Hispania was the Roman name for the Iberian Peninsula
.Under the
Republic, Hispania was divided into two
provinces:
Hispania Citeriorand
Hispania Ulterior. During the
Principate, Hispania Ulterior was divided into
two new provinces,
Baeticaand
Lusitania, while Hispania Citerior was renamed
Tarraconensis.
Subsequently, the
western part of Tarraconensis was split off, first as Hispania
Nova, later renamed Callaecia (or Gallaecia, whence modern Galicia
).From Diocletian's Tetrarchy (AD 284) onwards, the south of remaining
Tarraconensis was again split off as Carthaginensis, and probably
then too the Balearic
Islands
and all the resulting provinces formed one civil diocese under the vicarius for the Hispaniae (that is, the
Celtic provinces).
Name
The origin of the word
Hispaniais much disputed and the
evidence for the various speculations are based merely upon what
are at best mere resemblances (likely to be accidental) and the
sketchiest of supporting evidence.
One theory holds it to be of Punic
derivation, from the Phoenician
language of colonizing Carthage
.It
may derive from the Canaanite Hebrew אי-שפניא (i-shfania) meaning
"Island of the
Hyrax" or "island of the hare"
or "island of the rabbit".
Another theory, proposed by the etymologist
Eric Partridge in his work Origins, is that it is of
Iberian derivation and that it is
to be found in the pre-Roman name for Seville
, Hispalis,
which strongly hints at an ancient name for the country of
*Hispa, an Iberian or
Celtic root whose meaning is now
lost.It may alternatively derive from
Heliopolis(Greek for "city of the sun"). Occasionally it
was called
Hesperia, the western land, by Roman writers,
or
Hesperia ultima.Another theory derives the name from
Ezpanna, the
Basqueword for
"border" or "edge", thus meaning the farthest area or place.
Isidore of Sevilla considered Hispania derived from Hispalis.
Substituting "Spanish" for
Hispanicusor "Hispanic", or
"Spain" for
Hispania, though sometimes done by historians,
is anachronistic and can be misleading, since the borders of modern
Spain do not coincide with those of the
Roman provinceof Hispania, or of the
Visigothic Kingdomwhich succeeded it.
Although
the Latin term Hispania was
often used during Antiquity and
the High Middle Ages as a geographical name for the Iberian
Peninsula
, its
cognates "Spain" and "Spanish" have become
increasingly associated with the Kingdom of Spain
alone, after
its formation in the 15th century under the Catholic Kings.
Pre-Roman history
The Iberian peninsula has long been inhabited, first by
early hominidssuch as
Homo erectus,
Homo heidelbergensisand
Homo antecessor. In the
Paleolithicperiod, the
Neanderthalsentered Iberia and eventually took
refuge from the advancing migrations of
modern
humans. In the
40th millennium
BC, during the
Upper
Paleolithicand the
last ice age,
the first large settlement of
Europeby modern
humans occurred. These were
nomadichunter-gathereresoriginating on the
steppesof
Central Asia.
When the
last Ice Age reached its maximum extent,
during the 30th millennium BC,
these modern humans took refuge in Southern Europe, namely in Iberia
, after
retreating through Southern
France.In the millennia that followed, the
Neanderthals became extinct and local modern human cultures
thrived, producing pre-historic art
such as that found in L'Arbreda Cave
and in the Côa Valley
.
In the
Mesolithicperiod, beginning in the
10th millennium BC, the
Allerød Oscillationoccurred. This
was an interstadial
deglaciationthat
lessened the harsh conditions of the
Ice
Age.
The populations sheltered in Iberia
(descendants
of the Cro-Magnon) migrated and
recolonized all of Western
Europe.In this period one finds the Azilian culture in Southern France and Northern
Iberia
(to the mouth of the Douro
river), as
well as the Muge Culture in the
Tagus
valley.
The
Neolithicbrought changes to the human
landscape of Iberia (from the
5th
millennium BConwards), with the development of
agricultureand the beginning of the
European Megalith Culture.
This spread to most
of Europe and had one of its oldest and main
centres in the territory of modern Portugal
, as well as the Chalcolithic and Beaker cultures.
During the
1st millennium BC, in
the
Bronze Age, the first wave of
migrations into Iberia of speakers of
Indo-European languagesoccurred.
These were later (
7thand
5thCenturies BC) followed by others that can
be identified as
Celts.
Eventually urban
cultures developed in southern Iberia, such as Tartessos, influenced by the Phoenician
colonization of coastal Mediterranean
Iberia, with strong competition from the Greek colonization.These two processes
defined Iberia's cultural landscape - Mediterranean towards the
southeast and a Continental in the northwest.
Carthaginian Hispania

