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LAS MONEDAS CON NOMBRES DE ÉTNICOS DEL S. II Ac EN
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Archivo Español de Arqueología (E-Journal) Archivo Español de Arqueología 2008, 81, págs. 49-73 ISSN: 0066 6742 LAS MONEDAS CON NOMBRES DE ÉTNICOS DEL S. II a.C. EN EL NORDESTE PENINSULAR. ¿REFLEJO DE POSIBLES CIRCUNSCRIPCIONES?, ¿CIVITATES CON DOBLE NOMBRE? POR ARTURO PÉREZ ALMOGUERA Universidad de Lleida RESUMEN a través de la numismática, tan prolífica en la zona en esta etapa y, en concreto, la que en sus leyendas En el s. II a.C. se emiten en el nordeste de Hispania mo- nedas con el nombre de étnicos conocidos por las fuentes podemos reconocer como nombres de populi atesti- escritas. Se plantea el problema de si responden a una orga- guados por fuentes anteriores o posteriores, hecho casi nización territorial en circunscripciones que, curiosamente, insólito en otras zonas peninsulares. No pretendo ni corresponden con las regiones y principales populi que cita Plinio. Por otro lado estas cecas podrían corresponder a lo- mucho menos realizar un estudio numismático, sino calidades que pudieran tener otro nombre. basarme en los datos de los especialistas en ese campo con el fin de intentar pergeñar a través de sus datos SUMMARY la posible huella de una primera organización pro- piciada por los conquistadores. In the 2nd century BC coins were being minted in the Se ha incidido en muchas ocasiones que, en la His- northeast of Hispania with ethnic names known by written sources. This raises the problem of whether they are depend- pania republicana, las monedas con caracteres indí- ent upon a territorial organisation in districts that, interestingly, genas son el único documento propio que nos han would be the regiones and major populi mentioned by Pliny dejado las ciudades, o, si queremos, las sociedades in the 1st Century. -
AELAW Booklet / 3 Iberian Language / Writing / Epigraphy Noemí Moncunill Martí Javier Velaza Frías
This output received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 715626. AELAW Booklet / 3 Iberian Language / Writing / Epigraphy Noemí Moncunill Martí Javier Velaza Frías INTRODUCTION* The Iberian language is principally documented by more than 2000 inscriptions dated between the fifth century BCE and first century CE, drawn from a region of the Mediterranean belt that stretches from the Hérault river in French Languedoc to Almeria. It is currently an undeciphered language. We are able to read its texts fairly reliably and even analyse the briefest and most formulaic of them with some competence, but nonetheless are unable to understand its meaning. From a typological perspective, it is almost certainly an agglutinative language which may present ergative features. Its hypothetical relationships with other languages, ancient or modern, are, however, still unproven: although a relationship with Aquitanian or ancient Basque is not impossible, it is unclear whether this would be genetic or through contact. The study of the Iberian language, like that of the other Palaeohispanic languages, goes back to the works of the numismatists, from Antonio Agustín and Velázquez to Delgado and Zóbel de Zangróniz. They are responsible for identifying the script and deciphering the first signs. When Emil Hübner published the first corpus of pre-Roman Hispanian inscriptions at the end of the nineteenth century, however, the system of transcription was still very deficient and did not even serve to reveal that these inscriptions were in fact evidence of various languages that are very different to one another. -
AELAW Booklet / 3 Iberian Language / Writing / Epigraphy Noemí Moncunill Martí Javier Velaza Frías
