Εμφανίζονται 100 (επί συνόλου 197) τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Πληροφορίες για τον τόπο στην ευρύτερη περιοχή: "ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ Χώρα ΙΒΗΡΙΚΗ ΧΕΡΣΟΝΝΗΣΟΣ" .
ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ (Χώρα) ΙΒΗΡΙΚΗ ΧΕΡΣΟΝΝΗΣΟΣ
ΤΕΝΕΡΙΦΗ (Νησί) ΚΑΝΑΡΙΑ ΝΗΣΙΑ
ΒΑΛΕΑΡΙΔΕΣ ΝΗΣΟΙ (Σύμπλεγμα νήσων) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
ΑΜΠΟΥΡΙΑΣ (Χωριό) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Emporion or Emporiae (La Escala or Ampurias) Gerona, Spain.
A Greek trading settlement inhabited by the Phokaians from Massalia, at the end
of the Gulf of Rosas on the Costa Brava; it is 3 km from the village of La Escala
and 40 km NE of Gerona. It is first mentioned in the Periplus of the Pseudo-Skylax
and in Skymnos. Its location has been known from the time of the Renaissance since
it gave its name to an entire district, the Ampurdan, was an episcopal see in
the Middle Ages, and one of the counties of the Marca Hispanica.
The Greeks originally occupied the small islet of San Martin, now
joined to the mainland, which was subsequently known as Palaiapolis (Strab. 3.4.8).
They soon spread to the nearby coast and used the mouth of the Clodianus (Fluvia)
as a trading port. The town was founded a little after 600 B.C. (date of the foundation
of Massalia) and throughout the 6th c. was a mere trading settlement, a port of
call on the trade route from Massalia (Marseille), two days' and one night's sail
distant (Pseudo-Skylax 3), to Mainake and the other Phokaian foundations in S
Iberia which traded with Tartessos. Because it was frankly a mart the Greek settlement
grew rapidly, and probably received fugitives from the destruction of Phokaia
by the Persians (540) and after the Battle of Alalia (537), also Greeks from Mainake
and other cities in the S destroyed by the Carthaginians.
In the 5th c. Massalia declined, and Emporion, which was already independent,
became a polis ruled by magistrates; it developed a brisk trade with the Greek
towns in S Italy, the Carthaginian towns, and the native settlements in the interior,
on which it had a profound Hellenic influence. Emporion then minted its own coins,
first imitating those of the towns with which it traded, including Athens and
Syracuse, and later creating its own currency in fractions of the drachma. The
types were copied from those of both Carthage and Syracuse, and the currency system
continued to be separate from that of Massalia until Emporion was Romanized in
the 2d c. The 5th-3d c. were those of its greatest wealth and splendor.
The town built temples, foremost among which was that dedicated to
Asklepios, for which a magnificent statue of Pentelic marble was imported. Outside
the town a native settlement developed, which soon became hellenized. It was called
Indika (Steph. Byz.), an eponym of the tribe of the Indiketes. In the course of
time the two towns merged, although each kept its own legal status; this explains
why, in Latin, Emporion is referred to in the plural as Emporiae. In the 3d c.
commercial interests arising from its contacts with the Greek cities in Italy
made it an ally of Rome. After the first Punic war the Roman ambassadors visited
the Iberian tribes supported by the Emporitani, and in 218 B.C. Cn. Scipio landed
the first Roman army in Hispania to begin the counteroffensive against Hannibal
in the second Punic war.
The war years were prosperous for the city's trade, but when the Romans
finally settled in Hispania, difficulties arose between the Greeks and the native
population, which were accentuated during the revolt of 197 B.C. In Emporion itself
the Greek and native communities kept a constant watch on each other through guards
permanently stationed at the gate in the wall separating the twin towns (Livy
34.9). In 195 B.C. M. Porcius Cato established a military camp near the town,
rapidly subdued the native tribes in the neighborhood, and initiated the Roman
organization of the country. As the result of the transfer to Tarraco of the Roman
administrative and political sector, Emporion was eclipsed and became a residential
town of little importance. The silting-up of its port and the increase in the
tonnage of Roman vessels hastened its decline. The town became a municipium and
during the time of C. Caesar received a colony of Roman veterans.
The Roman town, which was surrounded by a wall, was ruined by the
invasion of the Franks in 265 and Rhode became the economic center of the district.
However, a few small Christian communities established themselves in Emporion
and transformed the ruins of the town into a necropolis which extended beyond
the walls. Mediaeval sources claim that St. Felix stayed in Emporion before his
martyrdom in Gerona in the early 4th c.
The enclosure of the Greek town has been completely excavated. To
the S is a temple area (Asklepieion and temple of Serapis), a small agora, and
a stoa dating from the Roman Republican period. It is surrounded by a cyclopean
wall breached by a single gate, confirming Livy's description. On top of the Greek
town and further inland is a Roman town, ten times larger and surrounded by a
wall built no earlier than the time of Augustus. Inside is a forum, completely
leveled, on which stood small votive chapels. To the E, facing the sea, are two
large Hellenistic houses with cryptoportici, which contained remains of wall paintings
and geometric mosaics. Many architectural remains are in the Barcelona Archaeological
Museum and in the museum on the site. Among the finds are a statue of Asklepios,
a Greek original; the mosaic of Iphigeneia, an archaic architectural relief with
representations of sphinxes; Greek pottery (archaic Rhodian, Cypriot, and Ionian;
6th-4th c. Attic, Italic, and Roman). Several cemeteries near the town have also
been excavated.
J.Maluquer De Motes, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains 34 image(s), bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΑΥΓΟΥΣΤΑ ΕΜΕΡΙΤΑ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Augusta Emerita (Augousta Emerita: Merida, Ru.), the chief city
of Lusitania in Spain, was built in B.C. 23, by Publius Carisius, the legate
of Augustus, who colonized it with the veterans of the 5th and 10th legions
whose term of service had expired (emeriti), at the close of the Cantabrian
War. (Dion Cass. liii. 26; Strab. iii. pp. 151, 166.) It was, of course, a colonia
from the first, and at a later period it is mentioned as having the jus Italicum.
(Paullus, Dig. viii. de Cens.) It was the seat of one of the three juridical
divisions of Lusitania, the conventus Emeritensis. (Plin. iv. 22. s. 35.) It
speedily became the capital of Lusitania, and one of the greatest cities of
Spain. (Mela, ii. 6.) Ausonius celebrates it in the following verses (Ordo Nobil.
Urb. viii., Wernsdorf, Poet. Lat. Min. vol. v. p. 1329):
Clara mihi post has memorabere, nomen Iberum,
Emerita aequoreus quam praeterlabitur amnis,
Submittit cui tota suos Hispania fasces.
Corduba non, non arce potens tibi Tarraco certat,
Quaeque sinu pelagi jactat se Bracara dives.
Emerita stood on the N. bank of the Anas (Guadiana), but a part
of its territory lay on the S. side of the river, on which account Hyginus places
it in Baeturia. (Hygin. Lim. Const. p. 154.) From its position on the borders
of Lusitania and Baetica, we have various statements of the people and district
to which it belonged. Strabo assigns it to the Turduli, a part of whom certainly
dwelt at one time on the right bank of the Anas (comp. Plin. l. c.); Prudentius
to the Vettones (Hymn. in Eulal. ix. 186). Ptolemy simply mentions it as an
inland city of the Lusitani (ii. 5. § 8). It is one of his points of astronomical
observation, having 14 hrs. 15 min. in its longest day, and being 3 1/2 hours
W. of Alexandria (viii. 4. § 3).
Emerita was the centre of a great number of roads branching out
into the three provinces of Spain; the chief distances along which were, 162
M. P. to Hispalis; 144 to Corduba; 145, 161, and 220, by different routes, to
Olisipo; 313 to the mouth of the Anas; 632 to Caesaraugusta, or 348 by a shorter
route, or 458 by the route through Lusitania. (Itin. Ant. pp. 414, 415, 416,
418, 419, 420, 431, 432, 433, 438, 444.) Its territory was of great fertility,
and produced the finest olives. (Plin. xv. 3. s. 4.) Pliny also mentions a kind
of cochineal (coccus) as found in its neighbourhood and most highly esteemed
(iv. 41. s. 65).
The coins of Emerita are very numerous, most of them bearing the
heads of the Augustan family, with epigraphs referring to the origin of the
city, and celebrating its founder, in some cases with divine honours. A frequent
type is a city gate, generally bearing the inscription Emerita Augusta a device
which has been adopted as the cognizance of the modern city. (Florez, Med. vol.
i. p. 384; Eckhel, Doctr. Num. Vet. vol. i. pp. 12, 13.)
And well may Merida, though now but a poor neglected town of 4500
inhabitants, cling to the memory of her past glory; for few cities in the Roman
empire have such magnificent ruins to attest their ancient splendour. It has
been fitly called the Rome of Spain in respect of stupendous and well-preserved
monuments of antiquity. (Ford, p. 258.) Remains of all the great buildings which
adorned a Roman city of the first class are found within a circuit of about
half a mile, on a hill which formed the nucleus of the city. The Goths preserved
and even repaired the Roman edifices; and, at the Arab conquest, Merida called
forth from the Moorish leader Musa the exclamation, that all the world must
have been called together to build such a city. The conquerors, as usual, put
its stability to the severest test, and the ruins of Merida consist of what
was solid enough to withstand their violence and the more insidious encroachments
of the citizens, who for ages have used the ancient city as a quarry. Within
the circuit of the city, the ground is covered with traces of the ancient roads
and pavements, remains of temples and other buildings, fragments of columns,
statues, and bas-reliefs, with numerous inscriptions. A particular account of
the antiquities, which are too numerous to describe here, is given by Laborde
and Ford. The circus is still so perfect that it might be used for races as
of old, and the theatre, the vomitaries of which are perfect, has been the scene
of many a modern bull-fight. The great aqueduct is one of the grandest remains
of antiquity in the world; and there are several other aqueducts of less consequence,
and the remains of vast reservoirs for water. The Roman bridge over the Guadiana,
of 81 arches, 2575 feet long, 26 broad, and 33 above the river, upheld by Goth
and Moor, and repaired by Philip III. in 1610, remained uninjured till the Peninsular
War of our own time, when some of the arches were blown up, in April 1812. (Florez,
Esp. Sagr. vol. xiii. pp. 87, foll.; Laborde, Itineraire de l'Espagne, vol.
iii. pp. 399, foll, 3rd ed.; Ford, Handbook of Spain, pp. 258, foll.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited July 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΒΑΛΕΑΡΙΔΕΣ ΝΗΣΟΙ (Σύμπλεγμα νήσων) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Baleares (Balliareis, Diod. v. 17, Eustath. ad Dion. 457; Baliareis,
Baliarides, Steph. B.; Balearides, Strab.; Balliarides, Ptol. ii. 6. § 78; Baleariai,
Agathem.; Baleriai etoi hugieinai, the Iberian name, according to Dion Cass. ap.
Tzetz. ad Lycoph. 633; Valeriae, Geog. Rav. v. 27: Eth. Baleareis, &c., Baleares,
Balearici, sing. Balearis: Polybius expressly says that the islands and the people
were called by the same name: the forms with e are generally used by
the Romans, those with i by the Greeks, but Baliares also occurs on Latin
inscriptions), or Gymnesiae (Gumnesiai: Eth. Gumnesios, fem. Gumnesia, Gumnesis,
Steph. B.), a group of islands in the Mediterranean, lying off that part of the
E. coast of Spain, which is between the rivers Sucro (Turia) and Iberus (Ebro),
E. of the Pityusae and (roughly speaking) between 39° and 40° N. lat., and between
2 1/4° and 4 1/2° E. long. The number of islands in the group is stated differently:
some make them seven (Eustath. l. c.); some mention only one (Steph. B. s. v.;
Strab. ii. p. 123, he Gumnesia, where, however, Groskurd and Kramer read hai Gumnesiai),
but nearly all the ancient writers used the term to include merely the two large
islands called the Greater, Balearis Major (he meizon), and the Lesser, Balearis
Minor (he elatton), or, as they were called in the Byzantine period, Majorica
and Minorica (Maiorika te kai Minorika: Procop. B. V. i. 1, ii. 5; Zonar. Ann.
ix. p. 435), whence the common modern names, Majorca and Minorca, or in Spanish
Mallorca and Menorca.
It should be remembered that the Balearic group, in the modern sense
of the word, includes also the Pityusae of the ancients, namely Ebusus (Iviza),
and Colubraria or Ophiusa (Formentera). Indeed, the passage in Strabo (iii. p.
