- The
Anartes (or Anarti,
Anartii or Anartoi) were
Celtic tribes, or, in the case of
those sub-groups of
Anartes which penetrated the
ancient region of Dacia...
-
Arhopala anarte, the
magnificent oakblue, is a
species of
butterfly belonging to the
lycaenid family described by
William Chapman Hewitson in 1862. It...
- Púchov-Skalka in Slovakia. Its
probable bearer was the
Celtic Cotini and/or
Anartes tribes. It
existed in
northern and
central Slovakia (although it also plausibly...
-
century AD:
Ptolemy (III.8.3)
lists two
Celtic peoples, the
Taurisci and
Anartes, as
resident in the
northernmost part of Dacia, in the
northern Carpathians...
-
kingdom (northern Carpathians/Bukovina) was
shared by non-Dacian tribes: the
Anartes and the Taurisci, who were
probably Celtic, and the
Germanic Bastarnae...
- Ptolemy,
starting from the
northernmost ones, are as follows. First, the
Anartes, the
Teurisci and the Coertoboci/Costoboci. To the
south of them are the...
- "Peucini")
Sidoni Vistula Veneti /
Venedi (more
probably a Balto-Slavic people)
Anartes (more
probably a
Celtic tribe later ****imilated by Dacians)
Campsiani (originally...
-
concept of a tribe.
Others are
confederations or even
unions of tribes.
Anartes/Anartoi –
Areas of
modern Slovakia and
modern Northern Hungary,
north of...
-
right line
along the
river Danube to the
territories of the Daci and the
Anartes".
Their territory on the left bank of the
Rhine had
belonged to the Mediomatrici...
- Gr****
orphans adopted by
Jonathan Peckham Miller, the
other two
being Anartes Nickolas Miller and
Theseus Themistocles Miller. In addition, J. P. Miller...