Published by Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza: https://puz.unizar.es/1887-iberian-language-writing-epigraphy.html • Año de edición: 2017 • Nº páginas: 44 • Editorial: Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza • Colección: Aelaw Booklet • Idioma: Inglés • Dimensiones: 14 x 21 • Encuadernación: Grapado • ISBN: 978-84-16935-65-9 AELAW Booklet / 3 Iberian Language / Writing / Epigraphy Noemí Moncunill Martí Javier Velaza Frías INTRODUCTION* The Iberian language is principally documented by more than 2000 inscriptions dated between the fifth century BCE and first century CE, drawn from a region of the Mediterranean belt that stretches from the Hérault river in French Languedoc to Almeria. It is currently an undeciphered language. We are able to read its texts fairly reliaBly and even analyse the Briefest and most formulaic of them with some competence, But nonetheless are unable to understand its meaning. From a typological perspective, it is almost certainly an agglutinative language which may present ergative features. Its hypothetical relationships with other languages, ancient or modern, are, however, still unproven: although a relationship with Aquitanian or ancient Basque is not impossiBle, it is unclear whether this would be genetic or through contact. * This output received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No. 715626); and under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions programme (grant agreement MSCA-IF-2014, no 655938). **Unless otherwise indicated, all dates are BCE. The inscriptions are cited according to J. Untermann’s Monumenta Linguarum Hispanicarum, e.g. C.18.5 for inscriptions and A.78 for coin legends, or, if missing from that work, according to Hesperia. -
'Gaulish' DEKANTEM
Palaeohispanica 6, (2006), pp. 45-58 FROM LIGURY TO SPAIN: UNACCENTED *YO > (Y)E IN NARBONENSIC VOTIVES (‘GAULISH’ DEKANTEM), HISPANIC COINS (‘IBERIAN’ -(SK)EN) AND SOME THEONYMS1 Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel 0. A PRELIMINARY THEORETICAL REMARK. The number of varieties documented for a certain language is inversely proportional to the fixedness of a literary code within the the same linguistic tradition. In particular, the richness of diatopic varieties documented in the ancient Gaulish territories was emphasized by Whatmough in the middle of the past century, and the coexistence of various dialects of an ancient type of Celtic2 could also be proved for the Iberian Peninsula.3 Although much more work is to be done in order to identify all individual isoglosses and study their dispersion, we offer here some evidence regarding a specific one. 1. *yo > ye IN LIGURIAN ONOMASTICS. Already Giacomo Devoto and after him Michel Lejeune recognized the phonetic change *yo > ye as a recurrent isogloss in the Ligurian onomastic material,4 calling attention to - iugo Blustiemelo - fontem Lebriemelum, both in the Sententia Minuciorum. By applying the rule discovered by Devoto and Lejeune it has further been possible to understand more of the ethnics and place-names documented for ancient Ligury,5 such as: ———— 1 This is the revised version of the second part of a paper titled ‘Beyond the Italian Keltiké’ which was presented in Munich (30th of July 2004) on the occasion of the Symposium ‘Linguistic Frontiers of the Ancient Celts’ (= 4th workshop of the Aberystwyth project ‘Towards an Atlas of Celtic Place Names’). The first part of the same paper has been summarized in De Bernardo Stempel (2002/05), pp. -
Contestani, Lacetani, Cerretani)"
"Ciuitates y etnias epónimos en el área ibérica: las excepciones ( Contestani, Lacetani, Cerretani)" Arturo PÉREZ ALMOGUERA Universidad de Lleida Resumen Casi todos los pueblos del área ibérica cuyo nombre conocemos por los textos clásicos cuentan con una ciuitas epónima. Sólo para unos pocos no nos consta: intentamos buscar una explicación a este hecho aparentemente anómalo. Destacan entre los últimos contestani, lacetani y cerretani. Abstract AH the populi or gentes amongst the iberi, whose names we know thanks to classic texts, have an eponym capital with only a very few not on record. W e try to find an explanation for this apparently anomalous fact. The case of contestani, lacetani and cerretani are particularly outstanding. Palabras clave: Hispania prerromana. Iberos. Ciuitates. Populi. El testimonio de los textos clásicos y de la numismática Es ya admitido de forma pácticamente unánime que desde los siglos V/IV a.C., la ciudad, -la ciuitas-, es la organización política que priva entre los llamados pueblos ibéricos y, por fechas no muy lejanas, también entre sus vecinos más o menos inmediatos de tierra adentro Uacetanos y vascones por ej emplo). Cuando a partir de la segunda Guerra Púnica las fuentestextuales greco-latinas comienzan a ser más abundantes que para los periodos precedentes, -lamentablemente abundantes sólo en relación con éstos-, así parecen mostrárnoslo. Pero las fuentes Flor. !1., 11, 2000, pp. 195-213. 196 A. PÉREZ ALMOGUERA- CIVITATES Y ETNIAS ... escritas que narran acontecimientos relacionados con la conflagración romano cartaginesa, son insuficientes para aseverar que la ciudad fue un hecho generalizado entre los pueblos que habitaban las zonas oriental y meridional peninsulares donde se producían los acontecimientos bélicos, aunque al menos nos indican que no se trataba de algo exclusivo de colonias y factorías griegas y feno púnicas como no hace tantas décadas aún se sostenía. -
