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CELTIBERIA

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 653 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CELTIBERIA  , a

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term used by Greek and
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Roman writers to denote, sometimes the whole north-east of Spain, and sometimes the north-east
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part of the central plateau of the peninsula . The latter was probably the correct use . The Celtiberi, in this narrower sense, were not so much one tribe as a
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group of cantons—Arevaci, Pelendones, Berones and four or five others . They were the most warlike
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people in Spain, and for a long time offered a stubborn resistance to the Romans . Originally Carthaginian mercenaries, they were induced to serve the Romans in a similar capacity, and Livy (
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xxiv . 49) distinctly states that they were the first mercenaries in the Roman army . They did not, however, keep faith, and several
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campaigns were undertaken against them . In 179 B.C. the whole country was subdued by T . Sempronius
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Gracchus, who by his generous treatment of the vanquished gained their esteem and affection . In 153 they again revolted, and were not finally overcome until the capture of
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Numantia (133) . The twenty years' war waged round this city, and its siege and destruction by Scipio the Younger (133 B.C.) form only the most famous
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episode in the long struggle, which has
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left its mark in entrenchments near Numantia excavated in 1906-1907 by German archaeologists . After the fall of Numantia, and still more after the
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death of Sertorius (72 B.C.), the Celtiberians became gradually romanized, and
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town
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life grew up among their 'alleys; Clunia, for instance, became a Roman
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municipality, and ruins of its walls, gates and theatre testify to its
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civilization; while Bilbilis (Bambola), another municipality, was the birth-place of the eminently Roman poet Martial .

The Celtiberiansmay have been so called because they were thought to be the descendants of

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Celtic immigrants from Gaul into Iberia (Spain), or because they were regarded (cf .
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Lucan iv . 9) as a mixed
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race of Celts and Spaniards (Iberians) ; in either case the name represents a geographer's theory rather than an ascertained fact . That a strong Celtic element existed in Spain is proved both by numerous traditions and by the more trustworthy evidence of place-names . The Celtic place-names of Spain, however, are not confined to Celtiberia or even to the north and east; they occur even in the south and west . A long description of the manners and customs of the Celtiberi is given by Diodorus Siculus (v . 33, 34) . Their country was rough and unfruitful as a whole (barley, however, was cultivated), being chiefly used for the pasture of sheep . Its inhabitants either led a nomadic life or occupied small villages; large towns were few . Their
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infantry and cavalry were both excellent . In
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battle, they adopted the wedge-shaped formation of the column . They carried double-edged swords and short daggers for use hand to hand, the steel of which was hardened by being buried underground; their defensive armour was a
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light Gallic shield or a round wicker buckler, and greaves of felt round their legs .

They wore brazen helmets with

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purple crests, and rough-haired black cloaks, in which they slept on the
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bare ground . Like the
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Cantabri, they washed themselves with urine instead of
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water . They were said to offer sacrifice to a nameless
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god (Strabo iii. p . 164) at the time of the full moon when all the household danced together before the doors of the houses . Although cruel to their enemies, they were hospitable to strangers . They
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ate
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meat of all kinds, and drank a kind of mead . E . Hiibner's article in Pauly-Wissowa's Realencyclopadie, iii . (1886-1893), collects all the ancient references, which are almost all brief . Strabo's
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notice (bk. iii.), based perhaps on Poseidonius, is fullest . (F . J .

End of Article: CELTIBERIA
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