Carthaginian influence sphere before
the First Punic War.
After its
defeat by the Romans in the First Punic War (264 BC-241 BC), Carthage
compensated for its loss of Sicily by rebuilding a commercial empire in
Hispania.
The major part of the
Punic Wars, fought
between the Punic Carthaginians and the Romans, was fought on the
Iberian Peninsula.
Carthage gave control of the Iberian
Peninsula and much of its empire to Rome in 201 BC as part of the
peace treaty after its defeat in the Second Punic War, and Rome completed its
replacement of Carthage as the dominant power in the Mediterranean
area.By then the Romans had adopted the
Carthaginian name, romanized first as
Ispania. The term
later received an
H, much like what happened with
Hibernia, and was pluralized as
Hispaniae, as had been done with the
Three
Gauls.
Roman Hispania

Roman conquest of Hispania

Hispania under Caesar Augustus rule
after the Cantabrian Wars 29 BC
Roman
armies invaded Hispania in 218 BC and used it as a training ground
for officers and as a proving ground for tactics during campaigns
against the Carthaginians
, the Iberians, the Lusitanians, the Gallaecians and other Celts.It was not until 19 BC that the Roman
emperor
Augustus(r. 27 BC-
AD
14) was able to complete the conquest (see
Cantabrian Wars). Until then, much of
Hispania remained autonomous.
Romanizationproceeded
quickly after the time of
Augustusand
Hispania was divided into three separately governed provinces (nine
provinces by the 4th century). More importantly, Hispania was for
500 years part of a cosmopolitan world empire bound together by
law, language, and the
Roman road. But
the impact of Hispania in the newcomers was also big. Caesar wrote
on the Civil Wars that the soldiers from the Second Legion had
become Hispanicized and regarded themselves as
hispanicus.
Many of the peninsula's population were admitted into the Roman
aristocratic class and they participated in governing Hispania and
the Roman empire, although there was a native aristocracy class who
ruled each local tribe. The
latifundia(sing.,
latifundium),
large estates controlled by the aristocracy, were superimposed on
the existing Iberian landholding system.
The
Romans improved existing cities, such as Lisbon
(Olissipo) and Tarragona
(Tarraco), established Zaragoza
(Caesaraugusta), Mérida
(Augusta Emerita), and Valencia
(Valentia), and provided amenities
throughout the empire.The peninsula's economy expanded under
Roman tutelage. Hispania served as a granary and a major source of
metals for the Roman market, and its harbors exported
gold,
tin,
silver,
lead,
wool,
wheat,
olive oil,
wine,
fish, and
garum. Agricultural
production increased with the introduction of irrigation projects,
some of which remain in use today. The Romanized Iberian
populations and the Iberian-born descendants of Roman soldiers and
colonists had all achieved the status of full Roman citizenship by
the end of the 1st century. The emperors
Trajan(r. 98-117),
Hadrian(r.
117-38), and
Marcus Aurelius(r.
161-80) were born in Hispania. The Iberian denarii, also called
argentum oscenseby Roman soldiers, circulated until the
1st century BC, after which it was replaced by Roman coins.
Hispania was separated into two provinces (in 197 BC), each ruled
by a
praetor:
Hispania Citerior("Nearer Hispania")
and
Hispania
Ulterior("Farther Hispania"). The long wars of conquest
lasted two centuries, and only by the time of
Augustusdid
Romemanaged
to control Hispania Ulterior. Hispania was divided into three
provinces in the 1st century BC.
In the 4th century,
Latinius
Pacatus Drepanius, a Gallic rhetorician, dedicated part of his
work to the depiction of the geography, climate, inhabitants,
soldiers, and so forth of the peninsula, writing with praise and
admiration:
- This Hispania produces tough soldiers, very skilled captains,
prolific speakers, luminous bards. It is a mother of judges and
princes; it has given Trajan, Hadrian, and Theodosius
to the Empire.
With
time, the name Hispania was used to describe the collective names
of the Iberian Peninsula kingdoms of the Middle Ages, which came to
designate all of the Iberian Peninsula plus the Balearic
Islands
.
The Hispaniae

