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¿Cataluña – una etimología céltica?: Indicios toponímicos de inmigración gálica (belga) en la Península Ibérica

  • Autores: Jörg Timmermann
  • Localización: Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie, ISSN-e 1865-9063, ISSN 0049-8661, Vol. 131, Nº 3, 2015, págs. 605-631
  • Idioma: español
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The central concern of the present contribution is to give further evidence for the Celtic-based etymology of Catalonia/Cataluña. Our starting point is the remarkable formal proximity between the latter name and the name of a tribe of Belgic Gaul, i.e. the Catalauni. Obviously, the Catalauni are not the only tribe to leave their trace in the toponymy of what is now North-Eastern Spain: other findings of place-names of Celtic origin seem to confirm the hypothesis that parts of different Belgic tribes invaded the North-Eastern corner of the Iberian Peninsula in order to settle there. In this article we’ll situate this putative migration in a plausible historical context. It will be argued that it is nothing more than the second branch of a historically well-known migration, i.e. the movement of several tribes from Belgic Gaul to Britain, as attested by Julius Caesar.


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