According to Celtic law, all sons equally divided the inheritance and principalities of their father.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Each father wants their sons to be just like them, really.
A filial son to his father can be a traitorous subject to his ruler.
The relative property of the Son is to be begotten, that is, so to proceed from the Father as to be a participant of the same essence and perfectly carry on the Father's nature.
In many ways we are all sons and daughters of ancient Greece.
In the modern world, it may be that a living father can only be half a father to a boy - the dead father is the other vital half: the half that grows the boy up once and for all.
Every father and son have conflicts.
I'm not a good father and they're not children any more; the eldest is in his fifties. My relationship with their mothers broke down and, because of what the law was, they went with their mothers and were imbued with their mothers' morality in life and they were not my people any more.
Every man is his own ancestor, and every man his own heir. He devises his own fortune, and he inherits his own past.
Every man is responsible only for his own acts. The sons do not inherit the sins of the fathers. But can we say: that was long ago, they were different?
The Celtic, Galatian, or Gallic nation received from the common mother endowments different from those of its Italian, Germanic, and Hellenic sisters.