This Pdf of Your Paper in Celtic Art in Europe Belongs to the Publishers Oxbow Books and It Is Their Copyright
This pdf of your paper in Celtic Art in Europe belongs to the publishers Oxbow Books and it is their copyright. As author you are licenced to make up to 50 offprints from it, but beyond that you may not publish it on the World Wide Web until three years from publication (September 2017), unless the site is a limited access intranet (password protected). If you have queries about this please contact the editorial department at Oxbow Books ([email protected]). ii An offprint from CELTIC ART IN EUROPE MAKING CONNECTIONS Essays in honour of Vincent Megaw on his 80th birthday Edited by Christopher Gosden, Sally Crawford and Katharina Ulmschneider Hardcover Edition: ISBN 978-1-78297-655-4 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78297-656-1 © Oxbow Books 2014 Oxford & Philadelphia www.oxbowbooks.com Published in the United Kingdom in 2014 by OXBOW BOOKS 10 Hythe Bridge Street, Oxford OX1 2EW and in the United States by OXBOW BOOKS 908 Darby Road, Havertown, PA 19083 © Oxbow Books and the individual authors 2014 Hardcover Edition: ISBN 978-1-78297-655-4 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78297-656-1 A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Celtic art in Europe : making connections : essays in honour of Vincent Megaw on his 80th birthday / edited by Christopher Gosden, Sally Crawford and Katharina Ulmschneider. pages cm Contributions in English, French, and German. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-78297-655-4 1. Art, Celtic. I. Gosden, Chris, 1955- editor. II. -
José Ángel Montañés Periodista D’El País, Té, Comerç
HISTÒRIES IBÈRIQUES HISTÒRIES IBÈRIQUES AUSETANS Històries ibèriques Teniu a les mans uns textos El món iber no era una cultura homogènia, JULIÀ GUILLAMON que us traslladaran a la vida dels nostres avant- JOSÉ ÁNGEL estava constituïda per un munt de pobles EL CASOL DE PUIGCASTELLET FOLGUEROLES L’ESQUERDA RODA DE TER passats ara fa més de 2.300 anys. Descobrireu que es distribuïen al llarg del litoral des EL TURÓ DEL MONTGRÒS EL BRULL una civilització, la dels ibers, que va ser pro- MONTAÑÉS del Llenguadoc fins a Andalusia, cadascun amb les seves especificitats. Amb aques- CERETANS / LACETANS tagonista d’un dels fets que van canviar la his- Qui eren els laietans? tòria, les lluites entre cartaginesos i romans pel Com vivien? Què van fer? tes guies hem volgut explicar tot un seguit DANIEL ROMANÍ NS EL CASTELLOT BOLVIR control del comerç a la Mediterrània. Els ibers On? Quan? Per què? d’històries ibèriques dels pobles que habi- EL COGULLÓ SALLENT foren els seus aliats o enemics, però sempre Metal·lúrgia, ceràmica taven Catalunya, de la mà d’un seguit de ILERCAVONS una peça clau. Llegiu, llegiu… a torn, urbanisme, escriptura, periodistes de diversos mitjans de la nos- CARLES COLS agricultura, ramaderia, tra premsa escrita. Es pretén, amb aquesta A LA MOLETA DEL REMEI ALCANAR José Ángel Montañés periodista d’El País, té, comerç... Descobriu com era proposta, accedir a un públic extens que EL CASTELLET DE BANYOLES TIVISSA COLL DEL MORO GANDESA per la seva formació, una gran sensibilitat en- la regió catalana més poblada tingui curiositat per aquesta gran civi- SANT MIQUEL VINEBRE vers el patrimoni arqueològic. -
Barcelona Catalonia, Spain
