From 200 BC, the culture was overrun by the arrival of Germanic and Celtic settlers to the region.
Pastoral and farming activities date back to pre-Roman Celtic settlers.
Many finds in the area of the village meadows show that there were already Celtic settlers here in Hallstatt and La Tène times.
After AD 620 the Celtic settlers were joined by Angles and increased the amount of forest clearing to establish fields for crops and animals.
The first Celtic settlers came there before the Middle Ages.
The route is thought to have been developed by the earliest Celtic settlers of the region and used as a drove road for moving livestock.
Early Celtic settlers farmed in the area of Grosswenkheim, Maria Bildhausen and Althausen (all towns within the city boundaries).
Around 350 BC celtic settlers found Noricum.
Kilmore was a stronghold of early Celtic settlers from Ireland, Scotland and Cornwall, and remains a strong Celtic area to this day.
Ruins of circular ramparts of celtic settlers can be found on the mountain's ridge.