Roman Hispania under Diocletian AD
293
During the first stages of Romanization, the peninsula was divided
in two by the Romans for administrative purposes. The closest one
to Rome was called
Citeriorand the more remote one
Ulterior.
The frontier between both was a sinuous line
which ran from Cartago Nova (now Cartagena
) to the Cantabrian Sea
.
Hispania
Ulterior comprised what are now Andalusia
, Portugal
, Extremadura
, León
, a great portion of the former Castilla la Vieja, Galicia
, Asturias
, Cantabria
, and the Basque
Country
.
Hispania
Citerior comprised the eastern part of former Castilla la
Vieja, and what are now Aragon
, Valencia
, Catalonia
, and a major part of former Castilla la Nueva.
In the
year BC 27 the general and politician Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa divided
Hispania into three parts, namely dividing Hispania Ulterior into
Baetica (basically Andalusia
) and Lusitania (including
Gallaecia and Asturias
) and attaching Cantabria
and the Basque Country to
Hispania Citerior.
The emperor
Augustusin that same year
returned to make a new division leaving the provinces as follows:
By the 3rd century the emperor
Caracallamade a new
division which lasted only a short time. He split Hispania Citerior
again into two parts, creating the new provinces
Provincia
Hispania Nova Citeriorand
Asturiae-Calleciae. In the
year 238 the unified province
Tarraconensisor
Hispania
Citeriorwas re-established.
In the third century, under the Soldier Emperors, Hispania Nova
(the northwestern corner of Spain) was split off from
Tarraconensis, as a small province but the home of the only
permanent legion is Hispania,
Legio VII
Gemina.Beginning with Diocletian's
Tetrarchyreform in AD 293, the new
dioecesis Hispaniaebecame one of
the four
dioceses—governed by a
vicarius—of the
praetorian prefecture of
Gaul(also comprising the provinces of
Gaul,
Germaniaand
Britannia), after the abolition of the
imperial Tetrarchs under the Western Emperor (in Rome itself, later
Ravenna).
The diocese, with capital at Emerita Augusta
(modern Mérida
), comprised the five peninsular Iberian provinces
(Baetica, Gallaecia and Lusitania, each under a governor styled
consularis; and Carthaginiensis,
Tarraconensis, each under a praeses), the Insulae Baleares
and the North African province of Mauretania Tingitana.
Christianitywas introduced into
Hispania in the first century and it became popular in the cities
in the second century. Little headway was made in the countryside,
however, until the late fourth century, by which time Christianity
was the official religion of the Roman Empire. Some
heretical sectsemerged in Hispania, most
notably
Priscillianism, but overall
the local bishops remained subordinate to the
Pope. Bishops who had official civil as well
as ecclesiastical status in the late empire continued to exercise
their authority to maintain order when civil governments broke down
there in the fifth century. The Council of Bishops became an
important instrument of stability during the ascendancy of the
Visigoths.
Rome continued to dominate the area until the
collapse of the Empire in the
west. The Iberian population turned to the Visigoths, a
Germanic people, for protection when
Rome could no longer spare
legionsto
guard the territory.
Byzantine reconquest
A century later, taking advantage of a struggle for the throne
between the Visigothic kings
Agilaand
Athanagild, the
eastern emperorJustinian Isent an army under the orders of
Liberiusto take back
the peninsula from the Visigoths. This short-lived reconquest
covered only a small strip of land along the Mediterranean coast
roughly corresponding to the ancient province of
Baetica, known as
Spania.
Germanic Hispania

Iberian Peninsula (AD 530-AD
570)

