Filters:
Group: Clazomenae, City-State of
People: Roxelana
Topic: Hispania, Roman conquest of
Location: Riga Gorod Riga Latvia

Hispania, Roman conquest of

Years: 218BCE - 19BCE

The Roman conquest of Hispania is a historical period that begins with the Roman landing at Empúries in 218 BCE and ends with the Roman conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, then Hispania, by Caesar Augustus after the Cantabrian wars in 19 BCE.

Long before the First Punic War, between the eighth and seventh centuries BCE, the Phoenicians (and later the Carthaginians) had already appeared in the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula as well as in the East, to the south of the Ebro.

Their numerous commercial settlements based throughout these coastal strips provided an outlet into Mediterranean commerce for minerals and other resources of pre-Roman Iberia.

These installations consisting of little more than warehouses and wharves allowed not only exports, but also the introduction to the Peninsula of products manufactured in the Eastern Mediterranean.

This had the indirect effect of the native peninsular cultures adopting certain Eastern characteristics.During the seventh century BCE, the Greeks established their first colonies on the northern Mediterranean coast of the peninsula.

Setting off from Massalia (Marseille) they founded the cities of Emporion (Ampurias) and Rhode (Roses), although at the time they had already spread throughout the coastal commercial centers of the region without establishing a permanent presence.

Part of this Greek commerce was nevertheless carried out by Phoenician shipping; Phoenician trade in the peninsula included articles both coming from and heading to Greece.

As a commercial power of the Western Mediterranean, Carthage expanded its interests to the island of Sicily and the south of Italy.

This growing influence over the region soon proved to be an annoyance for Rome.

This conflict of commercial interests ultimately led to the Punic Wars of which the First Punic War ended in an unstable armistice.

The mutual hostility led to the Second Punic War, which, after twelve years of conflict, resulted in effective Roman domination of the south and east of the Iberian Peninsula.

Later, a decisive defeat for Carthage at Zama would wipe that city from the historical scene.Despite having vanquished their rival Mediterranean power, the Romans still take another two centuries to bring the entire Iberian Peninsula under their control through an expansionist policy that earns the enmity of practically all of the tribes of the interior.

The abuses to which these people are submitted is considered to be responsible for the strong anti-Roman sentiment throughout these nations.

After years of bloody conflict, the indigenous people of Hispania are finally crushed by the military and cultural heel of Rome, thus disappearing from the face of history.

However, in the Roman Empire people keep their ancestral identifications but are loyal to the Roman state, so alhough the language becomes Latin, the 'gens' continue being local.

“The longer you can look back, the farther you can look forward...This is not a philosophical or political argument—any oculist will tell you this is true. The wider the span, the longer the continuity, the greater is the sense of duty in individual men and women, each contributing their brief life's work to the preservation..."

― Winston S. Churchill, Speech (March 2, 1944)