Gallia
The Gaul, or the goal, refers to the provinces of France, Belgium, western Switzerland and west of the Rhine, including Germany, before the fall of the Roman Empire, including the Gauli Kisalpina until Julius Caesar was included in his native Italy. . It was valued by Julius Caesar for eight years from 58 BC to 51 BC and by the first century it was divided into the five Roman provinces of Gallia Narbonensis, Aquitania, Gallia Lugudensis, Belgium, and Highland Germania. The original inhabitants of Gaul are the Celts, and the name Gaul itself is the Latin word for 'keltai'. The Gaelic Celts were divided into dozens of tribal countries, which are described in detail in Julius Caesar's "Gallic War".