167), tas men Rituoussas duo kai tas Gumnesias duo kalousi kai Baliapidas has
been taken as if the words in the parenthesis referred to both groups: but that
they only refer to the Gymnesiae is pretty clear, both from the consent of other
writers, and from another passage of Strabo himself (xiv. p. 654). Lycophron calls
the islands Choirades, from their rocky nature. (Cassand. 633; comp. Tzetz. ad
loc.)
There were various traditions respecting their population, some of
a very fabulous complexion. The story, preserved by Lycophron (l. c., Eustath.
ad Dion. Perieg. l. c.), that certain shipwrecked Boeotians were cast naked on
the islands, which were therefore called Gymnesiae (dia to gumnous kai achlainous,
ekei echenechthenai), is evidently invented to account for the name. There is
also a tradition that the islands were colonized from Rhodes after the Trojan
war (Strab. xiv. p. 654: the Rhodians, like the Baleares, were celebrated slingers:
Sil. Ital. iii. 364, 365:
Jam cui Tlepolemus sator, et cui Lindus origo, Funda bella ferens Balearis
et alite plumbo.)
At all events, they had a very mixed population, of whose habits several strange
stories are told (Diod., Strab., Eustath.): that they went naked, or clothed only
in sheep-skins (Tzetz. ad Lycophsr. l. c.) - whence the name of the islands (an
instance of a fact made out of an etymology), - until the Phoenicians clothed
them with broad-bordered tunics (Strab. p. 168: this seems the true sense of the
passage; see Groskurd's note: it is usually understood to mean that the Baleares
invented the latus clavus, and so it was understood by Eustathius, whose note
is chiefly taken from Strabo; others make them naked only in the heat of summer,
Tzetz. ad Lycophr. l. c.): that they lived in hollow rocks and artificial caves:
that they were remarkable for their love of women, and, when any were taken captive
by pirates, they would give three or four men as the ransom for one woman: that
they had no gold or silver coin, and forbade the importation of the precious metals,
so that those of them who served as mercenaries took their pay in wine and women
instead of money. Their peculiar marriage and funeral customs are related by Diodorus
(v. 18).
The Baleares were, however, chiefly celebrated for their skill as
slingers, in which capacity they served, as mercenaries, first under the Carthaginians,
and afterwards under the Romans. They went into battle ungirt, with only a small
buckler, and a javelin burnt at the end, and in some cases tipt with a small iron
point; but their effective weapons were their slings, of which each man carried
three, wound round his head (Strab. p. 168; Eustath. l. c.), or, as others tell
us, one round the head, one round the body, and one in the hand. (Diod. l. c.;
Tzetz. ad Lycophr. l. c.) The three slings were of different lengths, for stones
of different sizes; the largest they hurled with as much force as if it were flung
from a catapult; and they seldom missed their mark. To this exercise they were
trained from infancy, in order to earn their livelihood as mercenary soldiers.
It is said that the mothers only allowed their children to eat bread when they
had struck it off a post with the sling. (Strab., Diod., ll.cc.; Flor. iii. 8;
Tzetz. ad Lycophr. l. c.)
The Greek and Roman writers generally derive the name of the people
from their skill as slingers (baleareis, from ballo); but Strabo assigns to the
name a Phoenician origin, observing that it was the Phoenician equivalent for
the Greek gumnetas, that is, light-armed soldiers. (Strab. xiv. p. 654.) Though
his explanation be wrong, his main fact is probably right. The root Bal points
to a Phoenician origin; perhaps the islands were sacred to the deity of that name;
and the accidental resemblance to the Greek root BAL (in ballo), coupled with
the occupation of the people, would be quite a sufficient foundation for the usual
Greek practice of assimilating the name to their own language. That it was not,
however, Greek at first, may be inferred with great probability from the fact
that the common Greek name of the islands is not baleareis, but Gumnesiai, the
former being the name used by the natives, as well as by the Carthaginians and
Romans. (Plin.; Agathem.; Dion Cass. ap. Tzetz. ad Lycophr. 533; Eustath. l. c.)
The latter name, of which two fancied etymologies have been already referred to,
is probably derived from the light equipment of the Balearic troops (gumnetas).
(Strab. xiv. p. 654; Plin. l. c.)
The islands were taken possession of in very early times by the Phoenicians
(Strab. iii. pp. 167, 168); a remarkable trace of whose colonization is preserved
in the town of Mago (Mahon in Minorca), which still gives the name of a princely
family of Carthage to a noble house of England. After the fall of Carthage, the
islands seem to have been virtually independent. Notwithstanding their celebrity
in war, the people were generally very quiet and inoffensive. (Strab.; but Florus
gives them a worse character, iii. 8.) The Romans, however, easily found a pretext
for charging them with complicity with the Mediterranean pirates, and they were
conquered by Q. Caecilius Metellus, thence surnamed Balearicus, B.C. 123. (Liv.
Epit. Ix.; Freinsh. Supp. lx. 37; Florus, Strab. ll. cc.) Metellus settled 3,000
Roman and Spanish colonists on the larger island, and founded the cities of Palma
and Pollentia. (Strab., Mel., Plin.) The islands belonged, under the empire, to
the conventus of Carthago Nova, in the province of Hispania Tarraconensis, of
which province they formed, with the Pityusae, the fourth district, under the
government of a praefectus pro legato. An inscription of the time of Nero mentions
the Praef. Prae Legato Insular. Baliarum. (Orelli, No. 732, who, with Muratori,
reads pro for prae.) They were afterwards made a separate province, probably in
the division of the empire under Constantine. (Not. Dig. Occid. c. xx. vol. ii.
p. 466, Bocking.)
The ancient writers describe the Balearic islands sometimes as off
the coast of Tyrrhenia (peri ten Tursenida, Steph. B.), sometimes as the first
islands, except the Pityusae, to one entering the Mediterranean from Gades. (Plin.
l. c.) The larger island, Balearis Major (Mallorca), or Columba (Itin. Ant. p.
511) was a day's sail from the coast of Spain: it is, in fact, 43 miles NE. of
Iviza, which is 50 miles E. of C. St. Martin. Pliny makes the distance from Dianium
Pr. (C. S. Martin), on the coast of Spain to the Pityusae (Iviza, &c.), 700 stadia,
and the Baleares the same distance further out at sea. The Antonine Itinerary
places the Baleares 300 stadia from Ebusus (Iviza). The smaller island, Balearis
Minor (Menorca), or Nura (Itin. Ant. p. 512), lies to the E. of the larger, from
which it is separated by a strait 22 miles wide. The little island of Cabrera,
S. of Mallorca, is the Capraria of the ancients. In magnitude the islands were
described by Timaeus (ap. Diod. l. c.; Strab. xiv. p. 654) as the largest in the
world, except seven - namely, Sardinia, Sicily, Cyprus, Crete, Euboea, Corsica,
and Lesbos; but Strabo rightly observes that there are others larger. Strabo makes
the larger island nearly 600 stadia long by 200 wide (iii. p. 167); Artemidorus
gave it twice that size (Agathem. i. 5); and Pliny makes its length 100 M. P.
and its circuit 375: its area is 1,430 square miles. Besides the colonies of Palma
(Palma) and Pollentia (Pollenza), already mentioned, of which the former lay on
the SW., and the latter on the NE., it had the smaller towns of Cinium (Sineu),
near the centre of the island, with the Jus Latii (Plin. l. c.); Cunici (Alcudia?),
also a civitas Latina (Plin. l. c., where Sillig now reads Tucim); and Gujunta
(Inscr. ap. Gruter. p. 378. No. 1.)
The smaller island Minor (Menorca) is described by Strabo as lying
270 stadia E. of Pollentia on the larger: the Antonine Itinerary assigns 600 stadia
for the interval between the islands, which is more than twice the real space:
Pliny makes the distance 30 M. P. (240 stadia), the length of the island 40 M.
P, and its circuit 150. Its true length is 32 miles, average breadth 8, area about
260 square miles. Besides Mago (Port Mahon), and Jamno or Jamna (Ciudadela), at
the E. and W. ends respectively, both Phoenician settlements, it had the inland
town of Sanisera (Alajor, Plin. l. c.).
Both islands had numerous excellent harbours, though rocky at their
mouth, and requiring care in entering them (Strab., Eustath. ll. cc.: Port Mahon
is one of the finest harbours in the world). Both were extremely fertile in all
produce, except wine and olive oil. (Aristot. de Mir. Ausc. 89; Diod., but Pliny
praises their wine as well as their corn, xiv. 6. s. 8, xviii. 7. s. 12: the two
writers are speaking, in fact, of different periods.) They were celebrated for
their cattle, especially for the mules of the lesser island; they had an immense
number of rabbits, and were free from all venomous reptiles. (Strab., Mel., l.c.;
Plin. l. c., viii. 58. s. 83, xxxv. 19. s. 59; Varro, R. R. iii. 12; Aelian, H.
A. xiii. 15; Solin. 26.) Among the snails valued by the Romans as a diet, was
a species from the Balearic isles, called cavaticae, from their being bred in
caves. (Plin. xxx. 6. s. 15.) Their chief mineral product was the red earth, called
sinope, which was used by painters. (Plin. xxxv. 6. s. 13; Vitruv. vii. 7.) Their
resin and pitch are mentioned by Dioscorides (Mat. Med. i. 92). The population
of the two islands is stated by Diodorus at 30,000.
Twelve Roman miles S. of the larger island (9 miles English) in the
open sea (xii. M. P. in altum) lay the little island of Capraria (Cabrera), a
treacherous cause of shipwrecks (insidiosa naufragiis, Plin. l. c. naufragalis,
Mart. Cap. de Nupt. Phil. vi.); and opposite to Palma the islets called Marmariae,
Tiquadra, and parva Hannibalis. (Plin.).
The part of the Mediterranean E. of Spain, around the Balearic isles,
was called Mare Balearicum (to Ballearikon pelagos, Ptol. ii 4. § 3), or Sinus
Balearicus. (Flor. iii. 6. § 9.)
The islands still contain some monuments of their original inhabitants,
in the shape of tumuli, such as those which Diodorus describes them as raising
over their dead. These tumuli consist of large unhewn stones, and are surrounded
by a fence of flat stones set up on end; and a spiral path on the outside leads
to the summit of the mound. From this arrangement, and from their being generally
erected on elevated spots, they are supposed to have been used as watch-towers.
The Roman remains have been almost destroyed by the Vandal conquerors; the principal
ruin is that of an aqueduct near Pollentia. (Wernsdorf, Antiq. Balear.; Dameto,
Hist. of the Balearic Kingdom; Armstrong's Minorca.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited July 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΒΑΛΕΝΘΙΑ (Πόλη) ΒΑΛΕΝΘΙΑ
Valentia (Oualentia, Ptol. ii. 6. § 62), a considerable town of the
Edetani in Hispania Tarraconensis, situated on the river Turium, at a distance
of 3 miles from its mouth, and on the road from Carthago Nova to Castulo. (Plin.
iii. 3. s. 4; Vib. Seq. p. 18; Itin. Ant. p. 400.) Ptolemy (l. c.) erroneously
attributes it to the Contestani. It became at a later period a Roman colony (Plin.
l. c.), in which apparently the consul Junius Brutus settled the soldiers of Viriathus.
(Liv. Epit. lv.) Pompey destroyed it. (Epist. Pomp. ap. Sallust, ed. Corte, p.
965; cf. Plut. Pomp. 18.) It must, however, have been restored soon afterwards,
since Mela mentions it as being still an important place (ii. 6), and coins of
it of a late period are preserved. (Cf. Florez, Med. ii. p. 610, iii. p. 125;
Mionnet, i. p. 55, Suppl. i. p. 110; Sestini, p. 209; Eckhel, i p. 60.) The town
still bears the same name, but has few antiquities to show.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΕΛΒΙΡΑ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Illiberis (Ptol. ii. 4.11), or Illiberi Liberini (Plin. iii. 1. s. 3), one of the chief cities of the Turduli, in Hispania Baetica, between the Baetis and the coast, is identified by inscriptions with Granada. It is probably the Elibyrge (Eliburge) of Stephanus Byzantinus.
ΚΑΔΙΖ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Gades (-ium; also Gadis, and Gaddis), the Latin form of the name which,
in the original Phoenician, was Gadir (or Gaddir), and in the Greek Gadeira (ta
Gadeipa; Ion. Gedeira, Herod.; and, rarely, he Gadeira, Eratosth. ap. Steph. B.
s. v.), and which is preserved in the form Cadiz or Cadix, denotes a celebrated
city, as well as the island on which it stood (or rather the islands, and hence
the plural form), upon the SW. coast of Hispania Baetica, between the straits
and the mouth of the Baetis. (Eth. Gadeireus, fem. Gadeiris, also, rarely, Gadeirites,
Gadeiraios and Gadeiranos, Steph. B.; Adj. Gadeirikos, e. g. with chora, Plat.
