User:Alcides Pinto/Sandbox I

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This section of the timeline of Spanish history concerns events from before the Carthaginian conquests (c. 236 BC).

Pre-Roman Iberia

Pre-History

Iberian Middle Bronze Age
Iberian Late Bronze Age

Iron Age

  • Cadiz as a trading post.[6]
  • c.
    1000 BC – Development of Tartessos, the first Iberian State mentioned in writing sources, a centralized Monarchy brought about under Phoenician influence.[7]
  • c.
    900 BC – The Castro Village culture appears in the northwestern part of the peninsula (roughly present-day northern Portugal, Galicia and Asturias). This culture is characterized by their walled villages and hill forts. It expanded from south to north and from the coast to the interior of the peninsula during the next centuries.[5]
  • c. 800 BC
    • The Celtic Hallstatt culture reaches the local Urnfields Celts of the Northeast, bringing the iron working technology to Iberia. This culture starts to expand to the nearby areas, embracing the northern region of the Levante and the upper Ebro valley.
    • The Phoenicians establish a colony in Almuñécar called Sexi.
  • c. 700 BC – The cattle herding culture of Cogotas I is transformed into Cogotas II, mixing the Celtic culture with the Iberian culture (Celtiberians).[8]
  • 654 BC – Phoenician settlers found a port in the Balearic Islands as Ibossim (Ibiza).[9]
  • c. 600 BC
    • Celts penetrate in the Northwest of the Peninsula, although it has been debated whether all tribes of this area are actually Celtic, Celtizied or just native with Celtic influences.
    • Penetration of Celtic culture into the northern mountainous strip is minimal and most likely the tribes of this region remain fully pre-Indo European.
  • 575 BC
    • Foundation of Emporion (Ampurias), in the Catalan coast, by Greek colonists from Phocaea.[10]
    • Soon afterwards the Northwest is rapidly re-Iberized from the south. This process cut the Celts of Iberia off from their continental counterparts, preventing the late Celtic culture of La Tène from affecting the peninsular Celts.
  • c. 500 BC
    • Decadence of Phoenician colonization of the Mediterranean coast of Iberia. Many of the colonies are deserted.
      Carthago
      slowly replaces the Phoenician in its former areas of dominion.
    • Tartessos disappears suddenly, probably destroyed by the Carthaginians as revenge of the Tartessian alliance with the Greeks during the battle of Alalia, in the coast of Corsica. The Turdetanians become their successors, although with a strong Carthaginian influence.[10]
Iberia before Carthaginian conquests

See also

References

  1. ^ Bruce Bower, Ancient Roads to Europe: African ancestors may have entered Europe surprisingly early (Science News, v. 151 no. 1. January 4, 1997), 12-13
  2. ^ 'First west Europe tooth' found, BBC News, 2007-06-30
  3. ^ a b c d María Dolores Fernández-Posse, Antonio Gilman, Concepción Martin, Consideraciones Cronológicas sobre la Edad del Bronce en La Mancha (Complutum Extra, 1996), 6 (II), 111-137, ISSN 1131-6993
  4. ^
  5. ^ Velleius Paterculus, Compendium of Roman History I, 2
  6. ^ a b Herodotus of Halicarnassus, The Histories, I, 163; IV, 152
  7. ^ a b Strabo, Geographica, III, 4
  8. ^ Martín Almagro Gorbea, Etnogénesis del País Vasco: de los antiguos mitos a la investigación actual (Munibe (Antropologia-Arkeologia) 57, 2005), ISSN 1132-2217
  9. ^ Francisco Burillo Mozota, Sobre el territorio de los Lusones, Belos y Titos en el siglo II A. de C. in Estudios en homenaje al Dr. Antonio Beltrán Martínez (Universidad de Zaragoza, facultad de Filosofía y Letras, 1986)
  10. ^ Appian, Iberiké, 10