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Who was in Scotland before the Celts?
The Celts were the tribes active during the iron age in Britain. Before them were the Beaker people of the Bronze age although this was only for a relatively short time.Early sources place Celts in western Europe and also occupying land near the headwaters of the Danube River. Their home territories have often been traced to central and eastern France, extending across southern Germany and into the Czech Republic.The Scottish people or Scots (Scots: Scots fowk; Scottish Gaelic: Albannaich) are an ethnic group and nation native to Scotland. Historically, they emerged in the early Middle Ages from an amalgamation of two Celtic peoples, the Picts and Gaels, who founded the Kingdom of Scotland (or Alba) in the 9th century.

Who are the original Britons : The Britons (*Pritanī, Latin: Britanni), also known as Celtic Britons or Ancient Britons, were an indigenous Celtic people who inhabited Great Britain from at least the British Iron Age until the High Middle Ages, at which point they diverged into the Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons (among others).

Who inhabited Britain before Celts

Iberians
pre-celtic people had already settled in Great Britain. These were called the Iberians. Possibly Iberians that migrated north about 6,000 years ago after the ice age when Britain was buried in ice. This was followed by the Celtiberians from Iberia.

Who came first Celts or Vikings : A quick moment of Wikipedia will tell you that the Celts were a group at least since the iron age and were first recorded in 571 BC while the Vikings happened the 8–11th centuries AD.

12,000BC. People first occupied Scotland in the Paleolithic era. Small groups of hunter-gatherers lived off the land, hunting wild animals and foraging for plants. Natural disasters were a serious threat – around 6200BC a 25m-high tsunami devastated coastal communities in the Northern Isles and eastern Scotland.

A tribe of Scots coming from Ireland reached the west coast of what we recognize today as Scotland about 500 AD. Their descendants bear the names of the McDonalds, the MacNeils, the Fergusons and many others.

Who first came to Scotland

the Romans
Early History

The recorded history of Scotland begins in the 1st century AD when the Romans invaded Britain. The Romans added southern Britain to their empire as the province Britannia.England is a country that is really only Anglo-Saxon by the language they speak and even that has some Celtic/Latin admixture. What percentage of pre-Saxon Brythonic ancestry exists in the English population It varies by location, but the English overall are approximately 20% Brittonic Celt.Modern Britons are descended mainly from the varied ethnic groups that settled in Great Britain in and before the 11th century: Prehistoric, Brittonic, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Normans.

The mainstream view during most of the twentieth century is that the Celts and the proto-Celtic language arose out of the Urnfield culture of central Europe around 1000 BC, spreading westward and southward over the following few hundred years.

Are the British descended from Celts : The way history has been taught in the UK for a long time is that the Romans and then Anglo Saxons displaced the Celts to the fringes. It is only in the last couple of decades that DNA analysis has shown that Celtic DNA is still the majority and Anglo Saxon DNA is much less than expected.

Who inhabited Scotland first : The earliest people, Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) hunters and fishermen who probably reached Scotland via an ancient land bridge from the Continent, were to be found on the west coast, near Oban, and as far south as Kirkcudbright, where their settlements are marked by large deposits of discarded mollusk shells.

Are Scottish people Celts

Celtic cultures seem to have been diverse, with the use of a Celtic language being the main thing they had in common. Today, the term 'Celtic' generally refers to the languages and cultures of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Cornwall, the Isle of Man, and Brittany; also called the Celtic nations.

Scot, any member of an ancient Gaelic-speaking people of Ireland or Scotland in the early Middle Ages. Originally (until the 10th century) “Scotia” denoted Ireland, and the inhabitants of Scotia were Scotti.To date, no traces have been found in Scotland of either a Neanderthal or a homo sapiens presence during the Pleistocene interglacials. The first indications of human presence date from a period after the ice retreated in the 11th millennium BC and the current Flandrian interglacial began.

Who settled Scotland first : The earliest people, Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) hunters and fishermen who probably reached Scotland via an ancient land bridge from the Continent, were to be found on the west coast, near Oban, and as far south as Kirkcudbright, where their settlements are marked by large deposits of discarded mollusk shells.