Crit. p. 114, b: Lat. Adj. and Eth. Gaditanus). The fanciful etymologies of the
name invented by the Greek and Roman writers, are barely worthy of a passing mention.
(Plat. Critias, p. 114, Steph. B. s. v.; Etym. M.; Suid.; Hesych.; Eustath. ad
Dion. Perieg. 64.) The later geographers rightly stated that it was a Phoenician
word (Dion. Per. 456; Avien. Ora Marit. 267-269: Gaddir hic est oppidum: Nam Punicorum
lingua conseptum locum Gaddir vocabat.
It was the chief Phoenician colony outside the Pillars of Hercules,
having been established by them long before the beginning of classical history.
(Strab. iii. pp. 148, 168; Diod. Sic. v. 20; Scymn. Ch. 160; Mela, iii. 6. § 1;
Plin. v. 19. s. 17; Vell. Paterc. i. 2; Arrian. and Aelian. ap. Eustath. ad Dion.
Perieg. 454.) To the Greeks and Romans it was long the westernmost point of the
known world; and the island on which it stood (Isla de Leon) was identified with
that of Erytheia, where king; Geryon fed the oxen which were carried off by Hercules;
or, according to some, Erytheia was near Gadeira. (Hesiod. Theog. 287, et seq.,
979, et seq.; Herod. iv. 8; Strab. iii. pp. 118, 169; Plin. iv. 21. s. 36; and
many others: for a full discussion of the question, see Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1,
pp. 240, 241.) The island was also called Aphrodisias, and Cotinussa, and by some
both the city and the island were identified with the celebrated Tartessus.
The early writers give us brief notices of Gades. Herodotus (l. c.)
places Gadeira on the ocean, beyond the Pillars of Hercules, and near it the island
of Erytheia. Scylax states that, among the Iberi, the first people of Europe (on
the W.), there are two islands, named Gadeira, of which the one has a city, a
day's journey from the Pillars of Hercules. (Scylax, pp. 5, 120, ed. Gronov.,
pp. 1, 51, ed. Hudson.) Eratosthenes mentioned the city of Gadeira (ap. Steph.
B. s. v.), and the happy island of Erytheia, in the land of Tartessis, near Calpe
(ap. Strab. iii. p. 148, who refers also to the views of Artemidorus). In the
period of the Carthaginian empire, therefore, the situation of the place was tolerably
well known to the Greeks; but it is not till after the Punic Wars had given Spain
to the Romans, that we find it more particularly described. The fullest description
is that of Strabo (iii. pp. 140, 168), who places it at a distance of less than
2000 stadia from the Sacred Headland (C. S. Vincent), and 70 from the mouth of
the Baetis (Guadalquivir) on the one side, and about 750 from Calpe (Gibraltar)
on the other, or, as some said, 800. Mela (ii. 7) transfers it to the entrance
of the Straits, which he makes to begin at Junonis Pr. (C. Trafalgar). Pliny,
who makes the entrance of the Straits at Mellaria, places Gades 45 M. P. outside
(iv. 22. s. 36, with Ukert's emendation: the MSS. vary between 25 and 75). The
island is described as divided from the mainland of Baetica by a narrow strait,
like a river (Mela, iii. 6), the least breadth of which is given by Strabo as
only 1 stadium (606 ft.), and as barely 700 ft. by Pliny, who makes the greatest
breadth 7 1/2 M. P. (ii. 108. s. 112): it is now called the River of St. Peter,
and the bridge which spanned it (Itin. Ant. p. 409) is called the Puente de Zuazo,
from Juan Sanchez de Zuazo, who restored it in the 15th century. The length of
the island was estimated at about 100 stadia (Strab. l. c.), or 12 M. P. (Polyb.
ap. Plin. l. c.: Pliny himself says 15): its breadth varied from one stadium to
3 Roman miles (Strab., Plin., ll. cc.). The city stood on the W. side of the island,
and was from the first very small in comparison with its maritime importance.
Even after it was enlarged by the building of the New City, under the Romans,
by its wealthy and celebrated citizen, the younger Balbus, the Double City (he
Didume), as it was called, was still of very moderate dimensions, not exceeding
20 stadia in circuit: and even this space was not densely peopled, since a large
part of the citizens were always absent at sea. In fact, the city proper seems
to have consisted merely of the public buildings and the habitations of those
immediately connected with the business of the port, while the upper classes dwelt
in villas outside the city, chiefly on the shore of the mainland, and on a smaller
island opposite to the city, which was a very favourite resort (Trocadero or S.
Sebastian). The territory of the city on the mainland was very small; its wealth
being derived entirely from its commerce, as the great western emporium of the
known world. Of the wealth and consequence of its citizens Strabo records it as
a striking proof, that in the census taken under Augustus, the number of Equites
was found to be 500, a number greater than in any town, even in Italy, except
Patavium; while the citizens were second in: number only to those of Rome. Their
first alliance with Rome was said to have been formed through the centurion L.
Marcius, in the very crisis of the war in Spain, after the deaths of the two Scipios
(B.C. 212): another instance of the disaffection of the old Phoenician cities
towards Carthage; a feeling all the stronger in the case of Gades, as she had
only submitted to Carthage during Hamilcar's conquest of Spain after the First
Punic War. The alliance was confirmed (or, as some said, first made) in the consulship
of M. Lepidus and Q. Catulus, B.C. 78. (Cic. pro Balbo, 15; comp. Liv. xxxii.
2.) C. Julius Caesar, on his visit to the city during the Civil War in Spain,
B.C. 49, conferred the civitas of Rome on all the citizens of Gades. (Dion Cass.
xli. 24; Columella, viii. 16.) Under the empire, as settled by Augusta, Gades
was a municipium, with the title of Augusta Urbs Julia Gaditana, and the seat
of one of the four conventus juridici of Baetica. (Plin. iii. 1. s. 3, iv. 22.
s. 36; Inscr. ap. Gruter, p. 358, no. 4; Coins ap. Florez, Med. vol. ii. p. 430,
vol. iii. p. 68, who contends that the city was a colony; Mionnet, vol. i. p.
12, Suppl. vol. i. p. 25; Sestini, p. 49; Eckhel, vol. i. pp. 19-22.) There are
extant coins of the old Phoenician period, as well as of the Roman city; the former
are, with one exception, of copper, and generally bear the head of the Tyrian
Hercules (Melcarth), the tutelary deity of the city, on the obverse, and on the
reverse one or two fish, with a Phoenician epigraph, in two lines, of which the
upper has not been satisfactorily explained, while the lower consists of the four
letters which answer to the Hebrew characters HEBREW or HEBREW,
Agadir or Hagadir, that is, the genuine Phoenician form of the city's name, with
the prosthetic breathing or article, the omission of which gives GADIR, the form
recognised by the Greek and Roman writers. (Eckhel, l. c. and vol. iii. p. 422.)
The coins of the Roman period are very remarkable for the absence of the name
of the city, which occurs only on one of them, a very ancient medal, having an
ear of corn, with the epigraph MUN (i. e. Municipium) on the obverse,
and on the reverse GADES with a fish. The remaining medals bear, for
the most part, the insignia of Hercules, and naval symbols, with the names of
the successive patrons of the city, namely, Balbus, Augustus, M. Agrippa, and
his sons Caius and Lucius, and the emperor Tiberius. (Eckhel, vol. i. pp. 20-22.)
The first of these names refers to two eminent citizens of Gades,
who are distinguished by the names of Major and Minor. L. Cornelius Balbus Major,
who is generally surnamed Gaditanus, or, as Cicero writes jestingly, Tartesius
(ad Att. vii. 3), served against Sertorius, first under Q. Metellus, and then
under Pompey, whom he accompanied to Rome, B.C. 71, and who conferred upon him
the Roman citizenship, his right to which was defended by Cicero in an extant
oration. With both he lived in terms of intimacy, as well as with Crassus and
Caesar, and afterwards with Octavian. He was the first native of any country out
of Italy who attained to the consulship. But his nephew, L. Cornelius Balbus Minor,
who, as proconsul of Africa, triumphed over the Garamantes in B.C. 19, and who
attained to the dignity of Pontifex (Veil. Paterc. ii. 51, and coins), is probably
the one to whom the coins refer, as he was the builder of the New City of Gades.
He undertook this work when he was quaestor to Asinius Pollio in Further Spain,
B.C. 43. (Dion Cass. xlviii. 32.) Balbus also constructed the harbour of Gades,-Portus
Gaditanus,-on the mainland (Strab., Mela, ll. cc.; Itin. Ant. p. 409; Ptol. ii.
4: now Puerto Real), and the bridge already mentioned, which was so constructed
as to form also an aqueduct. The Antonine Itinerary places the bridge 12 M. P.
from Gades, and the harbour 14 M. P. further, on the road to Corduba. Of the other
public buildings the most remarkable were the temples of the deities whom the
Romans identified with Saturn and Hercules. The former was in the city itself,
opposite to the little island already mentioned; the latter stood some distance
S. of the city, 12 M. P. on the road to Malaca, in the Itinerary, and still further
according to Strabo, who has a long discussion of a theory by which this temple
was identified with the Columns of Hercules (iii. pp. 169, 170, 172, 174, 175;
Plin ii. 39. s. 100; Liv. xxi. 21; Dion Cass. xliii. 40, lxxvii. 20). The temple
had a famous oracle connected with it, and was immensely rich. It was also remarkable
for a spring, which rose and fell with the tide. Its site is supposed to have
been on the I. S. Petri or S. Pedro (St. Peter's Isle), a little islet lying off
the S. point of the main island of Leon. The city had one drawback to its unrivalled
advantages as a port: the water was very bad. (Strab. iii. p. 173.) Besides the
general articles of its commerce, its salt-fish was particularly esteemed. (Athen.
vii. p. 315; Pollux, vi. 49; Hesych. s. v. Gadeira.) The immense wealth which
its inhabitants enjoyed led naturally to luxury, and luxury to great immorality.
(Juv. xi. 162; Mart. i. 61, foil., v. 78, vi. 71, xiv. 203.) The modern city of
Cadiz stands just upon the site of Gades, that is, on the NW. point of the island
of Leon, together with the island of Trocadero. (The following are the authorities
for the antiquities of Cadiz cited by Ford, Handbook of Spain, p. 6: J. B. Suarez
de Salazar, Grandezas, &c., Cadiz, 1610, 4to.; Geronimo de la Concepcion, Emporio
de el Orbe, Amst. 1690, folio; Ms. de Mondejar, Cadiz Phenicia, Madrid, 1805,
3 vols. 4to.; Historia de Cadiz, Orosco, 1845, 4to.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΚΑΝΤΑΒΡΙΑ (Περιοχή) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Cantabria (Kantabria), the country of the Cantabri (Kantabroi; sing.
Kantabros, Cantaber, Adj. Cantabricus), a people of Hispania Tarraconensis, about
the middle of the N. side of the peninsula, in the mountains that run parallel
to the coast, and from them extending to the coast itself, in the E. of Asturias,
and the N. of Burgos, Palencia, and Toro. They and their neighbours on the W.,
the Astures, were the last peoples of the peninsula that submitted to the Roman
yoke, being only subdued under Augustus. Before this, their name is loosely applied
to the inhabitants of the whole mountain district along the N. coast (Caes. B.
G. iii. 26, B.C. i. 38). and so, too, even by later writers (Liv. Epit. xlviii.;
Juv. xv. 108 compared with 93). But the geographers who wrote after their conquest
give their position more exactly, as E. of the Astures, the boundary being the
river Salia (Mela, iii. 1), and W. of the Autrigones, Varduli, and Vascones. (Strab.
iii. p. 167, et alib.; Plin. iii. 3. s. 4, iv. 20. s. 34; Ptol. ii. 6. § § 6,
51.) They were regarded as the fiercest and rudest of all the peoples of the peninsula,
savage as wild beasts, says Strabo, who describes their manners at some length
(iii. pp. 155, 166; comp. Sil. Ital. iii. 329, 361; Hor. Carm. iii. 4.) They were
subjugated by Augustus, after a most obstinate resistance, in B.C. 25; but they
soon revolted, and had to be reconquered by Agrippa, B.C. 19. In this second war,
the greater part of the people perished by the sword, and the remainder were compelled
to quit their mountains, and reside in the lower valleys. (Dion Cass. liii. 25,
29, liv. 5, 11, 20; Strab. iii. pp. 156, 164, 287, 821; Horat. Carm. ii. 6. 2,
11. 1, iii. 8. 22; Flor. iv. 12, 51; Liv. xxviii. 12; Suet. Octav. 20, et seq.,
29, 81, 85; Oros. vi. 21.) But still their subjugation was imperfect; Tiberius
found it necessary to keep them in restraint by strong garrisons (Strab. p. 156);
their mountains have afforded a refuge to Spanish independence, and the cradle
of its regeneration; and their unconquerable spirit survives in the Basques, who
are supposed to be their genuine descendants. (Ford, Handbook of Spain, p. 554,
foll.)
