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Could simply be a melting pot event. A P-Celtic culture empire (Breton, Welsh, Cornish, Pictish) of celtic pagan religion ruling over not-Celtic cultured provinces in the region of ancient Gaul munge together into a distinct cultural identity which comes to be known as Gaulish. A kind of nationalism spurs interest in the old ways. Chariots, some Gaulish words and names, and styles of architecture (aesthetically, not materially) are adopted.
A sufficiently large realm in the region of ancient Gaul, which matches similar criteria to the above, may get an event allowing the ruler to pursue study of the ancient Celtic people of Gaul. This results in the eventual adoption of Gaulish cultural practices and an old-new culture.
A combination of the above. Something like the second idea could lead into the first.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
A melting pot idea is pretty cool. You could have number two lead into number one, as you said. Seems pretty solid, actually. An inversion of the English Melting pot, almost. Actually kinda clever.
Ideas
Could simply be a melting pot event. A P-Celtic culture empire (Breton, Welsh, Cornish, Pictish) of celtic pagan religion ruling over not-Celtic cultured provinces in the region of ancient Gaul munge together into a distinct cultural identity which comes to be known as Gaulish. A kind of nationalism spurs interest in the old ways. Chariots, some Gaulish words and names, and styles of architecture (aesthetically, not materially) are adopted.
A sufficiently large realm in the region of ancient Gaul, which matches similar criteria to the above, may get an event allowing the ruler to pursue study of the ancient Celtic people of Gaul. This results in the eventual adoption of Gaulish cultural practices and an old-new culture.
A combination of the above. Something like the second idea could lead into the first.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: