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IBERIANS (Iberi, "I(3r7Aes)

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 217 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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IBERIANS (Iberi, "I(3r7Aes)  , an ancient
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people inhabiting parts of the
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Spanish peninsula . Their ethnic
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affinities are not known, and our knowledge of their
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history is comparatively slight . It is almost impossible to make any statement in regard to them which will meet with general agreement . At the sametime, the general lines of Iberian controversy are clear enough, The
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principal
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sources of information about the Iberians are (I)
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historical, (2) numismatic, (3) linguistic, (4) anthropological . i . Historical.—The name seems to have been applied by the earlier Greek navigators to the peoples who inhabited the eastern coast of Spain; probably it originally meant those who dwelt b the
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river Iberus (mod . Ebro) . It is possible (Boudard . Etudes sur l'alphabet iberien (Paris, 1852) that the river-name itself represents the Basque phrase ibay-erri " the country of the river." On the other hand, even in older Greek usage (as in Thuc. vi . I) the
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term Iberia is said to have embraced the country as far east as the Rhone (see Herodorus of
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Heraclea, Fragrn . His' . Gr. ii .

34), and by the

time of Strabo it was the
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common Greek name for the Spanish peninsula . Iberians thus meant sometimes the population of the peninsula in general and sometimes, it would appear, the peoples of some definite
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race (y vos) which formed one element in that population . Of the tribal distribution of this race, of its linguistic, social and
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political characteristics, and of the history of its relation to the other peoples of Spain, we have only the most general, fragmentary and contradictory accounts . On the whole, the historical evidence indicates that in Spain, when it first became known to the Greeks and Romans there existed many
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separate and variously civilized tribes connected by at least apparent identity of race, and by similarity (but not identity) of language, and sufficiently distinguished by their general characteristics from Phoenicians, Romans and Celts . The statement of Diodorus Siculus that the mingling of these Iberians with the immigrant Celts gave rise to the Celtiberians is in itself probable . Varro and Dionysius Afer proposed to identify the Iberians of Spain with the Iberians of the
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Caucasus, the one regarding the eastern, and other the western, settlements as the earlier . 2 . Numismatic.—Knowledge of ancient Iberian language and history is mainly derived from a variety of coins, found widely distributed in the peninsula,) and also in the neighbourhood of
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Narbonne . They are inscribed in an alphabet which has many points of similarity with the western Greek alphabets, and some with the Punic alphabet; but which seems to retain a few characters from an older script akin to those of Minoan Crete and
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Roman
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Libya .2 The same Iberian alphabet is found also rarely in inscriptions . The coinage began before the Roman
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conquest was completed; the monetary
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system resembles that of the Roman republic, with values analogous to denarii and quinarii . The coin inscriptions usually give only the name of the
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town, e.g . PLPLIS (Bilbilis), KLAQRIQS (Calagurris), SEQBRICS (Segobriga),TMANIAV(Dumania) .

The types show

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late Greek and perhaps also late Punic influence, but approximate later to Roman
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models . The commonest
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reverse type, a charging horseman, reappears on the Roman coins of Bilbilis, Osca, Segobriga and other places . Another common type is one man leading two horses or brandishing a sword or a bow . The obverse has usually a male head, sometimes inscribed with what appears to be a native name . 3 . Linguistic.—The survival of the non-
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Aryan language among the
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Basques around the west Pyrenees has suggested the attempt to interpret by its means a large class of similar-sounding place-names of ancient Spain, some of which are authenticated by their occurrence on the inscribed coins, and to
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link it with other traces of non-Aryan speech round the shores of the Western Mediterranean and on the
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Atlantic seaboard of
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Europe . This phase of Iberian theory opens with K, W . Humboldt (Priifung der Untersuchungee iiber die Urbewoh3ter Hispaniens vermittelst der waskischen Sprache, Berlin, 1821), ' For the prehistoric
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civilization of the peninsula as a whole see SPAIN . 2 P . A . Boudard's Etudes sur l'alphabet iberien (Paris, 1852). and Numismatique iberienne (
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Beziers, 1859) ; Aloiss Heiss, Notes
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sus
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les monnaies celtiberiennes (Paris, 1865), and Description,generale
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des monnaies antiques de l'Espagne (Paris, 187o) ; Phillips, Uber das iberische Alphabet (Vienna, 187o), Die Einwanderung der Iberer in die pyren . Halbinsel (Vienna, 187o) ; \V .

