User:Alcides Pinto/Timeline of Spanish history (Hispania)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This section of the timeline of Spanish history concerns events from the Carthaginian conquests (236 BC) to before the barbarian invasions (408 AD).

Roman Hispania

3rd Century BC

Carthaginian conquests in Iberia
  • Hannibal Barca
    , Hamilcar Barca's older son, is acclaimed commander-in-chief by the army and confirmed in his appointment by the Carthaginian Senate.
  • 220 BC - Hannibal capture the Vaccean cities of Helmantica (Salamanca) and Arbucala (Zamora).
  • 219 BC
    • Hannibal defeate a combined force of Vaccaei,
      Saguntum
      .
    • Beginning of the siege of Saguntum. The city call for Roman aid and the Roman Senate sends envoys to declare the city under Roman protection, which is disregarded by Hannibal.
  • 218 BC
    • Hannibal Barca takes Saguntum with the aid of the Turboletae and departs for the Italian peninsula in order to attack the Romans in their own territory. His younger brother Hasdrubal Barca is left in the command of the Carthaginian armies in Iberia.
    • Beginning of the Second Punic War between Carthage and Rome.
    • A Roman army under Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus defeat an outnumbered Carthaginian army near Cissa, thus gaining control of the territory north of the Ebro River that Hannibal had just subdued a few months prior in the summer. This is the first battle the Romans ever fought in Iberia.
    • Scipio and the Roman army winter at Tarraco. Hasdrubal retire to Cartagena after garrisoning allied towns south of the Ebro.
  • 217 BC
    • Hasdrubal Barca launch a joint expedition to destroy the Roman base north of the Ebro River, but is defeated after a surprise attack by the Roman ships, who completely annihilate the Carthaginian naval contingent.
    • After the battle of Ebro River, Hasdrubal dismiss the Iberian crews, sparking a rebellion in the Trudetani tribe.
    • During the fall, Publius Cornelius Scipio joins his brother Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus, reinforcing the Roman troops.
  • 216 BC
    • The Scipio brothers raid Barcid possessions in Iberia and Balearic Islands and recruit auxiliary troops from Iberian tribes, consolidated their hold north of the Ebro River. They also encourage Iberian tribes friendly with the Romans to raid tribes loyal to Carthage beyond the Ebro.
    • Hasdrubal spend the year in subduing the Iberian tribes, with little effort made to confront the Romans.
  • 215 BC
    • The Romans lay siege to Ibera, a small Iberian town allied to Carthage. Hasdrubal march north with his field army to the Ebro, but besiege a town allied with the Romans across Dertosa instead. The Scipios lift their siege and move to engage Hasdrubal, defeating him in the
      battle of Dertosa
      .
    • The Romans retake Saguntum and go deeper into Iberia.
  • 212 BC
    • The Romans and their Edetani allies invade Turboletania, seize the capital Turba and raze it to the ground, selling his residents to slavery.
    • Large Carthaginian counter-offensive led by Hasdrubal Barca, his brother Mago Barca and Hasdrubal Gisco.
  • 211 BC
    • Publius Cornelius Scipio and his bother Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus are killed in the Battles of the Upper Baetis. Carthaginian victory.
    • Rome send reinforcements to Iberia under the command of Gaius Claudius Nero, but Nero score no spectacular victories.
  • Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus
    , the son of Publius Scipio, with 10,000 Roman troops in Iberia.
  • 209 BC
    • The Roman general Scipio Africanus conquers Carthago Nova.
    • The three Carthaginian armies remain separated, and their generals at odds with each other, thus giving the Romans a chance to deal with them one by one.
  • 208 BC
    • Scipio move against Hasdrubal, whose force wintered at Baecula, inflicting great losses.
    • After the battle, Hasdrubal lead his depleted army over the western passes of the Pyrenees into Gaul, and subsequently into Italy with a mostly Gallic force in an ill-fated attempt to join his brother Hannibal.
    • Scipio retire his army to Tarraco, and manage to secure alliances with most of the native Iberian tribes, who switch side after the recent Roman successes.
  • 207 BC
    • Carthaginian reinforcements land in Iberia under Hanno, who soon join Mago Barca. Together they raise a powerful army by heavy recruiting of Celtiberians.
    • Hasdrubal Gisco advance his army from Gades into Andalusia.
    • Scipio send a detachment under Silanus to strike Mago first. Achieving complete surprise, Silanus fall on the Carthaginian camps, dispersing Mago’s Celtiberians and capturing Hanno.
  • 206 BC
    • Battle of Ilipa (near Seville) between Roman legions, commanded by Scipio Africanus, and Carthaginian armies, commanded by Hasdrubal Barca and Mago. Roman victory that results in the evacuation of Iberia by the Punic commanders.
    • Gadir surrenders without a fight to the Romans.
  • 205 BC - The exhausted Turboletae sue for peace, on which the Roman Senate force them to pay a huge compensation to the surviving citizens of Saguntum.
  • 202 BC - End of the Second Punic War with the defeat of Hannibal Barca in the Battle of Zama in North Africa.
  • Quintus Ennius
    records, for the first time, the use of the word Hispania to designate the Iberian peninsula (from the Carthaginian name).

