No, but 19th century nationalism ensured that Gallic tribes were seen by generations of French as, in some vague, suitably nationalist way, part of the French nation, and Vercingetorix in particular was lionized as an early hero in the history of France.
He was unambiguously heroic in leading disparate tribes against the Roman legions. But yeah, he was a Germanic with no tangible connection to France as a modern nation state.
He was certainly not a Germanic. The Gallic and Germanic tribes were largely at odds in this point in history - Caesar’s wider intervention in Gaul was predicated in no small part on the plea from Gallic allies of Rome to expel Germanic invaders (a request which they may have come to regret, lmao).
Arguably, modern France is more Germanic than Gallic in origins, having its roots in the migrating tribes of the Germanic Franks and subsequent Frankish Kingdom, from which it gets its name.
It was not France back then. US should keep at rewriting their history instead of rewriting other‘s
No, but 19th century nationalism ensured that Gallic tribes were seen by generations of French as, in some vague, suitably nationalist way, part of the French nation, and Vercingetorix in particular was lionized as an early hero in the history of France.
He was unambiguously heroic in leading disparate tribes against the Roman legions. But yeah, he was a Germanic with no tangible connection to France as a modern nation state.
He was certainly not a Germanic. The Gallic and Germanic tribes were largely at odds in this point in history - Caesar’s wider intervention in Gaul was predicated in no small part on the plea from Gallic allies of Rome to expel Germanic invaders (a request which they may have come to regret, lmao).
Arguably, modern France is more Germanic than Gallic in origins, having its roots in the migrating tribes of the Germanic Franks and subsequent Frankish Kingdom, from which it gets its name.
Even Vercingetorix’s name is clearly continental Celtic, not Germanic.
You’re absolutely right thanks for the correction