M .

Flinders Petrie, Journ . Anthr . Inst.
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xxix . (1899) 204, and above all E . Hiibner, Monuments linguae Ibericae . who contended that there existed once a single
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great Iberian people, speaking a distinct language of their own; that an essentially " Iberian " population was to be found in Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica, in
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southern France, and even in the
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British Isles; and that the Basques of the
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present day were remnants of this race, which had elsewhere been expelled or absorbed . This last was the central and the seminal idea of the
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work, and it has been the point round which the
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battle of scholarship has mainly raged . The principal evidence which Humboldt adduced in its support was the possibility of explaining a vast number of the ancient topographical names of Spain, and of other asserted Iberian districts, by the forms and significations of Basque . In reply, Graslin (De l'Iberie, Paris, 1839), maintained that the name Iberia was nothing but a Greek misnomer of Spain, and that there was no proof that the Basque people had ever occupied a wider
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area than at present; and Blade (Origine des Basques, Paris, 1869) took the same
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line of
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argument, holding that Iberia is a purely
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geographical term, that there was no proper Iberian race, that the Basques were always shut in by alien races, that their affinity is still to seek, and that the whole Basque-Iberian theory is a figment . His main contention has met with some acceptance,' but the great current of ethnographical
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speculation still flows in the direction indicated by Humboldt . 4 .

Anthropological.—Humboldt's " Iberian theory " depended partly on linguistic comparisons, but partly on his observation of widespread similarity of

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physical type among the population of south-western Europe . Since his time the anthropological researches of Broca, Thurnam and Davis, Huxley, Busk, Beddoe, Virchow, Tubino and others have proved the existence in Europe, from Neolithic times, of a race, small of stature, with long or oval skulls, and accustomed to bury their dead in tombs . Their remains have been found in Belgium and France, in Britain, Germany and Denmark, as well as in Spain; and they bear a close resemblance4o a type which is common among the Basques as well as all over the Iberian peninsula . This Neolithic race has consequently been nicknamed " Iberians," and it is now common to speak of the " Iberian " ancestry of the people of Britain, recognizing the racial characteristics of " Iberians " in the" small swarthy Welshman," the " small dark Highlander," and the " Black Celts to the west of the Shannon," as well as in the typical inhabitants of Aquitania and
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Brittany ? Later investigators went further . M. d'
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Arbois de Jubainville, for example (Les Premiers habitants de l'Europe, Paris, 1877), maintained that besides possessing Spain, Gaul, Italy and the British Isles, " Iberian " peoples penetrated into the
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Balkan peninsula, and occupied a
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part of
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northern Africa, Corsica and Sardinia; and it is now generally accepted that a race with fairly
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uniform characteristics was at one time in possession of the south of France (or at least of Aquitania), the whole of Spain from the Pyrenees to the straits, the Canary Islands (the Guanches) a part of northern Africa and Corsica . Whether this type is more conveniently designated by the word Iberian, or by some other name (" Eur-
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african," " Mediterranean," &c.) is a
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matter of
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comparative indifference, provided that there is no misunderstanding as to the steps by which the term Iberian attained its meaning in
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modern anthropology . ' W.
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van Eys, for example, " La Langue iberienne et la langue basque," in Revue de linguistique, goes against Humboldt; but Prince
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Napoleon and to a considerable extent A . Luchaire maintain the justice of his method and the value of many of his results . See Luchaire, Les Origins linguistiques de l'
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Aquitaine (Paris, 1877) . 2 Compare the Interesting resume of the whole question in Boyd Dawkins's Early Man in Britain (
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London, 1880) . Fortnightly Rev .