2nd Century BC

1st division of Roman Hispania
  • 196 BC - The Tuboletae revolt is crushed by Q. Minucius, Praetor of Hispania Citerior, in a pitched battle near the ruins of Turba. Their devastated lands are divided among the Bastetani and Edetani, resulting in their total disappearance.
  • 195 BC - Cato the Elder becomes consul, assuming the command of the whole of Hispania. Cato first put down the rebellion in the northeast, then march south and put down the revolt by the Turdetani.
  • Vacceos, Vettones and Lusones near Toletum (Toledo
    ). The rebelling forces take refuge in the Lusone city of Contrebia Belaisca, which is taken by the consul. The rebellion is over.
  • 181 BC
    • The
      Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus
      .
    • Several tribes along the Ebro, especially the Lusones, rebel against Roman rule, invading Hispania Ulterior, Ebro valley and Iberic Levante in search of a lack of land on which to live. Beginning of the First Celtiberian War.
  • 180 BC
    • Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, proconsul of Hispania Citerior, frees the city of Caraues (Magallón), a roman allie, from the Celtiberians.
    • Gracchus conquers Contrebia and the vicinities, dividing this region with the indigenous roman allies and founding Gracurris (Alfaro) for the dispossessed Celtiberians.
  • Moncayo
    , ending the 1st Celtiberian War.
  • Lucius Mummius. Beginning of the Lusitanian War
    .
  • 154 BC
    • Lusitanians, under Cesarus, pillage through
      Baetica
      (modern Andalusia).
    • Rome forbid the enlargement of the fortification of Segeda, capital of the Belli, considering an infraction to the treaty with Gracchus in 179 BC. However, the Belli continue the enlargement. Beginning of the 2nd Celtiberian War.
  • 153 BC
    • With the advance of the roman legions led by the Consul Quintus Fulvius Nobilior, the inhabitants of Segeda take refuge in Numantia, a city of the Arevaci tribe.
    • Nobilior destroys the city of Segeda, takes Ocilis (Medinaceli), but is ambushed by the Belli General Caros, leader of the Celtiberian coalition, at the battle of Ribarroya, at the Baldano river valley.
    • Nobilior arrives at the city of Numantia, where he spend the winter without taken it.
  • 152 BC - Marcus Claudius Marcellus replaces Nobilior as Consul and takes the Celtiberian cities of Ocilis and Nertobriga. Entrapped, the Numantines surrender. End of the 2nd Celtiberian war.
  • 147 BC - Viriathus is acclaimed leader of the Lusitanians.
  • 143 BC - Viriathus form a league against Rome with several Celtic tribes. The Arevaci are one of these tribes, beginning the second phase of the Numantine War.
  • 142 BC - The governor Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus attacks the territory of the Vettones, but is not able to take the cities of Numantia and Termancia.
  • 141 BC - After suffering severe defeats, the general Quintus Pompeius secretly negotiate a peace with the city of Numantia.
  • 140 BC
    • Fabius Servilianus, new Consul of Hispania Ulterior, after having sacked several cities loyal to Viriathus in Baetica and southern Lusitania, is defeated by the Lusitanians in Erisane (in Baetica).
    • Fabius Servilianus, after the defeat, declare Viriathus to be a Friend of the Rome.
  • 139 BC
    • The Roman Senate deems Fabius Servilianus' actions unworthy of Rome, and sends Servilius Cipianus to defeat the rebellious tribes of Hispania.
    • In Hispania Ulterior, Servilius Cipianus, with the aid of
      Marcus Popillius Laenas
      ' armies, severely defeat the Lusitanians and oblige Viriathus to take refuge north of the Tagus river.
    • Servilius Cipianus armies also attack the Vettones and the Gallaecians.
    • Servilius Cipianus founds the Roman cities of Castra Servilia and Caepiana (in the territory of the Celtici).
    • Viriathus send emissaries to negotiate the peace with Servilius Cipianus, but is betrayed and killed in his sleep by his companions, bribed by Marcus Popillius Laenas.
    • Lusitanian armies, now led by Tautalus, still tries a southern incursion against the Romans, but are defeated. End of the Lusitanian War.
  • 138 BC - The general Marcus Popillius Laenas don't recognize the peace treaty of 141 BC signed between Quintus Pompeius and the Arevaci, beginning the final phase of the Numantine War.
  • 137 BC - Gaius Hostilius Mancinus assault the city of Numantia, but is repulsed several times before being routed and encircled, and so forced to accept a treaty. However, the Roman Senate don't ratify this treaty.
  • Talabriga
    , thus defeating the Gallaecians. After the military campaigns, the Roman legions depart south and leave no garrisons.
  • 134 BC - The Consul Scipio Aemilianus is sent to Hispania Citerior to end the war against the city of Numantia.
  • 133 BC - Scipio builds a ring of seven fortresses around Numantia itself before beginning the siege proper. After suffering pestilence and famine, most of the surviving Numantines commit suicide rather than surrender to Rome. End of the Numantine War and the Celtiberian Wars.
  • Palma and Pollentia
    .
  • 105 BC - After the Battle of Arausio, the Germanic Teutons and Cimbri plunder through all north Iberia as far as Gallaecia.
  • Vercellae
    .

1st Century BC

Administrative organization of emperor Augustus in 17 BC
Administrative organization of Hispania in 212 by emperor Caracalla.

1st Century

  • 98 - Trajan, born in Hispania Baetica, becomes Roman Emperor.
Administrative division of Diocletian in 293.

2nd Century

  • 117 - Hadrian, born in Hispania Baetica, becomes Roman Emperor.

3rd Century

  • 212 - The Emperor Caracalla makes a new administrative division which lasts only a short time. He splits Hispania Citerior again into two parts, creating the new provinces Hispania Nova Citerior and Asturiae-Calleciae.
  • 238 - The unified province Tarraconensis or Hispania Citerior is reestablished. Asturias and Gallaecia are again part of it.
  • Insulae Baleares and the North African province of Mauretania Tingitana
    .

See also

Spain Category:History of Spain