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Celtic expansion was no doubt due to over-population. Even today, the Scots
and Irish have a very high birth-rate. It seems likely that the Celts
reached the north-south section of the Danube by the 4th century BCE as
is shown by several La Tene B cemetaries in the Danube bend and
north-eastern Hungary. Transylvania too came under Celtic rule. The
sudden and conspicuous increase in the number of sites
in Trans-Danuvia, north-eastern Hungary and the Great Hungarian Plain
implies that these areas also came under Celtic hegemony when, in the
late 4th and early 3rd century BCE, tribes from the middle Rhine region
set out to conquer new territories in the south. Celtic graves appear in
the cemeteries of the Iranian-speaking Scythians in the Great Hungarian
Plain from the mid-3rd century BCE while settlements yielding
distinctively Celtic finds can be dated roughly to the same time, which
suggests that Celtic expansion was relatively peaceful and did not meet
with particulary strong resistance.
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