The Volcae in the 2nd century BC were a large and powerful nation of Gaul.
Some believe that the name Volcae is related in some manner to the English word "folk", derived from Proto-Germanic *fulka "people" or "host". This is dubious, since it would imply a loan from Germanic to Celtic. Another posibility would be derivation from PIE ulkwos "wolf" (c.f. Russian volk). This is also unlikely, since the expected P-Celtic form of the word would be volp-. A more likely suggestion is a derivation from PIE *velk, a word for water or dampness (Old Irish failc "bathe"; cognate to English wallow, welkin c.f. Volga), according to which the Volcae would have been the "river people" [http://www.ceantar.org/Dicts/MB2/mb16.html. The Proto-Germanic sound change that changed Volcae into *walha is known as Grimm's law, so that the contact between the Volcae and the early Germanic tribes would have occurred before that sound change, in the later 1st millennium BC.
The Volcae are consequently believed to have originally been settled north-east of the Rhine, in what is now western and central Germany in the basin of the Weser River where there are toponyms of supposed Celtic origin. Julius Caesar mentioned the Volcae Tectosages as a Celtic tribe which still remained in western Germany. For some time, the Volcae would have blocked Germanic expansion southwards. It is consequently not surprising that it became the generic name for Celts and later also for the Romans, contained in Wales, Wallachia, Wallonia, and walnut (see also Etymology of Vlach).
Ancient Roman enemies and allies | Ancient Gauls | Toulouse
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