The ethnical affinities, however, both of the ancient and the modern
people, have always presented a most difficult problem; the most probable opinion
is that which makes them a remnant. of the most ancient Iberian population. (W.
von Humboldt, Urbewohner von Hispanien, Berlin, 1821, 4to.) Strabo (iii. p. 157)
mentions a tradition which derived them from Laconian settlers, of the period
of the Trojan war.
Under the Roman empire, Cantabria belonged to the province of Hispania
Tarraconensis, and contained seven tribes. (Plin. iii. 3. s. 4.) Of these tribes
the ancient geographers apologise for possessing only imperfect information, on
the ground of the barbarian sound of their names. (Strab. iii. pp. 155, 162; Mela,
iii. 1.) Among them were the Pleutauri (Pleutauroi); the Bardyetae or Bardyali
(Barduetai, Bardualoi), probably the Varduli of Pliny (iii. 3. s.4, iv.20. s.34);
the Allotriges(Allotriges, probably the same as the Autrigones; the Conisci (Koniskoi),
probably the same as the Coniaci (Koniakoi) or Concani (Konkanoi), who are particularly
mentioned in the Cantabrian War (Mela, iii. 1; Horat. Carm. iii. 4. 34; Sil. Ital.
iii. 360, 361); and the Tuisi (Touisoi), about the sources of the lberus. These
are all mentioned by Strabo (iii. pp. 155, 156, 162). Mela names also the Origenomesci
or Argenomesci (iii. 1), and some minor tribes are mentioned by Ptolemy and other
writers.
Of the nine cities of Cantabria, according to Pliny, Juliobrica alone
was worthy of mention. (Plin. iii. 3. s. 4, iv. 20. s. 34.) Ptolemy mentions these
nine cities as follows: near the sea-coast, Noegaucesia (Noigaoukesia), a little
above the mouth of a river of the same name (ii. 6. § 6); and, in the interior,
Concana (Knkana), Ottaviolca (Ottaouiolka), Argenomescum (Argenomeskon), Vadinia
(Ouadinia), Vellica (Ouellika), Camarica (Kamarika), Juliobriga (Iouliobriga),
and Moroeca (Moroika, ii. 6. § 51). Pliny also mentions Blendium (prob. Santander);
and a few places of less importance are named by other writers, (Ukert, vol. ii.
pt. i. pp. 443, 444.)
Strabo places among the Cantabri the sources of the rivers Iberus
(Ebro) and Minius (Minho), and the commencement of Mt. Idubeda, the great chain
which runs from NW. to SE. between the central table-land of Spain and the basin
of the Ebro; (Strab. iii. pp. 153, 159, 161.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited August 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΚΕΛΤΙΒΕΡΙΑ (Αρχαία χώρα) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Celtiberia (Keltiberia, Polyb., Strab., Caes., Liv. &c.: Eth. Celtiber, pl. Celtiberi,
Keltiberes), was the name of a large inland district of Spain, comprising the
central plateau (media inter duo maria, Liv. xxviii. 1), which divides the basin
of the Iberus (Ebro) from the rivers flowing to the W., and corresponding to the
SW. half of Aragon, nearly the whole of Cuenca and Soria, and a great part of
Burgos. These were about the limits of Celtiberia Proper; but, the name was used
in a much wider sense, through the power which the Celtiberians obtained over
the surrounding tribes so that, for example, Polybius made it extend beyond the
sources of the Anas (Guadiana) even to those of the Baetis (Guadalquivir: Strab.
iii.), and he mentions the mountain range which reaches the sea above Saguntum,
as the boundary of Iberia and Celtiberia (Polyb. iii. 17.2). So we find both Hemeroscopium
on the Pr. Dianium (C. S. Martin, and Castulo on the Baetis, named as in Celtiberia
(Artemidor. ap. Steph. B. s. v. Hemeroskopeion; Plut. Sertor. 3). In fact, it
would seem that, under the Romans, Celtiberia was often used as a term equivalent
to Hispania Citerior (excepting, perhaps, the NE. part, between the Pyrenees and
the Ebro), and that, as the boundaries of the latter were extended, so was the
signification of the former (Plin. iv. 21. s. 36; Solin. 23).
The Celtiberians were believed to have originated in a union of the indigenous
Iberians with Celts from Gaul, who were the earliest foreign invaders of the peninsula,
and whose union gave rise to a nation distinguished by the best qualities of both
peoples, and which speedily became great and powerful (Diod. v. 33; Strab. i.,
iii.; Appian. Hisp. 2; Lucan. iv, 9).
Strabo (iii.) describes their country as commencing on the SW. side of M. Idubeda
which divided it from the basin of the Ebro. It was large and irregular, the greater
part of it being rugged and intersected with rivers; for it contained the sources
of all the great rivers which flow W. across the peninsula, the Anas, Tagus, and
Durius except the Baetis and this too, as we have seen, is assigned by Polybius
to Celtiberia. The Celtiberi were bounded on the N. by the Berones and the Bardyitae
or Varduli; on the W. by some of the Aastures Callaici, Vaccaei, Vettones, and
Carpetani; on the S. by the Oretani and by those of the Bastetani and Edetani
who inhabit M. Oospeda; and on the E. by M. Idubeda. This description applies
to the Celtiberi in the widest sense of the name. They were divided, he adds,
into four tribes, of whom he only mentions two, the Arevacae, who were the most
powerful, and the Lusones Pliny (iii. 3. s. 4) mentions, as Celtiberians, first
the Arevacae (Celtiberi Arevacae), and afterwards the Pelendones (Pelendones Celtiberorum,
quatuor populis, quorum Numantini clari: where it is doubtful whether the IV.
populis refers to Pelendones or Celtiberorum: if to the former, he disagrees with
Strabo and others, who assign Numantia to the Arevacae). The Belli and the Titti
(or Dittani) are also mentioned as Celtiberian peoples (Polyb. xxxv. 2; Appian.
Hisp. 44). Ptolemy uses the name in a narrower sense: his Celtiberi are bounded
on the N. by the Arevacae (whom he places S. of the Pelendones and Berones), on
the W. by the Carpetani, on the S. by the Oretani, and on the E. by the Lobetani
and Edetani.
The nature of the country and the habits of the people combined to
prevent their having many considerable cities; and on this ground Strabo charges
Polybius with gross exaggeration in stating that Tiberius Gracchus destroyed 300
cities of the Celtiberians (xxvi. 4), a number which could only be made up by
counting every petty fort taken in the war (Strab. iii.). The chief cities, besides
Numantia, Segeda, and Pallandia and others which belonged to the Arevace, Berones,
and Pelendones were the following: The capital was Segobriga which some identify
with the Segeda just named, and with the Segestica of Livy (xxxiv. 17).
On the great road which ran W. from Caesaraugusta (Zaragoza) to Asturica
(Itin. Ant.), were: 37 M. P. Caravis; 18 M. P. Turiaso (Touriaso, Ptol., Tarazona);
and, on a branch road from Turiaso to Caesaraugusta were: 20 M. P. from the former
Balsio or Belliso and, 20 M. P. from Balsio, and 16 from Caesaraugusta, Allobon
or Alavona (Alauona: Alagon, Ptol. ii. 6.67), which Ptolemy assigns to the Vascones.
On the road leading SW. from Caesaraugusta to Toletum and Emerita were: 16 M.
P. from Caesaraugusta, Segontia (at or near Epila), apparently the Segontia which
belonged to the Arevacae, and to be distinguished from the other Segontia, to
be mentioned directly): 14 M. P. further, Nertobriga (Itin. ll. cc. Nertobriga,
Ptol. l. c.: Almunia); then 21 M. P., Bilbilis and, 24 M. P., Aquae Bilbitanorum;
then, 16 M. P., Arcobrica; then, 23 M. P., Secondia (Siguenza), apparently the
Seguntia Celtiberum of Livy (xxxiv. 19); then 23 M. P. Caesada (Kesada e Kaisada,
Ptol. l. c.), at or near Brihuega on the Tajuna, 24 M. P. from Arriaca of the
Carpetani.
Another road ran south through M. Idubeda from Caesaraugusta to Laminium
near the source of the Anas, on which were: 28 M. P. Sermo (Muel?); Carae (Carinena);
10 M. P., Agiria (Daroca); 6 M. P. Albonica (probably Puerta de Daroca); 25 M.
P. Urbiaca seemingly the Urbicua of Livy (xi. 16; but the reading is uncertain,
see Drakenborch, ad loc.: now Molina, Lapie; others identify it with Alcaroches
or Checa); 20 M. P. Valebonga or Valeponga (Valsolebre, Lapie; Val de Meca, Cortes);
40 M. P. Ad Putea (Cuenca, Lapie); 32 M.P. Saltici (S. Maria del Campo, Lapie;
Jorquera, Cortes); 16 M.P., Parietinis (S. Clemrente, Lapie; Chinchilla, Cortes);
22 M. P. Libisosia (Lezuza), 14 M. P. from the source of the Anas: but the last
place very likely belonged to the Oretani.
Among the cities not mentioned in the Itinerary were: Ergavica (Plin.
iii. 3. s. 4: Ergaouika, Ptol. l. c.) or Ergavia (Liv. xi. 50), a municipium belonging
to the conventus of Caesaraugusta, the considerable ruins of which, at the confluence
of the Guadiela and the Tagus, are called Santaver; Bursada, (Boursada, Ptol.),
near the last place; Centobriga near Nertobriga, if not the same place: Attacum:
Contrebia: Complega: Valeria, a Roman colony, belonging to the conventus of New
Carthage (Plin. iii. 3. s. 4: Florez, Esp. S. viii.); Egelasta the (Lachta, Ptol.);
Ocilis (Okilis), the Roman headquarters in the Celtiberian war, probably in the
SE. of the country (Appian. Hisp. 47, foll.); Belsinum: Mediolum (Mediolon) in
the N., and Condabora (Kondabora), Istonium (Istonion), Alaba (Alaba), Libana
(Libana), and Urcesa (Ourkesa), in the S. are mentioned only by Ptolemy; Munda
and Certima on the borders of Carpetania, near Alces, only by Livy (xl. 46), and
Belgeda (Belgede) or Belgida, only by Appian (Hisp. 44) and Orosius (v. 23). There
are also a number of localities in the neighbourhood of Bilbilis, only named by
Martial; such as the mountains Calvus and Badavero, and the towns or villages
of Boterdum, Platea on the Salo, Tutela, chores Rixamarum, Cardua, Peteron, Rigae,
Petusiae, and others, for the barbarous sound of which to Roman ears he feels
it necessary to apologize Celtiberis haec sunt nomina crassiora terris.
Of the manners and customs of the Celtiberians, besides the notices
in Strabo and other writers, we have an elaborate account by Diodorus (v. 33,
34). As warriors they attained the highest renown by their long and obstinate
resistance to the Romans. They were equally distinguished as excellent cavalry,
and as powerful and steady infantry, so that, when their cavalry had defeated
that of the enemy, they dismounted and engaged the hostile infantry (comp. Polyb.
Fr. Hist. 13). Their favourite order of battle was the wedge-shaped column, in
which they were almost irresistible (Liv. xl. 40). They sang as they joined battle
(Liv. xxiii. 16). Their weapons were a two-edged sword of the finest temper, and
the still national dagger (comp. Polyb. Fr. Hist. 14: Strab. iii. p. 154); their
defensive armour consisted of a bronze helmet, with a purple crest, of greaves
made of plaited hair, and a round wicker buckler (kurtia), or the light but large
Gallic targe. A rough black blanket, of wool not unlike goats' hair, formed their
sole dress by day, and at night they slept, wrapped up in it, upon the bare ground.
They were particularly attentive to cleanliness. with the exception of the strange
custom, which is ascribed also to the Cantabri, of washing with urine instead
of water. Though cruel to criminals and enemies (comp. Strab. iii.), they are
gentle and humane to strangers; and those of them whose invitations are accepted
are deemed favourites of the gods. Their food consists in abundance of various
meats; and they drink must (oinomelitos pomati) their country supplying plenty
of honey, and wine being imported by merchants. Though the country was generally
mountainous and sterile, it contained some fertile valleys, and the prosperity
of some few of the cities is exemplified by the cases of Bilbilis and especially
Numantia It is thus that we must explain the statement of Diodorus respecting
the excellence of their country, and the large tribute of 600 talents which, according
to Poseidonius, M. Marcellus exacted from the country (Strab. iii.). As to their
religion, Strabo says that the Celtiberians and some of their neighbours on the
N. celebrated a festival to some nameless deity at the time of the full moon,
assembling together in their families, and dancing all night long (iii.). Several
other points in Strabo's description of the manners of the mountaineers of the
N. may be regarded as applying to Celtiberians among the rest.
The Celtiberians are renowned in history for their long and obstinate
resistance to the Romans. They had been subdued by Hannibal with great difficulty.