N.S. xvi . 323-337 (1874) ; W . T. van Eys, " La Langue iberienne et la langue basque," in Revue de linfuistique, PP- 3-15 (1874) ; W .

Webster, " The Basque and the Kett," in Journ . Anthrop . Inst. v . 5-29 (1875); F . M . Tubino, Los
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Aborigines ibericos o los Berberos en la peninsula (
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Madrid, 1876) ; A . Luchaire, Les Origines linguistiques de l'Aquitaine (Paris, 1877) ; W . Boyd Dawkins, Early Man in Britain (London, 188o) ; A . Castaing, " Les Origines des Aquitains," Mem .

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Soc . Eth . N.S . 1, pp . 183-328 (1884) ; G . C . C . Gerland, " Die Basken and die Iberer " in Grober, Grundriss d. roman . Philologie, 1, pp . 313-334 (1888) ; M . H. d'Arbois de Jubainville, Les Premiers habitants de l'Europe (1889–1894); J . F .

Blade, Les Vascons avant'leur etablissement en Novempopulanie,

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Agen . (1891); W . Webster, " The Celt-iberians," Academy xl . 268-269 (and consequent correspondence) (1891) ; J . Rhys, " The Inscriptions and Language of the Northern Picts," Pros .. Soc . Ant . Scot.
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xxvi . 263-351 (1892) ; F . Fita . " El Vascuence en Ias inscripciones ogmicas,' Bal . Real .

Acad . Hist . Madrid (

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June 1893), xxii . 579-587; G. v. d . Gahelentz, " Baskisch u . Berberisch," Sitz. k. preuss . Akad . Wiss . 593-613 (Berlin, 1893), Die Verwandtschaft der Baskischen mit der
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Berber-Sprache Nordafrikas nachgewiesen (Braunschweig, 1894) ; M . H. d'Arbois de Jubainville, ` Les Celtes en Espagne," Rev. celtique, xiv . 357-395 (1894) ; G . Buschan, " Uber die iberische Rasse," Ausland, lxvi .

342-344 (1894); F . Oloriz y

Aguilera, Distribucion geografica del indite cefalico en Espana (Madrid, 1894), " La Talla humana en Espana " in Discursos R . Acad . Medicina
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xxxvi . 389 (Madrid, 1896) ; R . Collignon, "La Race basque," L'Anthropologie, v . 276-287 (1894) ; T. de Aranzadi, " Le Peuple basque, resume " Bull. soc. d'anth . 510-520 (1894), " Consideraciones acerca de la raza basca " Euskel-Erria
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xxxv . 33, 65, 97, 129 (1896) ; H . Schuchhardt, Baskische Studien, i . " Uber die Enrstehung der Bezugsformen des baskischen Zeitworts "; Denkschriften der K . Akad. der Wiss., Phil.-Hist., Classe, Bd .

42, Abh . 3 . (Wien, 1893) Ph .

Salmon, Rev. mens . Ec. d'anthr. v . 155-181, 214-220 (1895) R . Collignon, Anthr. du S.-O. de la France," Mein . Soc . Anthr . § 3 . 1 . 4. p .

1-129 (1895),

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Ann. de geogr. v . 156-166 (1896), and with J . Deniker, " Les Maures de
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Senegal," L'Anthr. vii . 57-69 (1897) ; G . Herve, Rev. mens . Ec. d'anthr. vi . 97-109 (1896); G . Sergi, Africa: Anthropologia della stirpe Camitica (
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Turin, 1897), Arii ed Italici (1898); L. de Hoyos Sainz, " L'Anthropologie et la prehistorique en Espagne et en
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Portugal en 1897," L'Anthropologie, ix . 37-51 (1898) ; 1 . Deniker (see Collignon) " Les Races de 1'Europe," L'Anthropologie, ix . 113-133 (1898) ; M . Geze, " De quelques rapports entre les langues berbere et basque," Mein. soc. arch. du Midi de la France, xiii .

See also the

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works quoted in the footnotes; and the bibliography under BASQUES . (J . L .

End of Article: IBERIANS (Iberi, "I(3r7Aes)
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