Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition

The boundaries of Celtiberian territory are uncertain inasmuch as we do not know exactly which different peoples were considered Celtiberian. If we ignore the significance of the adjective «Celtiberian» as it is used by geographers, we find that the term «Celtiberian» does not encompass all Celtic p...

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Autor principal: Pierre-Yves Lambert
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FR
Publicado: Casa de Velázquez 2005
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:f8f107aa0421405d98590e7c40cb054c2021-12-02T10:46:56ZLe territoire celtibère : essai de définition0076-230X2173-130610.4000/mcv.2032https://doaj.org/article/f8f107aa0421405d98590e7c40cb054c2005-11-01T00:00:00Zhttp://journals.openedition.org/mcv/2032https://doaj.org/toc/0076-230Xhttps://doaj.org/toc/2173-1306The boundaries of Celtiberian territory are uncertain inasmuch as we do not know exactly which different peoples were considered Celtiberian. If we ignore the significance of the adjective «Celtiberian» as it is used by geographers, we find that the term «Celtiberian» does not encompass all Celtic peoples of the Iberian Peninsula, despite the fact that historians have tended to link the Celtiberians with the various celtici in the west of the Peninsula. Among those identified as Celtiberians we must clearly distinguish between the peoples of the East (Ebro and Jalón valleys), who were the first to come into contact with the Romans, and the Arevaci, Pelendones and Berones to the North-West - and among the latter the Numantines, who offered the longest and fiercest resistance. Evidence can be found on a linguistic level, but it is not always consistent: onomastic sources tend to show a far wider area of Celtiberian occupation that that strictly defined by Celtiberian inscriptions. We need to view the Celtiberian dimension afresh, as a variable entity defined by a more or less violent expansive movement outwards from a mountainous zone of refuge. The Celtiberians related to their neighbours as allies, as mercenaries or as invaders according to the circumstances. For the title of the third Botorrita bronze, an interpretation has been proposed based on the metaphor of the «swarm of bees» for migrant populations. Historians mention several examples of migrations, some spontaneous like a species of uer sacrum, and others organised by the Roman power. We believe that the two hundred names of persons refer to candidates for emigration; TarKuai could refer to the chosen destination.Pierre-Yves LambertCasa de VelázquezarticleCeltiberian languageCelticnessEpigraphyMigrationsHistory of SpainDP1-402Latin America. Spanish AmericaF1201-3799French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literaturePQ1-3999ESFRMélanges de la Casa de Velázquez, Vol 35, Iss 2, Pp 45-74 (2005)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language ES
FR
topic Celtiberian language
Celticness
Epigraphy
Migrations
History of Spain
DP1-402
Latin America. Spanish America
F1201-3799
French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature
PQ1-3999
spellingShingle Celtiberian language
Celticness
Epigraphy
Migrations
History of Spain
DP1-402
Latin America. Spanish America
F1201-3799
French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature
PQ1-3999
Pierre-Yves Lambert
Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
description The boundaries of Celtiberian territory are uncertain inasmuch as we do not know exactly which different peoples were considered Celtiberian. If we ignore the significance of the adjective «Celtiberian» as it is used by geographers, we find that the term «Celtiberian» does not encompass all Celtic peoples of the Iberian Peninsula, despite the fact that historians have tended to link the Celtiberians with the various celtici in the west of the Peninsula. Among those identified as Celtiberians we must clearly distinguish between the peoples of the East (Ebro and Jalón valleys), who were the first to come into contact with the Romans, and the Arevaci, Pelendones and Berones to the North-West - and among the latter the Numantines, who offered the longest and fiercest resistance. Evidence can be found on a linguistic level, but it is not always consistent: onomastic sources tend to show a far wider area of Celtiberian occupation that that strictly defined by Celtiberian inscriptions. We need to view the Celtiberian dimension afresh, as a variable entity defined by a more or less violent expansive movement outwards from a mountainous zone of refuge. The Celtiberians related to their neighbours as allies, as mercenaries or as invaders according to the circumstances. For the title of the third Botorrita bronze, an interpretation has been proposed based on the metaphor of the «swarm of bees» for migrant populations. Historians mention several examples of migrations, some spontaneous like a species of uer sacrum, and others organised by the Roman power. We believe that the two hundred names of persons refer to candidates for emigration; TarKuai could refer to the chosen destination.
format article
author Pierre-Yves Lambert
author_facet Pierre-Yves Lambert
author_sort Pierre-Yves Lambert
title Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
title_short Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
title_full Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
title_fullStr Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
title_full_unstemmed Le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
title_sort le territoire celtibère : essai de définition
publisher Casa de Velázquez
publishDate 2005
url https://doaj.org/article/f8f107aa0421405d98590e7c40cb054c
work_keys_str_mv AT pierreyveslambert leterritoireceltibereessaidedefinition
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