In the Second Punic War, after giving important aid to the Carthaginians, they
were induced by the generosity of Scipio to accept the alliance of Rome; but yet
we find a body of them serving the Carthaginians as mercenaries in Africa (Liv.
xxv. 33, xxvi. 50; Polyb. xiv. 7, 8). But the cruelty and avarice of later governors
drove them, in B.C. 181, into a revolt, which was appeased by the military prowess
and the generous policy of the elder Tiberius Gracchus, B.C. 179. The resistance
of the city of Segeda to the demands of Rome led to a fresh war (B.C. 153), which
was conducted on the part of the Romans with varying success by M. Marcellus,
who would have made peace with the Celtiberians; but the Senate required their
unconditional surrender. The diversion created in Lusitania by Viriathus caused
the Celtiberian war to languish till B.C. 143, when the great war with Numantia
began, and was not concluded till B.C. 133. In spite of this great blow, the Celtiberians
renewed the war under Sertorius; and it was only after his fall that they began
to adopt the Roman language, dress and manners.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΚΟΡΝΤΟΜΠΑ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Corduba (Korduba, Kordube, Kordouba: Eth. and Adj. Cordubensis: Cordoba
or Cordova), one of the chief cities of Hispania, in the territory of the Turduli.
It stood on the right bank of the Baetis (Guadalquivir), a little below the spot
where the navigation of the river commenced, at the distance of 1200 stadia from
the sea. Its foundation was ascribed to Marcellus, whom we find making it his
headquarters in the Celtiberian War. (Strab. iii. p. 141; Polyb. xxxv. 2.) It
was occupied from the first by a chosen mixt population of Romans and natives
of the surrounding country; and it was the first colony of the Romans in those
parts. Strabo's language implies that it was a colony from its very foundation,
that is, from B.C. 152. It was regarded as the capital of the extensive and fertile
district of Baeturia, comprising the country between the Anas and the Baetis,
the richness of which combined with its position on a great navigable river, and
on the great high road connecting the E. and NE. parts of the peninsula with the
S., to raise it to a position only second to Gades as a commercial city. (Strab.
l. c., and p. 160 )
In the great Civil War Corduba suffered severely on several occasions,
and was at last taken by Caesar, soon after the battle of Munda, when 22,000 of
its inhabitants were put to the sword, B.C. 45. (Caes. B.C. ii. 19; Hirt. Bell.
Alex. 49, 57, 59, 60, Bell. Hisp. 32-34; Appian, B.C. ii. 104, 105; Dion Cass.
xliii. 32.)
Corduba was the seat of one of the four convents juridici of the province
of Baetica, and the usual residence of the praetor; hence it was generally regarded
as the capital of the province. (Plin. iii. 1. s. 3; Appian, Hisp. 65.) It bore
the surname of Patricia (Plin. l. c.; Mela, ii. 6. § 4), on account, as is said,
of the number of patricians who were among the colonists; and, to the present
day, Cordova is so conspicuous, even among Spanish cities, for the pride of its
nobles in their azure blood that the Great Captain, Gonzalo de Cordova, used to
say that other towns might be better to live in, but none was better to be born
in. (Ford, Handbook, p. 73.)
In the annals of Roman literature Corduba is conspicuous as the birthplace
of Lucan and the two Senecas, besides others, whose works justified the epithet
of facunda, applied to it by Martial (Ep. i. 62. 8):
Duosque Senecas, unicumque Lucanum Facunda loquitur Corduba. (Comp. ix.
61, and the beautiful epigram of Seneca, ap. Wernsdorf, Poet. Lat. Min. vol. v.
pt. 3, p. 1364.)
Numerous coins of the city are extant, bearing the names of Corduba,
Patricia, and Colonia Patricia. (Florez, Med. de Esp. vol. i. p. 373, vol. ii.
p. 536; Mionnet, vol. i. p. 11, Suppl. vol. i. p. 23; Sestini, p. 46; Eckhel,
vol, i. p. 18.) There are now scarcely any remains of the Roman city, except a
ruined building, which the people dignify with the title of Seneca's House. (Florez,
Esp. Sagr. vol. x. p. 132; Minano, Diccion. vol. iii. p. 170.) The city is one
of Ptolemy's places of recorded astronomical observations, having 14 hrs. 25 min.
for its longest day, and being distant 3 2/5 hrs. W. of Alexandria. (Ptol. ii.
4. § 11, viii. 4. § 4.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΡΟΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Rhoda or Rhodus (Rhode, Steph. B. s. v.; Rhoda, Mela, ii. 6; Liv. xxxiv.
8; Rhodos, Strab. xiv. p. 654; Eustath. ad Dion. Per. 504; called by Ptol. ii.
6. § 20, Rhodipolis, where we should probably read Rhode polis), a Greek emporium
on the coast of the Indigetae in Hispania Tarraconensis, founded according to
Strabo (l. c.) by the Rhodians, and subsequently taken possession of by the Massiliots.
It is the modern Rosas; but tradition says that the old town lay towards the headland
at San Pedro de Roda. (Ford, Handbook of Spain, p. 249; comp. Meurs. Rhod. i.
28; Marca, Hisp. ii. 18; Martin, Hist. des Gaules, p. 218; Florez, Med. iii. p.
114; Mionnet, i. p. 148.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited August 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΣΑΡΑΓΟΣΑ (Πόλη) ΣΑΡΑΓΟΣΑ
Caesaraugusta (Kaisaraugousta, Strab. iii. pp. 151, 161, 162 ; Mela,
ii. 6; Plin. iii. 3. s. 4; Itin. Ant.), or Caesarea Augusta (Kaisareia Augousta,
Ptol. ii. 6. § 63; Auson. Epist. xxiv. 84; Inscr. ap. Golz. Thesaur. p. 238: coins
generally have C. A., Caes. Augusta, or Caesar. Augusta, whence it may perhaps
be inferred that the common shorter form has arisen from running together the
two parts of the last-mentioned abbreviation: now Zaragoza, merely a corruption
of the ancient name; in English works often Saragossa), one of the chief inland
cities of Hispania Tarraconensis, stood on the right bank of the river Iberus
(Ebro), in the country of the Edetani (Plin., Ptol.), on the borders of Celtiberia
(Strab.). Its original name was Salduba which was changed in honour of Augustus,
who colonized it after the Cantabrian War, B.C. 25. (Plin. l. c. Isid. Orig. xv.
1). It was a colonia immunis, and the seat of a conventus juridicus, including
152 communities (populos clii., Plin.) It was the centre of nearly all the great
roads leading to the Pyrenees and all parts of Spain. (Itin. Ant. pp. 392, 433,
438, 439, 443, 444, 446, 448, 451, 452). Its coins, which are more numerous than
those of almost any other Spanish city, range from Augustus to Caligula. (Florez,
Esp. S. vol. iv. p. 254; Med. de Esp. vol. i. p. 186, vol. ii. p. 636, vol. iii.
p. 18; Eckhel, vol. i. pp. 36-39 ; Sestini, Med. Isp. p. 114 ; Rasche, s. v.).
There are no ruins of the ancient city, its materials having been entirely used
up by the Moors and Spaniards. (Ford, Handbook of Spain, p. 580.)
The first Christian poet, Aurelius Prudentius, is said to have been
born at Caesaraugusta (A.D. 348); but some assign the honour to Calagurnis (Calahorra).
The place is one of Ptolemy's points of recorded astronomical observations, having
15 1/12) hours in its longest day, and being distant 3 1115 hours W. of Alexandria
(Ptol. viii. 4. § 5)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited August 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΤΑΡΤΗΣΣΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Tartessus (Tartessos, Herod. i. 163; Tartessos and Tartesos, Diodor.
Siculus, Frag. lib. xxv.), a district in the south of Spain, lying to the west
of the Columns of Hercules. It is now the prevailing opinion among biblical critics
that the Tarshish of Scripture indicates certain localities in the south of Spain,
and that its name is equivalent to the Tartessus of the Greek and Roman writers.
The connection in which the name of Tarshish occurs in the Old Testament with
those of other places, points to the most western limits of the world, as known
to the Hebrews (Genes. x. 4; 1 Chron. i. 7; Psalms, lxxii. 10; Isaiah, lxvi. 19);
[p. 1107] and in like manner the word Tartessus, and its derlivative adjectives,
are employed by Latin writers as synonymous with the West (Ovid, Met. xiv. 416;
Sil. Ital. iii. 399; Claud. Epist. iii. v. 14). Tarshish appears in Scripture
as a celebrated emporium, rich in iron, tin, lead, silver, and other commodities;
and the Phoenicians are represented as sailing thither in large ships (Ezek. xxvii.
12, xxviii 13; Jerem. x. 9). Isaiah speaks of it as one of the finest colonies
of Tyre, and describes the Tyrians as bringing its products to their market (xxiii.
1, 6, 10). Among profane writers the antiquity of Tartessus is indicated by the
myths connected with it (Strab. iii. p. 149; Justin, xliv. 4). But the name is
used by them in a very loose and indefinite way. Sometimes it stands for the whole
of Spain, and the Tagus is represented as belonging to it (Rutilius, Itin. i.
356; Claud. in Rufin. i. 101; Sil. Ital. xiii. 674, &c.). But in general it appears,
either as the name of the river Baetis, or of a town situated near its mouth,
or thirdly of the country south of the middle and lower course of the Baetis,
which, in the time of Strabo, was inhabited by the Turduli. The Baetis is called
Tartessus by Stesichorus, quoted by Strabo (iii. p. 148) and by Avienus (Ora Marit.
i. 224), as well as the town situated between two of its mouths; and Miot (ad
Herod. iv. 152) is of opinion that the modern town of S. Lucar de Barameda stands
on its site. The country near the lower course of the Baetis was called Tartessis
or Tartesia, either from the river or from the town; and this district, as well
as others in Spain, was occupied by Phoenician settlements, which in Strabo's
time, and even later, preserved their national customs. (Strab. iii. p. 149, vii.
p. 832; Arr. Exp. Alex. ii. 16; App. Hisp. 2; Const. Porphyrog. de Them. i. p.
107, ed. Bonn.) There was a temple of Hercules, the Phoenician Melcarth, at Tartessus,
whose worship was also spread amongst the neighbouring Iberians. (Arr. l.c.) About
the middle of the seventh century B.C. some Samiot sailors were driven thither
by stress of weather; and this is the first account we have of the intercourse
of the Greeks with this distant Phoenician colony (Herod. iv. 152). About a century
later, some Greeks from Phocaea likewise visited it, and formed an alliance with
Arganthonius, king of the Tartessians, renowned in antiquity for the great age
which he attained. (Herod. i. 163; Strab. iii. p. 151.) These connections and
the vast commerce of Tartessus, raised it to a great pitch of prosperity. It traded
not only with the mother country, but also with Africa and the distant Cassiterides,
and bartered the manufactures of Phoenicia for the productions of these countries
(Strab. i. p. 33; Herod. iv. 196; cf. Heeren, Ideen, i. 2. § § 2, 3). Its riches
and prosperity had become proverbial, and we find them alluded to in the verses
of Anacreon (ap. Strab. iii. p. 151). The neighbouring sea (Fretum Tartessium,
Avien. Or. Mar. 64) yielded the lamprey, one of the delicacies of the Roman table
(Gell. vii. 16); and on a coin of Tartessus are represented a fish and an ear
of grain (Mionnet. Med. Ant. i. p. 26). We are unacquainted with the circumstances
which led to the fall of Tartessus; but it may probably have been by the hand
of Hamilcar, the Carthaginian general. It must at all events have disappeared
at an early period, since Strabo (iii. pp. 148, 151), Pliny (iii. I, iv. 22, vii.
48), Mela (ii. 6), Sallust (Hist. Fr. ii.), and others, confounded it with more
recent Phoenician colonies, or took its name to be an ancient appellation of them.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΓΑΛΛΑΙΚΟΙ (Αρχαία χώρα) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Gallaecia (Kallaikia). The country of the Gallaeci or Callaeci in the north of Spain, between the Astures and the Durius (Dio Cass. xxxvii. 53). Its inhabitants were some of the most uncivilized in Spain. They were defeated with great slaughter by D. Brutus, consul B.C. 138, who obtained in consequence the surname of Gallaecus.
ΘΕΟΥΤΑ (Περιοχή) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
(Ogugia). The mythical island inhabited by the enchantress Calypso, placed by Homer as lying in the very centre of the sea, away from all lands.
