You guys are bad. Worst than the paparazzi. If I had neighbors like you I would get a retraining order based on claims of invasions of privacy. But you make for an interesting thread.
Just going back a few hundred posts someone was talking about classifications of the Civs. I think generally they should have followed art sets based on religion. Buddhist, Hindu, Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, Muslim. Because when you find architecture of that period, for each civ, it becomes very confusing when you try to categorize in any other-way. Someone said Britons were classed as one of the barbarian groups. But the term Briton actually precedes all Germanic involvement. The name is in reference to a people that lived there during the Roman and Greek period of the Isles. They were no longer Britons once they were conquered, the alternative term Anglo or Anglo-Saxxon is often used. The original inhabitants of the island were just the same as any other Roman or Greek land. This is entirely from an architectural and grouping of Civs within the art work point of view. So really the Britons would have and did have Roman architecture, similar to Byzantine and ancient Greece. It was only after their conquest by Germanic tribes that their architecture changed significantly. Bath near London probably shows this past best, and Hadrians wall certainly indicates the trouble the island underwent in trying to remain free. So really Britons should have been included in the Roman team architecture. Also Celts were the ancestors of the Gauls and Britons and they too were Hellenised well past 700BC. But there is confusion because the way they are depicted is from a post Germanic invasion point of view and yet they use the names associated with their former Roman membership. So what we see ingame called Britons is actually Anglo-Saxxon kingdoms, and while they use the name Celts in the Game they are actually Germanic tribes possibly Picts. The La Tene culture found in modern Switzerland was actually developed by the Celts or Gauls of Marsielle. Marsielle started as a Greek city but after a few generations it had more Celtic citizens than Greeks and as such acted as a catapault for the rise of Celtic culture (dragging with it Hellenisation eg they used Greek coins even if they were minted in Gaul).
So that there is confusion enough, then comes the art work which I think should have been really split based on religious factions. Religion as a cultural aspect in medieval times pretty much defined everything. Orthodox churches or early christian churches and Catholic were the same. Protestant types took on that steep roof appearance etc.
"To love Christ -means not to be a hireling, not to look upon a noble life as an enterprise or trade, but to be a true benefactor and to do everything only for the sake of love for God." —St John Chrysostom
"When one returns to the Greek; it is like going into a garden of lilies out of some, narrow and dark house." -Oscar Wilde.