If we look back through time, right back to the dawn of wisdom and human intellect, we come to those that we call the Shamans.  For these people, tha nature of humanity (savages and wonderers) meant that they were thankful for everything in their immediate surroundings and everything needed a protector.  The Wise ones, the Shamans, were the medicine people, the power wielders, the spiritual guides.  they created magic and conversed with the spirits.  The protectors were given names by these Wise ones.  These protectors were worshipped and exhulted and given the titles Goddesses and Gods.  After all, they were the protectors of that which mattered most to these Wise ones.  It is said that the more knowledge and wisdom we get through life, the less deities we need, and one by one, they drop off.  Hence about 2000 years ago a large group of Humans dropped all but one god off the list.  This God was given the name of Jehawa.  I believe that this is an arrangant way to say that we are intelligent enough to understand the Godhead - we cannot even attempt to begin to understand.

Germania, the origin of the Wise ones, set the president with their Gods.  They were the Nordics, latter known (after extensive traversing, saking and pillaging) as the Celtic people.
  At the best of times, the Celts were a mixed up breed.  The Irish Celts and the British Celts.  Though, through the scattering of origin the Clets came into their own within the social order, beleif structures and, above all, race. 
  By the forth century BCE, the Celts had become one of the four great nations in the world along with Scythians, the Indeans and the Ethiopians.  For, just like their ancestors, the Vikings, they spread themselves far and wide rudely and dramatically into the political centres of the Mediterranean.

They then threatened Rome and by exploding from the southern Germania (the original homeland) into part of Bohemia and into the eastern and western limits of Europe including, by the end of the fifth century BCE, Spain.  By circa 400 BCE, the Celtic tribes had invaded Northern Italy to form Gallia Cisalpina and on to raid the peninsula and in 390 BCE they captured and sacked the city of Rome.  From there they penetrated into the Carpethians and the Balkans where their pressence was felt as early as the fourth century BCE.  No wonder the Christians were afraid of them.
HISTORY