ΙΜΠΙΖΑ (Νησί) ΒΑΛΕΑΡΙΔΕΣ ΝΗΣΟΙ
The modern Iviza; the largest of the Pityusae Insulae, off the east coast of Spain.
ΙΤΑΛΙΚΑ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Now Sevilla la Vieja in Spain. A municipium in Hispania Baetica on the west bank of the Baetis, founded by Scipio Africanus in the Second Punic War. It was the birthplace of both Trajan and Hadrian.
ΚΑΝΑΡΙΑ ΝΗΣΙΑ (Περιοχή) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
The largest of the cluster of islands called by the ancients Beatae and Fortunatae Insulae, and now the Canary Islands. Pliny says that this island derived its name from the number of very large-sized dogs (canes) which it contained.
ΚΟΡΝΤΟΒΑ (Επαρχία) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
The modern Cordova; one of the largest cities in Spain, and the capital of Baetica, on the right bank of the Baetis. It became a Roman colony B.C. 152, and was the birthplace of the two Senecas and of Lucan.
ΣΕΒΙΛΛΗ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
more rarely Hispal. The modern Seville, a town of the Turdetani
in Hispania Baetica, founded by the Ph?nicians, and situated on the left bank
of the Baetis, and in reality a seaport, for, although 500 stadia from the sea,
the river is navigable for the largest vessels up to the town. Under the Romans
it was an important place, with the name Iulia Romula or Romulensis, and was surpassed
in size by Corduba (Cordova) and Gades alone. Under the Goths and Vandals it was
the chief town in the south of Spain; and under the Arabs the capital of a separate
kingdom.
This text is cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΤΑΡΤΗΣΣΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
An ancient town in Spain, and one of the chief settlements of the Ph?nicians, probably the samearshish of Scripture. The whole country west of Gibraltar was called Tartessis.
ΓΑΛΛΑΙΚΟΙ (Αρχαία χώρα) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
ΕΡΥΘΕΙΑ (Μυθικοί τόποι) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
ΜΙΝΟΡΚΑ (Νησί) ΒΑΛΕΑΡΙΔΕΣ ΝΗΣΟΙ
Total results on 23/5/2001: 74
ΑΖΑΪΛΑ (Πόλη) ΣΑΡΑΓΟΣΑ
Azaila ("Beligio") Teruel, Spain.
Hispano-Roman town, possibly Beligio, 12 km W of Escatron. A fortified oppidum
on the Cabezo de Alcala which covered the slopes of the hill and the surrounding
plain as far as the river Aguas. Nothing is known of its history, but there were
at least three towns: the first, founded in the Iron Age (ca. 500 B.C.), occupied
by the Iberians from the middle of the 5th c. B.C., and destroyed by Cato between
197 and 195 B.C.; the second, reconstructed in the Iberian fashion on the ruins
of the first, ca. 195 B.C., and destroyed in the Sertorian wars between 81 and
72 B.C.; a large amount of material from the second town was used during the Roman
period for the construction of a third town. After the battle of Ilerda, 49 B.C.,
it was not rebuilt.
The ruins are well preserved. Excavation has uncovered a complex defensive
system including a ditch and drawbridge, and walls of small rubble which follow
the contour of the hill. They apparently date from the Republican period, and
are arranged in terraces with communicating stairways. Two streets climb directly
to the acropolis and a third serves as a ring road. The decumanus runs N-S, divides
into two in the last third of its course, and has short cardines, one of which
ends in a watch tower; all the streets were paved with large irregular stones
and had sidewalks, reflecting advanced city planning. The approach to the acropolis
was protected by two towers. Except for a few houses (one with grindstones) and
the guard house, the N part is occupied by a large house or palace. In the center
of the oppidum there is a small temple in antis and another of the native type
near a deep and well-built cistern. In the first temple was found a group of bronze
statues; two of them, from before 49 B.C., were once thought to be Augustus and
Livia but almost certainly represent the ranking Roman of the district and his
wife. The remains of a horse, fragments of a bed, and some ladles were also found
here, also a little bull from the native temple.
The pottery includes painted Iberian ware, Campanian, and common ware
(wheel-turned jars and amphorae), but no terra sigillata. None of the 802 coins
studied are later than 45 B.C. Unlike that of the Bronze Age tumulus, the site
of the Ibero-Roman cemetery is unknown.
Finds are in the National Archaeological Museum in Madrid and the
Zaragoza Museum.
A. Beltran, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΑΛΑΝΖΕ (Πόλη) ΜΠΑΝΤΑΧΟΘ
Alange (Castrum Colubri) Badajoz, Spain.
Roman town 15 km SE of Merida, built over a pre-Roman settlement and now covered by the mediaeval castle. Traditionally it was Castrum Colubri, but this name appears in none of the sources of the Roman period. The baths, the basic structure of which is still recognizable despite later restorations, are still in use. They consist of a rectangular enclosure (28 x 13 m) inside which are two round rooms with separate entrances. Each room, 11.3 m in diameter, is flanked by four exedras and has a round pool in the center.
ΑΛΙΚΑΝΤΕ (Πόλη) ΒΑΛΕΝΘΙΑ
Lucentum (Alicante) Alicante, Spain.
A Contestan city on the E coast (Plin., HN 3.20, Mela 2.6.93, Ptol. 2.14.14).
It was once thought that the name derived from the phrase Akra Leuke given in
the Classical texts, but that town is more probably Tossal de Manises or Benacantil.
Towards the end of the 19th c. the urbanization of the suburb of Benalua, E of
Alicante, uncovered the remains of a Roman city and a fragment of a stone tablet
(since disappeared) with the inscription . . .ONINUS L . . ./ . . .S.AVGG.GER.SAR.
. ./MVNICIPI LVCENTINI. . . , apparently part of a dedication of the municipium
of Lucentum to Antoninus Pius and to Commodus (A.D. 176-180), thus locating it
in the Els Antigons area.
At its height, the city occupied an area of 1 km by 200-400 m along
the coast; it was smaller after the crisis in the 3d c., and the W part was used
as a necropolis during the Late Empire. Excavation has uncovered a group of buildings
identified as a trading post for salt fish, fine wall tiles from Arezzo, S Gaul,
and Spain, amphorae, chandeliers, sculptural remains, and Republican and Imperial
coins, most of which have been lost. Lucentum was apparently founded in the 1st
c. B.C., suffered upheavals in the 3d c. A.D., survived precariously until it
disappeared in the 8th c. with the Arab invasion when the town was moved to its
present location at the foot of Benacantil.
D. Fletcher, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΑΛΚΑΔΑΡΑ (Πόλη) ΕΣΤΡΕΜΑΔΟΥΡΑ
Alcadara Caceres, Spain.
Town on the Tajo 62 km NW of Caceres where an immense bridge carried the Roman
road from Norba to Conimbriga. The road may be traced from the Alcatntara bridge
to the Segura bridge over the Erjas at the Portuguese border, also built by the
Romans. The Alcaintara bridge, 194 m long, spans the river with six arches; it
is almost perfectly symmetrical. The maximum height is 71 m, of which 14 m are
the triumphal arch in the center of the bridge. This arch, disfigured by restorations
of the 16th c. and earlier, bears an inscription dedicated to Trajan (CIL II,
759), in whose reign the bridge was built. The imperial titles are those of the
year A.D. 104. The columns of the arch also bore inscriptions, now lost, listing
the municipalities which paid for the bridge (CIL II, 760). At the S side is a
small shrine on the pediment of which is another inscription of Trajan (CIL II,
761) giving the name of the architect of the viaduct, C. Iulius Lacer.
L.G. Iglesias, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΑΛΚΑΛΟ ΝΤΕ ΧΕΝΑΡΕΣ (Πόλη) ΜΑΔΡΙΤΗ
Complutum (Alcala de Henares) Madrid, Spain.
An ancient site, 31 km NE of Madrid, on San Juan del Viso hill, near the town.
It is mentioned by the ancient geographers, in itineraries, and in inscriptions
(CIL II, 3024ff). Some architectural remains are still visible, and finds include
epigraphic and numismatic material, but the site has not been excavated except
for recent investigation of a villa on the lower part of the hill.
L.G. Iglesias, ed.
ΑΜΠΟΥΡΙΑΣ (Χωριό) ΙΣΠΑΝΙΑ
Emporion. A Greek trading settlement inhabited by the Phokaians from Massalia,
at the end of the Gulf of Rosas on the Costa Brava; it is 3 km from the village
of La Escala and 40 km NE of Gerona. It is first mentioned in the Periplus of
the Pseudo-Skylax and in Skymnos. Its location has been known from the time of
the Renaissance since it gave its name to an entire district, the Ampurdan, was
an episcopal see in the Middle Ages, and one of the counties of the Marca Hispanica.
The Greeks originally occupied the small islet of San Martin, now
joined to the mainland, which was subsequently known as Palaiapolis (Strab. 3.4.8).
They soon spread to the nearby coast and used the mouth of the Clodianus (Fluvia)
as a trading port. The town was founded a little after 600 B.C. (date of the foundation
of Massalia) and throughout the 6th c. was a mere trading settlement, a port of
call on the trade route from Massalia (Marseille), two days' and one night's sail
distant (Pseudo-Skylax 3), to Mainake and the other Phokaian foundations in S
Iberia which traded with Tartessos. Because it was frankly a mart the Greek settlement
grew rapidly, and probably received fugitives from the destruction of Phokaia
by the Persians (540) and after the Battle of Alalia (537), also Greeks from Mainake
and other cities in the S destroyed by the Carthaginians.
In the 5th c. Massalia declined, and Emporion, which was already independent,
became a polis ruled by magistrates; it developed a brisk trade with the Greek
towns in S Italy, the Carthaginian towns, and the native settlements in the interior,
on which it had a profound Hellenic influence. Emporion then minted its own coins,
first imitating those of the towns with which it traded, including Athens and
Syracuse, and later creating its own currency in fractions of the drachma. The
types were copied from those of both Carthage and Syracuse, and the currency system
continued to be separate from that of Massalia until Emporion was Romanized in
the 2d c. The 5th-3d c. were those of its greatest wealth and splendor.
The town built temples, foremost among which was that dedicated to
Asklepios, for which a magnificent statue of Pentelic marble was imported. Outside
the town a native settlement developed, which soon became hellenized. It was called
Indika (Steph. Byz.), an eponym of the tribe of the Indiketes. In the course of
time the two towns merged, although each kept its own legal status; this explains
why, in Latin, Emporion is referred to in the plural as Emporiae. In the 3d c.
commercial interests arising from its contacts with the Greek cities in Italy
made it an ally of Rome. After the first Punic war the Roman ambassadors visited
the Iberian tribes supported by the Emporitani, and in 218 B.C. Cn. Scipio landed
the first Roman army in Hispania to begin the counteroffensive against Hannibal
in the second Punic war.
The war years were prosperous for the city's trade, but when the Romans
finally settled in Hispania, difficulties arose between the Greeks and the native
population, which were accentuated during the revolt of 197 B.C. In Emporion itself
the Greek and native communities kept a constant watch on each other through guards
permanently stationed at the gate in the wall separating the twin towns (Livy
34.9). In 195 B.C. M. Porcius Cato established a military camp near the town,
rapidly subdued the native tribes in the neighborhood, and initiated the Roman
organization of the country. As the result of the transfer to Tarraco of the Roman
administrative and political sector, Emporion was eclipsed and became a residential
town of little importance. The silting-up of its port and the increase in the
tonnage of Roman vessels hastened its decline. The town became a municipium and
during the time of C. Caesar received a colony of Roman veterans.
The Roman town, which was surrounded by a wall, was ruined by the
invasion of the Franks in 265 and Rhode became the economic center of the district.
However, a few small Christian communities established themselves in Emporion
and transformed the ruins of the town into a necropolis which extended beyond
the walls. Mediaeval sources claim that St. Felix stayed in Emporion before his
martyrdom in Gerona in the early 4th c.
The enclosure of the Greek town has been completely excavated. To
the S is a temple area (Asklepieion and temple of Serapis), a small agora, and
a stoa dating from the Roman Republican period. It is surrounded by a cyclopean
wall breached by a single gate, confirming Livy's description. On top of the Greek
town and further inland is a Roman town, ten times larger and surrounded by a
wall built no earlier than the time of Augustus. Inside is a forum, completely
leveled, on which stood small votive chapels. To the E, facing the sea, are two
large Hellenistic houses with cryptoportici, which contained remains of wall paintings
and geometric mosaics. Many architectural remains are in the Barcelona Archaeological
Museum and in the museum on the site. Among the finds are a statue of Asklepios,
a Greek original; the mosaic of Iphigeneia, an archaic architectural relief with
representations of sphinxes; Greek pottery (archaic Rhodian, Cypriot, and Ionian;
6th-4th c. Attic, Italic, and Roman). Several cemeteries near the town have also
been excavated.
