TisILeclerc wrote:Guichard remarks in his book that many if not most of the Alesias are on peninsulas with a couple at least of rivers flowing around it but all of them are located at mineral water springs or wells. Source in French hence sourcier or sorcerer.
He is adamant that the names of all these locations are not French or Latin based and are found in all countries in Europe. They are pre Roman, pre Celtic and he claims that they are from a language dating back to the Stone Age.
Allihies, on the south-west tip of the Beara peninsula in Ireland, is supposed to mean 'cliff-fields' or something but I wondered if it counts as an 'Alesia'.
According to Wiki Allihies has been at the centre of copper mining in Ireland since at least the Bronze Age, right up to the late nineteenth century. The village has a copper mining museum though obviously most of the structures are relatively modern.
More pertinent mapping-wise, the village is a mile or so south of the so-called Michael-Apollo Line from Skellig Michael to the Lebanese ports of Tyre and Sidon, possibly to Jerusalem. The point where it reaches the Beara peninsula crosses a sandy beach or cove, rather unexpected on such a rocky coastline.
At the very western end of the Beara peninsula is a dolmen on flat ground close to the shore; a few feet south-west of the line, a small promontory juts out with a standing stone pointing north-west towards Skellig Michael which is visible, probably only occasionally in view of Irish weather.
