- Look up
Gallic in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Gallic is an
adjective that may describe:
ancient Gaul (Latin: Gallia),
roughly corresponding to the...
- The
Gallic Empire or the
Gallic Roman Empire are
names used in
modern historiography for a
breakaway part of the
Roman Empire that
functioned de facto...
- The
Gallic Wars were
waged between 58 and 50 BC by the
Roman general Julius Caesar against the
peoples of Gaul (present-day France, Belgium, and Switzerland)...
-
increasingly put
pressure on the
Gallic sphere of influence. The
Battle of
Telamon (225 BC)
heralded a
gradual decline of
Gallic power during the 2nd century...
-
Gallic acid (also
known as 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoic acid) is a
trihydroxybenzoic acid with the
formula C6H2(OH)3CO2H. It is
classified as a
phenolic acid...
-
ships of the
White Star Line have
borne the name SS
Gallic, an
adjectival reference to France: SS
Gallic (1894) was a p****enger tender,
originally SS Birkenhead...
- The
Gallic rooster (French: le coq gaulois) is a
national symbol of
France as a nation, as
opposed to
Marianne representing France as a
state and its values:...
-
Commentaries on the
Gallic War), also
Bellum Galli**** (English:
Gallic War), is
Julius Caesar's
firsthand account of the
Gallic Wars,
written as a third-person...
- Gáedel re Gallaib. As adjectives,
English has the two variants:
Gaulish and
Gallic. The two
adjectives are used synonymously, as "pertaining to Gaul or the...
- (September 52 BC) was the
climactic military engagement of the
Gallic Wars,
fought around the
Gallic oppidum (fortified settlement) of
Alesia in
modern France...