J. Maluquer De Motes, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΑΝΤΕΚΟΥΕΡΑ (Πόλη) ΜΑΛΑΓΑ
Anticaria (Antequera) Malaga, Spain.
Town 62 km N of Malaga, built over a megalithic cultural center. The Roman town
is documented in the Antonine Itinerary, 412.2, and by the Ravenna Cosmographer,
316.1 and 18. The nucleus of Roman Anticaria was probably under the mediaeval
castle.
A building E of the present city, beyond the megalithic caves, has
a wall of blind arches 54 m long, 2.8 m high, and ca. 1.5 m thick, closely connected
to a rectangular enclosure of the same length and 8 m wide by 2.8 m deep. This
was probably a villa rather than a bath because of its distance from the urban
center; mosaic fragments have been found. Sculptural and epigraphic material and
metal work found in the area is in the municipal museum, notably a portrait of
Drusus Maior and two busts, of a man and a woman, of the Antonine period.
L.G. Iglesias, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΑΣΤΟΡΓΚΑ (Πόλη) ΚΑΣΤΙΛΗ-ΛΕΟΝ
Asturica Augusta (Astorga) Leon, Spain.
Roman city and mining and communications center 47 km SW of Leon (Antonine Itinerary
422-23, 425, 427, 429, 431, 439, 448, 453). It belonged to the tribe of the Astures
and was capital of the conventus; it was also inhabited in pre-Roman times. Pliny
(3.28) calls it a great city. It was a bishopric as early as the middle of the
3d c., and its bishops are quoted in the Spanish councils from the 4th c. on.
Its mediaeval walls are built over Roman ones of the Late Empire,
with towers and gates. The city was rebuilt by Augustus, using the soldiers of
the Legio X Gemina, stationed there in the 1st c. The ergastula and an extensive
network of sewers are preserved. Several Roman sculptures of the 1st c. have been
found, sarcophagi without reliefs, and one urban house of several rooms with Pompeian
paintings and many inscriptions, some in Greek, besides those mentioning mine
administration personnel. The inscriptions are dedicated to Roman deities such
as Jupiter, Juno, Regina, Minerva, Fortuna, Salus, Ceteri dei inmortales y Ceteri
dei deasque; oriental deities: Serapis, Isis, Tyche, Nemesis, and Kore; and occidental
deities: Apollo, Grannus, and Mars Sagatus, dating from the Antonine and Severan
periods. The inscriptions also refer to a grammarian (CIL II, 5079) and to flamines
of the conventus in the temple of Augustus in Tarraco in the provincial concilium
(CIL II, 2637, 4223, 5124).
J.M Blazquez, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΒΑΛΕΝΘΙΑ (Πόλη) ΒΑΛΕΝΘΙΑ
Valentia (Valencia) Valencia, Spain.
A city on the banks of the Turia, ca. 3 km from the sea (Mela 2.92; Plin. HN 3.20, referring to it as a colony; Ptol. 2.6.61). It was founded by Junius Brutus in 138 B.C. (Livy, Per. 55: Junius Brutus consul in Hispania iis qui sub Viriato militaverant agros et oppidum dedit quod vocatum est Valentia). Based on lines 479-82 of the Ora Maritima of Avienus, it has been claimed that the Roman city was built over the indigenous city of Tyris, but there is no archaeological confirmation. Identification with any of the Valencias on the border of Portugal may be rejected since they received the name, with the meaning of fortress, only in the 13th c., and the only Valencia whose stone tablets mention the valentini is that on the Mediterranean.
There are two schools of thought about the first inhabitants: one relates the
text of Livy to those of Appian (Iber. 72) and Diodorus Siculus (33.1.3) and claims
that they were the defeated troops of Viriatus; the other, taking into account
that no indigenous names appear on the tablets, that no Iberian money was coined,
that indigenous remains are scarce compared to Roman, and that "militare"
is inappropriate for Viriatus' men, supports the thesis that they were discharged
from the Roman army, and translates "at the time" and not "under
the orders" of Viriatus. Some tablets bear the inscriptions "valentini
veterani et veteres" and "uterque ordo decurionum", proving that
there were two stages of settlement, one with the veteres, the first inhabitants,
and the other with the veterani who came later, perhaps with Afranius, which would
justify the tablet that the Valencians dedicated to him (CIL IX, 5275).
The location of the Roman city and its area is unknown, but the greatest
density of finds indicate the vicinity of the Cathedral. Fragments of Roman buildings
and tablets are incorporated in the facade of the 17th c. basilica. In general,
the Imperial levels are 3 m down, and the Republican on virgin soil, at 4.5 m,
with Campanian pottery A and B mixed, as in Ventimiglia and Pollentia. Above 3
m are the Visigoth levels (tablet of Bishop Justinianus, A.D. 546). A necropolis,
La Boatella, has been excavated (over 200 tombs with poor furnishings, 3d to 5th
c. A.D.), as have other tombs within the city.
There is abundant pottery from Arezzo, S Gaul, Spain, and Campania
A and B (more of B). The most interesting mosaic is one of Medusa (2d c.) similar
to that of Tarragona. Little is known about sculpture, since a collection formed
in the 18th c. disappeared when Napoleon's troops were transporting it to France
by ship. About 70 tablets are known (CIL II, 3710, 3725-75, 3903, 4948, 5127,
6004-5). Valentia coined money, ca. 123 to 75 B.C., with asses of various weights
(19.25-13 gm). On the face was the head of Roma on the right with a winged helmet
and the names of the quinquennales, and on the reverse a cornucopia tied with
a sheaf of six rays and the name Valentia. There are also semisses and quadrantes.
Most of the finds are in the Museum of Fine Arts and the Museum of Prehistory
in Valencia.
D. Fletcher, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΒΑΡΚΕΛΩΝΗ (Πόλη) ΚΑΤΑΛΟΝΙΑ
Barcino (Barcelona) Barcelona, Spain.
Town in Tarraconensis whose name, known from many inscriptions, was Colonia Iulia
Augusta Paterna Faventia Barcino, indicating that it was founded by Augustus.
Barcino appears to be the native name of an oppidum of the Laietani who minted
silver drachmae at the end of the 3d c. B.C., imitating those of Emporion and
bearing the iberian legend Barkenos. An allusion by Ausonius (Ep. 37.68) is the
basis for the claim that it was founded by the Carthaginians (the family of the
Barcidae). This is unacceptable, however; the name appears in Avienus (OM. 5.520)
in its pure Iberian form, Barcilo.
The Augustan colony spread over a small height, Mons Tabar (18 m above
sea level), between two mountain streams, the San Juan to the N and La Rambla
to the S. its fields probably extended from the Baetulo river (Besos) to the Rubricatus
(Llobregat). During the Late Empire it had large monuments, temples, baths, and
two aqueducts, but it was burned and razed in A.D. 265 during the invasion of
the Franks and the Alamanni. it was subsequently rebuilt and its perimeter reduced.
The colony had been surrounded by a strong defensive wall with over 60 circular
or polygonal towers which were mostly incorporated later into mediaeval structures.
The extraordinary fortification of Barcino and the excellence of its port increased
its importance during the Early Empire. At the beginning of the 5th c. A.D. it
was occupied by the Visigoths as allies of the Romans, and King Ataulfo was assassinated
there in 414. it had an active Christian community, including St. Paciano, and
there are remains of a 6th c. basilica.
The Roman wall has been restored and the subsoil excavated, uncovering
a large amount of reused architectural material, statues, funerary and honorific
stones, and mosaics, from the destruction of the town in the 3d c. it is now possible
to visit more than 200 m of the Roman town under the Gothic cathedral and the
public buildings dating from the Middle Ages. The finds are in the museum on the
site and the Barcelona Archaeological Museum.
J. Maluquer De Motes, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΒΕΛΙΛΛΑ ΤΟΥ ΕΒΡΟΥ (Χωριό) ΣΑΡΑΓΟΣΑ
Celsa (Velilla de Ebro) Zaragoza, Spain.
Town in Tarraconensis, near the Ebro, and E of Quinto, key to the romanization
of the valley before the foundation of Caesaraugusta. Its history is based on
the many bronze coins minted in the 2d and 1st c. B.C.: first Iberian, bearing
the name Celsa, and then Latin. The city was founded by Lepidus in 42 B.C. and
named Colonia Victrix Iulia Lepida. After the fall of the triumvirate, its name
was changed to Iulia Celsa. Its decline began after the founding of Caesaraugusta
in 24 B.C. It had the only stone bridge over the Ebro in the upper third of its
course up to Dertosa (Strabo: Ad Hiberum amnem est Celsa oppidum, ubi ponte lapideo
Amnis iungitur); Pliny located it in the jurisdiction of the Conventus luridicus
Caesaraugustanus and Ptolemy attributed it to the Ilergetes. Its location is certainly
in the Velilla de Ebro, where there are the remains of a bridge reported in the
19th c., and ruins between the sanctuaries of San Nicolas and San Jose, which
include a wall of opus reticulatum.
Pottery, carnelians, coins, and bronze letters of various weights
have been found, and excavations have uncovered mosaics in threshing floors, terra
sigillata, and painted stuccos with figurative themes. Below the San Jose sanctuary
stand the ruins of the Roman theater with traces of the walls of the stage and
of the tiers of seats of the cavea. Among finds made at an earlier period Martin
Carrillo (1435) speaks of a statue, later destroyed, of a certain T. Sempronius
with a scroll and staff. The name of the ancient town has been preserved in Gelsa,
4 km NW, where finds have also been made. A Roman road that crossed the Monegros
from Bujaraloz ran as far as the Val de Velilla, and stones with inscriptions
have been found nearby. An area between Velilla and Gelsa is still called Puencaido,
which may refer to the stone bridge mentioned by Strabo.
Celsa minted coins bearing the abbreviated names of the town or its
initials. Lepida first used the head of Victory and the yoke of oxen led by a
priest, the foundation type, and later the heads of Peace and of Pallas and a
bull, copied from Republican prototypes. After 36 B.C. come the duoviri themselves,
with the bust of Augustus and a bull, and coins continued to be minted until the
time of Tiberius. Finds are in the Zaragoza museum.
A. Beltran, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΒΙΧ (Πόλη) ΚΑΤΑΛΟΝΙΑ
Ausa (Vich) Barcelona, Spain.
Town in Tarraconensis W of Gerona and 50 km N of Barcelona, mentioned by Pliny
(HN 22-23) and Ptolemy (2.6.69). The town takes its name from a tribe of the Ausetani,
who held sway as far as Gerunda. Under Amusicus, Ausa revolted against the Romans
but was subdued after a 30-day winter siege by Cneus Cornelius Scipio. In the
2d c. B.C. the town minted many coins based on the Roman system with the Iberian
legend AUSESCEN and, according to Pliny, had Latin rights. A small prostyle hexastyle
Corinthian temple survives from the Imperial age; the cella (10.1 x 12.1 m) is
built in opus emplecton lined with small ashlar.
J. Maluquer De Motes, ed.
ΓΑΛΕΡΑ (Πόλη) ΓΡΑΝΑΔΑ
Tutugi (Galera) Granada, Spain.
An Iberian city near Huescar in NE Granada. The burial chambers in its necropoleis have yielded eight Greek kraters belonging to the group of Polygnotos, of the Munich Painter, of the Painter of the Battle of the Griffins of Oxford, and the Painter of the Black Thyrsos; also three kylikes, two of them Attic (two from the 5th c. B.C., the other from the 4th), and two pelikes from the beginning of the 4th c. in the Kertch style. There are also two rectangular urns with animals lying on the covers and scenes on the sides, one of which shows Greek influence. Most of the finds are in the National Archaeological Museum of Madrid.
ΓΚΑΡΑΫ (Πόλη) ΣΟΡΙΑ
Numantia (Muela de Garray) Soria, Spain.
Site 7 km N of Soria. The cultural sequence on the hill is as follows: 1) Material
from the final phase of the Neolithic Age and from the Copper Age; 2) Iron Age
occupation, with a later castrum dating from the 4th-3d c. B.C., possibly beginning
ca. 850 B.C.; 3) Celtiberian Numancia, of the Arevaci, from the beginning of the
3d c. to 133 B.C.; 4) Roman town of the Augustan age, rebuilt after being abandoned
for a century and lingering on to the end of the 4th c.; 5) Visigoth town or perhaps
merely isolated buildings. Some of these phases may have included destruction
and reconstruction; this certainly occurred with the invasion of the Franks and
the Alamanni in the 3d c.