CRUISIN’ WITH THE TIME TRAVELING GOURMET Barcelona Catalonia, Spain Temple de la Sagrada Familia (Church of the Holy Family) — Antoni Gaudí’s masterpiece of Modernism — is Barcelona’s most striking landmark. Begun in 1883, this UNESCO World Heritage site is still under construction. Cruise Globally…Sip Locally ravel through the Roman province of one could rest, shed the burdens of travel, and Hispania was always dusty, and very enjoy the freshest of seafood – especially the Toften dangerous. Nowhere was this legendary oysters – washed down with the hearty truer than the section of the Via Augusta that wines of the Laietanian hinterland. ran between Narbo (modern Narbonne) and This small settlement was Barkeno (spellings the old Phoenician seaport at Taraco (modern vary), a name possibly derived from that of the Tarragona). Here the road swung inland through Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca, Hannibal’s the lands of the Laietani clinging to the hills father, who had occupied the area briefly toward and avoiding marshy, and potentially malarial, the end of the 3rd century BC. To the Romans, stretches along the coast. But there was a bright however, it was the Colonia Faventia Julia spot: a small garrison on Monte Tabor, the low Augustus, adopted son of Julius Caesar and first Roman Emperor (27 BC-AD 14), was deified by the Senate after his Augusta Pia Barcino, fortunately shortened to extension of the waterless Montjuïc massif. Here death and worshipped as such in the forum at Barcino. Barcino by the Emperor Augustus c. AD 15. 4 w w w . TimeTravelingGourmet . c o m 1 Barcino was good to Rome, sending gold, Eventually Charlemagne’s son, Louis the Pius, silver, wine, grain and fish sauce back to the reclaimed most of the land north of the Ebro capital. -
4Th ENCUENTRO PENINSULAR DE NUMISMÁTICA ANTIGUA (EPNA)
4th ENCUENTRO PENINSULAR DE NUMISMÁTICA ANTIGUA (EPNA) Barter, Money and Coinage in the Ancient Mediterranean (10th –1st centuries BC) Abstracts (In order of contribution) Madrid, 15 – 17 de marzo de 2010 Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, CSIC c/ Albasanz 26-28, 28037 Madrid 15 de marzo, 9.45-10. 30 Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Ponderals from the Western Peninsula: New Data and Unanswered Questions RAQUEL VILAÇA Universidade de Coimbra The text presents and analyses various metal objects thought to be ponderals from a number of sites from the Western Peninsula from the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age. During excavations undertaken by the author in settlements in the Beira Interior (centre of Portugal), namely Morereirinho and Monte de Trigo (Idanha-a-Nova, Castelo Branco) occupied in the transition period between the 2nd and the 1st millennium BC, small bronze objects came to light that were taken to be ponderals. The search for comparable objects and the importance of this subject led to a preliminary analysis of the set, presented in 2003, a study which it is now our intention to expand and complete. The objects of study are twenty-six items from different sites in Portugal, all of them south of the River Douro. Some of them are of minor interest as they were isolated finds, but others, such as those from Monte de Trigo and Pragança (Cadaval, Estremadura) are notable for their number and internal consistency, making up sets of true ponderals. The aim of this paper is to explain the point we have reached in our study, including new contributions, among others an important set of ponderals from Baleizão (Beja, Alentejo) which is being studied by the author, and by Alicia Perea and Barbara Ambruster. -
A Central Italian Coin with Dionysus/Panther Types And
SAGVNTVM (P.L.A.V.) 46, 2014: 159 - 180 ISSN: 0210-3729 ISSN online: 2174-517X DOI: 10.7203/SAGVNTVM.46.2646 CLIVE STANNARD, ALEJANDRO G. SINNER A CENTRAL ITALIAN COIN WITH DIONYSUS/PANTHER TYPES, AND CONTACTS BETWEEN CENTRAL ITALY AND SPAIN, ND ST 1 IN THE 2 AND 1 CENTURIES BC Key words UNA MONEDA CENTRO ITÁLICA CON LOS TIPOS DIONIOSIO/PANTERA, Y CONTACTOS ENTRE ITALIA CENTRAL E HISPANIA DURANTE LOS SS. II-I. A.C. ensamblaje centro-itálico, las cerámicas itálicas de importación en la costa catalana y en la mina de La Loba, y algunos de los principales Palabras clave - Texto recibido el 24/07/2013 Texto aceptado el 14/02/2014 159 CLIVE STANNARD, ALEJANDRO G. SINNER - - rived overland. - c. 200 and 75, in order to - - - - - - - Laietani 2nd- 160 A CENTRAL ITALIAN COIN WITH DIONYSUS/PANTHER TYPES, AND CONTACTS BETWEEN CENTRAL ITALY AND SPAIN, IN THE 2ND AND 1ST CENTURIES BC THE COINS 4. Æ 18 mm 6 1909.5-4.2. - Rev 5. Æ 21 mm 9 8,64 g Madrid. 6. Æ 11 mm 4 1,62 g Liri 45.439. - - - - Catalonia. Obv Rev 1. Æ 17 mm 0 3,30g Cabrera de Mar inv. 1400- 1 / 1178-1. - 2. Æ 18 mm 6 old excavations at Emporion. 3. Æ 19 mm 8 provenance. Rev 161 CLIVE STANNARD, ALEJANDRO G. SINNER - quadrans, L·P·D·A·P·, RRCc. 91. Fig 3, 8 is a Roman semis, RRCc 162 A CENTRAL ITALIAN COIN WITH DIONYSUS/PANTHER TYPES, AND CONTACTS BETWEEN CENTRAL ITALY AND SPAIN, IN THE 2ND AND 1ST CENTURIES BC as on post-Lex Papiria assesc. -
