Celts in the midland districts may have lived in permanent villages, raising crops of oats or some rougher kind of grain for food, and weaving themselves garments of hair or of coarse wool from their puny, many-horned sheep. But the ruder tribes, who... ... Rutland - Page 53by George Phillips - 1912 - 171 pagesFull view - About this book
| Charles Isaac Elton - Druids and druidism - 1882 - 506 pages
...and preferred to trust to the chances of war for food and plunder. The Celts in the midland districts may have lived in permanent villages, raising crops of oats or some rougher kind of grain for food, and weaving themselves garments of hair or of coarse wool from their puny, many-horned sheep. But the... | |
| Charles Isaac Elton - Druids and Druidism - 1882 - 514 pages
...and preferred to trust to the chances of war for food and plunder. The Celts in the midland districts may have lived in permanent villages, raising crops of oats or some rougher kind of grain for food, and weaving themselves garments of hair or of coarse wool from their puny, many-horned sheep. But the... | |
| Charles Isaac Elton - Druids and Druidism - 1882 - 512 pages
...and preferred to trust to the chances of war for food and plunder. The Celts in the midland districts may have lived in permanent villages, raising crops of oats or some rougher kind of grain for food, and weaving themselves garments of hair or of coarse wool from their puny, many-horned sheep. But the... | |
| Jean Roemer - English language - 1888 - 714 pages
...meat and milk, and were clad in the skins of beasts. 1 The Celts in the midland districts may possibly have lived in permanent villages, raising crops of oats or some rougher kind of grain for food, and weaving themselves garments of hair or of coarse wool from their puny, many-horned sheep; but the... | |
| Charles Isaac Elton - Druids and Druidism - 1890 - 506 pages
...preparation, made by the application of a greater heat." Herbert, Britannia after the Romans, Ivi. permanent villages, raising crops of oats or some rougher kind of grain for food, and weaving for themselves garments of hair, or of coarse wool, from their puny many-horned sheep.... | |
| Leicestershire (England). County Council. Planning Department - Regional planning - 1976 - 192 pages
...concerned, has been almost entirely neglected, and it is only since the institution of the Rutland Archaeological Society, about ten years ago, that...cattle, would naturally follow the herd, living through the summer in booths on the higher pasture grounds, and only returning to the valleys to find shelter... | |
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