neither unified rule nor homogeneous roots.

The Gallic clans sometimes function separately and sometimes form into one of over four hundred tribes, which in turn often join into one of the seventy or so nations.

The Gauls, who have no single leader or authority, and except for Marseille and Nice, no cities or towns either, mostly live in scattered mud huts generally surrounded by a stockade.

The Gauls derive their basic needs from hunting, fishing, and pastoral pursuits, sending surpluses and craftwork in wood and leather to local markets for sale or exchange.

Local Gauls are not philhellenes who want to imitate Greek culture, but peoples who selectively consume a very limited range of Greek objects (mostly wine and drinking ceramics) that they incorporate into their own cultural practices according to their own systems of value.

Gallic religious life is localized and pluralistic, with pantheistic worship of rivers, woods, and other elements of nature.

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