The fame of Numantia comes from its ten years of sustained and successful
struggle against the Roman armies, a struggle which actually began in 153 and
ended with the destruction and burning of the town in 133. The primary source
is Appian, who obtained his information from Polybios, a friend and chronicler
of Scipio and an eyewitness of the siege; also L. Anneus Florus and many others
(Diodorus Siculus, Livy, Dio Cassius, Frontinus, Paulus Orosius, and later Pliny
and Strabo).
The history of Numantia is linked to the insurrections of the Celtiberians
against the abuses of the Romans: the first of importance was in 197, which caused
Cato to attack the towns of the Meseta; disturbances again occurred in 193 when
the Arevaci helped the Vetones, Vaccaei, and Lusitani, causing Tiberius Sempronius
Gracchus to attack them in 180. He defeated them near the Moncayo and reached
a peace agreement which lasted until 154, the date of the great rising of the
Celtiberians and the Lusitani. The insurrection began in Segeda (Belmonte), and
Q. Fulvius Nobilior moved against it with an army of 30,000 men. The Belli and
the Titi took refuge in Numantia with their chieftain Caros. Nobilior razed Segeda
and in August 153 advanced on Numantia. He was fiercely attacked by the Celtiberians,
defeated at Uxama (Osma) and Ocilis, and forced to take refuge in the Renieblas
camp, where he spent the winter of 153-152 B.C. He relinquished his command to
his successor, M. Claudius Marcellus, who skillfully pacified the region. A peace
treaty was signed in 151, which lasted until 143, despite the atrocities of Lucullus
at Cauca (Coca) and elsewhere. In 144 the Viriathus rising ended in a peace agreement;
Q. Caecilius Metellus, after conquering Contrebia, the Lusitanian capital, and
the tribes in the Jalon valley, laid waste the territory of the Vaccaei and attacked
the Arevaci who took refuge in Numantia and Termantia (142). The war was resumed
in 137 by C. Hostilius Mancinus, who was roundly defeated and capitulated, but
the Senate again refused to recognize the peace agreement and left the Roman general
to the mercy of the Numantians, naked, shackled, and on his knees before the walls
of the town.
Finally in 134 Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus reorganized the
demoralized army, seized supplies from the Vaccaei, and blockaded the hill town
with a circumvallation 9 km long, supported by six camps, with wall, ditch, and
towers. Against the 10,000 Numantians, of which only 4000 were under arms, Scipio
deployed 60,000 men, elephants, slingers, and Jugurtha's Numidian archers, cavalry
furnished by Spanish auxiliaries, and 300 catapults. But it was hunger which finally
defeated Numantia. Scipio refused to accept any terms other than unconditional
surrender and the laying down of arms, so the defenders burned the town and most
of them killed themselves. Only a few surrendered. Numantia was reduced to ashes
in the summer of 133, after a nine-month siege, and reconstruction of the town
was forbidden. In the triumph Rome gave to Scipio in 132, so poor was Numantia
that only seven denarii could be distributed to each soldier.
The Muela de Garray is a hill 67 m high, protected by the Douro and
the Tera, which meet at its foot to the W, and by the Merdancho (Merdancius) on
the S; the N, S, and especially the W slopes are precipitous, while the E slope
is gentle. According to Appian and Orosius the perimeter of the town of 150 ha
was 4400 m, but excavations have given axes of 310 and 720 m and an area of ca.
24 ha. The center of the Celtiberian town lay slightly W of the crest of the hill:
two long streets parallel to the main axis were crossed at right angles by 11
others, with steps at the intersections. A street parallel to the wall surrounded
the urban complex, and the central part and the first two ring streets appear
to be the oldest. The trapezoidal wall, built of boulders, is 3.4 m thick at its
base and still stands to a height of 2 m, backed by houses facing inwards; excavations
have unearthed two gates, simple openings in the wall. The streets were paved
with small cobblestones but repaired with larger ones; they had raised sidewalks
and stepping stones for crossing the gutter. The houses were arranged in rectangular
blocks with exterior dry pebblestone walls; the surviving houses are Roman, with
a cellar or storeroom, and one or two stories high. On the S slope there are two
small circles of large stones, assumed to be platforms on which the dead were
exposed (Silius Italicus, Elianus).
The Roman streets are clearly built over the Celtiberian ones, and
usually separated from them by a layer of debris and ashes. In some cases they
have been regularized and widened, and the pavement consists of large well-joined
slabs. In the so-called first street was discovered the remains of a temple, at
the place thought to be a forum of modest proportions and design. Numantia was
undoubtedly reconstructed in the Augustan period as a town with ius peregrinum
for the subjected Celtiberians, to protect the road from Asturica Augusta to Caesar-augusta.
It is difficult to distinguish the Roman houses from earlier ones of the native
type. They have no mosaic pavements or drains but have regular two-course ashlar
walls bound with clay; in addition to the usual roofs of wood and boughs, tegulae,
imbrices, and antefixes have been found; the Celtiberian silos of the houses were
replaced by cisterns for collecting runoff water. Numantia may have had an amphitheater
or theater on the N slope, of which only the cavea can be seen. There are also
remains of large houses: one with a caldarium may have been a public bath.
On the surrounding hills were built the Roman camps: that on the Atalaya
de Renieblas, 8 km away, was reconstructed five times and remains of all the reconstructions
survive (Cato in 195, 193-181, Nobilior in 153 m accordance with the Vitruvian
model, Mancinus in 137, and Scipio; the last occupation was in 75-74 in the wars
between Sertorius and Pompey). Penarredonda, on the S, has well-defined ruins,
what is assumed to be the camp of Maximus with cavalry quarters and the houses
of the tribunes; there are remains on the Castillejo, on the N of the camps of
Marcellus (ruins of the praetorium and the house of the tribune), Pompey, and
Scipio, some remains of the catapult platform at Valdeborron, on the E, and walls
of the forts of Travesadas, Dehesilla, Alto Real, el Molino, Vega, and Saledilla,
some of which perhaps were reused Celtiberian settlements.
All these camps have yielded remains of weapons, projectiles, ornaments,
for the most part Celtiberian, as is the pottery. This is basically wheel-turned,
smoked, painted pottery with animated scenes, many in the Iron Age tradition,
and terra sigillata. Bronze fibulae, necklaces, rings, belt buckles, surgical
instruments, and needles have also been found, and clay slingshots, few weapons,
trumpets, horns, clay nozzles, an occasional iron tool, circular grindstones,
Hispano-Roman and Imperial coins. The finds are in the Numantia Museum, the National
Archaeological Museum in Madrid, and the museums of Mainz and Bonn.
A. Beltran, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΓΚΟΥΑΝΤΙΧ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Acci (Guadix) Granada, Spain.
Town 59 km NE of Granada, whose modern name comes from the Arabic Wadi-Aci. Pliny
refers to it as Colonia Accitana Gemellensis (3.25), adding that it possessed
Italic law from the time of its founding. Ptolemy (2.6) calls it Akkiand locates
it among the Bastetani. The Antonine Itinerary (402.1; 404.6) calls it Acci. On
the inscriptions (CIL II, 3391, 3393-94) it appears as Colonia Iulia Gemella Accis,
and on coins as Col(onia) Iul(ia) Gem(ella) Acci; the abbreviations L I II refer
to Legions I and II, whose veterans were settled there. The name Gemella comes
from these two legions. It was founded to guard the mountainous area in which
it was located. Until the reform of Augustus (7-2 B.C.) it was part of Baetica,
but was then transferred to Tarraconensis.
Its establishment as a colony has been attributed to Caesar or Octavius
because of the name Iulia and the fact that it lacked an epithet referring to
Augustus. However, not all the places founded by Augustus bear a name referring
to him and, moreover, the name Iulia was employed by Augustus before 27. Most
likely it was founded by Lepidus in 42 B.C. in the name of Octavius. It has not
been excavated.
R. Teja, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΕΛΒΙΡΑ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Iliberris (Elvira) Granada, Spain. The exact location of this Baetic town W of Granada is not known and there is no archaeological evidence. About A.D. 309 19 bishops and 24 presbyters met here in a Council which promulgated 81 canons, notably no. 36, prohibiting images and paintings in the churches.
ΕΛΚΕ (Πόλη) ΒΑΛΕΝΘΙΑ
Illici Elche) Alicante, Spain.
A settlement 2 km from Elche on the Dolores road, on the estate of La Alcudia.
It is mentioned in ancient sources (Plin. 3.20; Mela 2.93; Diod. 25.10; Ptol.
2.61). The settlement occupied some 10 ha on a rise ca. 4 m higher than the surrounding
plain. In the Bronze Age it bore a tiny village (stratum G), above which were
a series of towns: Iberian (F, E), Republican Roman (D), destroyed about the middle
of the 1st c. B.C.; Imperial Roman (C), razed by the Frankish invasions and subsequent
revolts; Late Roman (B), much reduced in size and destroyed by barbarian peoples;
and finally the Visigothic-Byzantine stratum (A), after which the hillside was
abandoned and its inhabitants settled the site of modern Elche.
In 43-42 B.C. Illici was raised to the status of colonia immunis under
the name of Colonia Iulia Illici Augusta and issued Roman coinage with more than
20 variant types between 43 B.C. and A.D. 31. The town walls, surveyed in 1565,
had a perimeter of 1400 m (now largely destroyed). Since 1752 excavation has uncovered
such architectural remains as baths and an amphitheater. Stratum C (mid 1st c.
B.C. to mid 3d c. A.D.) yielded houses larger than those in stratum D, with impluvium,
bath and drain, admirable statuary, coins from the Empire. Stratum B (3d-4th c.)
produced remains of a building identified as a synagogue, built in the 4th-5th
c., enlarged in the 7th c., and containing a mosaic with a Greek legend indicating
where the people, the magistrates, and the elders assembled for prayer.
Finds from the site include sculpture--most notably the so-called
Lady of Elche (4th-3d c. B.C.) now in the National Archaeological Museum in Madrid--coins,
inscriptions, mosaics, ceramics. There is a museum on the site.
D. Fletcher, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΕΛΛΙΝ (Πόλη) ΚΑΣΤΙΛΗ-ΜΑΝΤΣΑ
Ilunum City of Tarraconensis 59 km S of Albacete (Ptol. 2.6.61). The principal finds are a magnificent Roman mosaic of the 2d c. A.D. showing the seasons and months of the year, and an Early Christian sarcophagus of ca. A.D. 380. Both are in Madrid, the mosaic in the National Archaeological Museum and the sarcophagus in the Royal Academy of History.
ΕΣΠΕΓΙΟ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Ucubi or Ucubis (Espejo) Cordoba, Spain.
To the SE of Cordoba, W of Castro del Rio. A colony exempt from the jurisdiction
of the Conventus Iuridicus Astigitanus, known as Claritas Julia according to Pliny
(NH 3.12), and mentioned by Sallust (1.123) in a passage that must refer to the
entry of Sertorius into Baetica after having defeated Metelus in Lusitania in
79-78 B.C. The cache of 700 Roman denarii found near Ucubi must have been hidden
on that occasion. Bellum Hispaniense contains several references to Ucubi during
the struggle between Caesar and the sons of Pompey in 45-44 B.C. Pompey camped
between Ategua and Ucubi when besieged by Caesar; the latter finally occupied
the site, but not until Pompey had ordered the execution of all those he suspected
of being Caesar's partisans (Bell.Hisp. 20.1; 24.2).
Remains apparently from that period include the amphitheater N of
the town, partly hewn out of a hillside. Only the walls of the substructure remain,
but the diameter of the arena must have been ca. 35 m. There is a Roman bridge
nearby. Inscriptions and the remains of houses and fortifications have been found
in Ategua vetus and Ucubi, and ceramic fragments in Ategua which date from the
1st c. B.C. and even earlier. The town is reputed to have been the birthplace
of Annius Verus, grandfather of Marcus Aurelius, and this accounts for the alleged
Cordovan origin of the emperor.
C. Fernandez-Chicarro, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Jan 2006 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
ΕΣΤΕΠΑ (Πόλη) ΑΝΔΑΛΟΥΣΙΑ
Astapa or Ostippo (Estepa) Sevilla, Spain.
Situated between Osuna and Puente Genil and mentioned by Pliny (NH 3.12). The
modern town surrounds the hill on which Astapa must have stood; but excavation
has produced no traces. Livy (28.22; 28.23.5) and Appian (Iber. 33) recount the
capture of Astapa by Marcius while Scipio retired to Carthago Nova after taking
Castulo and Iliturgi in 206 B.C. Famous for its defense by its inhabitants who,
after firing the town and consigning its valuables to the flames, slew their wives
and children and one another. Rome gained nothing by its capture. Livy writes
of it "ingenia incolarum latrocinio laeta". Its final fate reminds us
of Numantia.
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