La Problemática De Las Fuentes Clásicas. Reflexiones Y Planteamientos Del Caso Ausetano
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Repositori Institucional de la Universitat Jaume I QUAD. PREH. ARQ. CAST. 34, 2016 La problemática de las fuentes clásicas. Reflexiones y planteamientos del caso Ausetano Carles Padrós Gómez* Resumen Este trabajo pretende definir la existencia de pautas diferenciadoras entre la Ausetania (Barcelona) y la Ositania (Teruel), considerando el contraste de datos arqueológicos con las propias fuentes escritas así como los trabajos pre- cedentes, distinguiendo las que hacen referencia a la zona pre-pirenaica catalana o al bajo Ebro. Además este estudio propone la definición de un posible marco geográfico para la Ausetania, planteando una hipótesis de ubicación para este pueblo del noreste peninsular. Palabras clave: Ausetanos, Ositanos, Ausetanos del Ebro, cultura ibérica, ocupación del territorio. Abstract This paper deals with the differentiation between the Ausetania (Barcelona) and the Ositania (Teruel), by confron- ting the archaeological evidence coming from references related either to the Catalan pre-Pyrenean territory or to the Lower Ebro area. Likewise, a possible geographical framework for Ausetania is proposed, putting forward a hypothesis on the settling pattern of this northeastern Iberian people. Keywords: Ausetanians, Osetanians, Ausetanians from the Ebro, Iberian culture, settling. INTRODUCCIÓN1 Benavente et al., 2003; Moret et al., 2006), y que aquí se pretende trabajar desde una óptica territo- Tratar el tema de los Ausetanos quiere decir rial concreta, la del área de Barcelona. La historio- hacer referencia a una duplicidad de este etnónimo grafía tradicional había considerado a lo largo de (Jacob, 1987-1988: 135-147), entre los Ausetanos los años un pueblo Ausetano situado a grandes de la comarca de Osona (Barcelona) y los Auseta- rasgos, en el área de Osona. -
Issue 4 - January 2021
New Classicists Selected papers from Issue 4 - January 2021 0 ISSN 2732-4168 Funded by the Department of Classics Table of Contents Foreword from conference organisers……………………….……………………... 2 Mitigating Pollution in Ancient Rome’s Green Spaces Dr Andrew Fox - University of Nottingham……………………………….……………….…3 Rus ‘Becomes’ Urbs: Hard and Soft Landscape Elements in the Gardens of Pompeii Jessica Venner - University of Birmingham………………………………………...………13 ‘Liquid spaces’ in NE Hispania Citerior during the Mid-Republican period: Introducing a new reality Gerard R.Ventós & Gerard Cabezas-Guzmán - Universitat de Girona……….…………41 Sparta and Athens: A monumental confrontation. Matt Thompson - University of Nottingham……………….……………………….………67 Revisiting the Anonymous 'Pilgrim' from Bordeaux: Defining Characteristics of Christian Sacred Space and Travel in Early Fourth Century Jerusalem Natalie Smith - University of Edinburgh……………….………………….….……………90 1 Foreword The idea for a conference that brought together scholars interested in the study of space came from conversations enjoyed at the Arts and Humanities Research Council’s (AHRC) Midlands3Cities [now Midlands4Cities (M4C)] introductory trip to the University of Leicester in 2018. There, the editors of this issue, Ben Salisbury (University of Birmingham) and Ben White (University of Nottingham), met for the first time Chris Rouse (University of Birmingham) and Curtis Lisle (University of Birmingham). Our research foci held several themes in common, but most striking was the prevalence of an appreciation for the study of space by whatever means. Over the weeks and months that followed this initial meeting, in which time we were joined by Liam McLeod (University of Birmingham) and Tom Quigley (University of Manchester), we went about putting into writing some of the central themes of spatial studies in which we were interested.