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HALLOWEEN, A DOOR TO PALEOLITHIC TIMES

Released on: October 28, 2007, 3:30 am

Press Release Author: Ana Chiappori / A.J. Place

Industry: Entertainment

Press Release Summary: When people were just hunters and gatherers and women might
have had an amazingly high status.

Press Release Body: When people were just hunters and gatherers and women might have
had an amazingly high status.

Halloween is a Celtic tradition. Who were the Celts? Just a few years ago there was
a widely accepted vision, on account of their language. Linguists placed the Celts
among the earliest Indo-European tribes that came to Europe from the East. They
supposedly brought their Neolithic innovationagriculture. The DNA revolution
turned those stereotypes upside down. (As J.F. del Giorgio tells in "The Oldest
Europeans: Who are we? Where do we come from? What made European women different?")

Geneticists pointed that Celts were practically identical to the Paleolithic,
post-Glacial, pre-Indo-European population. Paleolithic European women seem to have
had a surprisingly high status. They owned properties, were the only inheritors and
arranged their brother's marriage. An Indo-European all-macho minority most probably
took advantage of the peculiar, matrilineal, social structure of the Paleolithic
hunter-gatherers. They became the new, aristocratic male nobility and imposed their
language.

Women retained a few of their rights only in the western fringe of Europe. Celtic
women were famous by their independence, a token of their much higher status in the
Paleolithic. Paleolithic traditions also survived much longer in that zone, as told
in "The Oldest Europeans".

The Celts believed in sacred periods of the year, apt for change or reflection,
among other things. One of them survived as Halloween. Curiously, as women's rights
are on advance, Halloween keeps regaining popularity.


Web Site: http://www.ajplace.com

Contact Details: Ana Chiappori, C. Camelias 8, B D, Alcorcón, Madrid 28925, Spain
Phone 34 91 619 5759
Fax 34 91 611 3957
achiappori@ajplace.com

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