The Iberian Peninsula in the year
560AD
Rome's
loss of jurisdiction in Hispania began in 409 , when the Germanic, Buri ,Suevi and
Vandals, together with the Sarmatian Alans crossed the
Rhine
and ravaged Gaul until the
Visigoths drove them into Iberia that same year.The Suevi established
a kingdom in Gallaecia in what is today modern Galicia
and northern
Portugal
.The Alans' allies, the
HasdingiVandals, also established a kingdom in
another part of Gallaecia.
The Alans established a
kingdom in Lusitania - modern Alentejo and Algarve, in
Portugal
.The
SilingiVandals
briefly occupied parts of South Iberia.
Because large parts of Hispania were outside his control, the
western Roman emperor,
Honorius(r. 395-423), commissioned his
sister,
Galla Placidia, and her
husband
Athaulf, the
Visigothicking, to restore order in the Iberian
Peninsula. Honorius gave them the rights to settle in and to govern
the area in return for defending it.
The highly romanized Visigoths entered Hispania in 415 and managed
to compel the Vandals and
Alansto sail for
North Africa in 429.
In 484 the Visigoths established Toledo
as the capital of their monarchy.Successive
Visigothic kings ruled Hispania as patricians who held imperial
commissions to govern in the name of the Roman emperor. In 585 the
Visigoths conquered the Suevi kingdom, thus controlling almost all
Hispania.
Under the Visigoths, lay culture was not as highly developed as it
had been under the Romans, and the task of maintaining formal
education and government shifted decisively to the church because
its Roman clergy alone were qualified to manage higher
administration. As elsewhere in early medieval Europe, the church
in Hispania stood as society's most cohesive institution.
The
Visigoths also are responsible for the introduction of mainstream
Christianity to the Iberian peninsular; the earliest representation
of Christ in Spanish religious art can be
found in a Visigothic hermitage, Santa Maria de Lara
.It also embodied the continuity of Roman
order. In addition, Romans continued to run the civil
administration and
Latincontinued to be the
language of government and of commerce.
Religion was the most persistent source of friction between the
Roman Catholic Romans and their
ArianVisigothic overlords, whom the former
considered heretical. At times this tension invited open rebellion,
and restive factions within the Visigothic aristocracy exploited it
to weaken the monarchy. In 589,
Recared, a
Visigothic ruler, renounced his
Arianismbefore the Council of Bishops at Toledo and
accepted
Catholicism, thus assuring an
alliance between the Visigothic
monarchyand
the Romans. This alliance would not mark the last time in the
history of the peninsula that political unity would be sought
through religious unity.
Court
ceremonials - from Constantinople
- that proclaimed the imperial sovereignty and
unity of the Visigothic state were introduced at
Toledo.Still, civil war, royal assassinations, and
usurpation were commonplace, and warlords and great landholders
assumed wide discretionary powers. Bloody family feuds went
unchecked. The Visigoths had acquired and cultivated the apparatus
of the Roman state but not the ability to make it operate to their
advantage. In the absence of a well-defined hereditary system of
succession to the throne, rival factions encouraged foreign
intervention by the
Greeks, the
Franks, and finally the
Muslimsin internal disputes and in royal
elections.
According to
Isidore of Seville,
it is with the
Visigothicdomination of the
zone that the idea of a peninsular unity is sought after, and the
phrase
Mother Hispaniais first spoken. Up to that date,
Hispaniadesignated all of the peninsula's lands. In
Historia Gothorum, the
Visigoth
Suinthilaappears as the first
monarchwhere Hispania is dealt with as a
Gothnation.
Moorish Hispania

The Reconquista, 790-1300.
The North
African Muslim, referred to as Moorish, conquest of Hispania (اسبانيا, Arabic: Isbānīya), which they called
Al-Andalus
(الأندلس), gave a new development,
both in form and meaning, to the term "Hispania".The
different chronicles and documents of the high
Middle Agesdesignate as
Spania,
Españaor
Espanhaonly the
Muslim-dominated territory.
King Alfonso I of Aragon (1104-1134) says in
his documents that "he reigns over Pamplona
, Aragon
, Sobrarbe y Ribagorza
", and that when in 1126 he made an expedition to
Málaga
he "went to
the lands of España".
But by
the last years of the 12th century the whole Iberian Peninsula,
whether Muslim or Christian, became known as "Spain"
(España, Espanya or Espanha) and the
denomination "the Five Kingdoms of Spain" became used to refer to
the Muslim Kingdom of Granada, and the Christian Kingdom of
Castile and León
, Kingdom of
Navarre, Kingdom of
Portugal
and Crown of
Aragon.
The process of the
Reconquista(Christian Reconquest of
Hispania from the Moors), produced the emergence of several
Christian kingdoms, as the ones mentioned above. Some of these
eventually merged into a single country.
In fact, with the
union of Castile and Aragon
in 1479 (and
especially with the incorporation of Navarre
in 1512), the word "Spain" (España in
Spanish, Espanha in
Portuguese), began being used
only to refer to the new kingdom and not to the whole of the
Iberian peninsula, now composed of two independent countries,
Portugal
and Spain
.
The economy of Hispania
Before
the Punic Wars, Hispania was a land with much untapped mineral and
agricultural wealth, limited by the primitive subsistence economies
of her native peoples outside of a few trading ports along the
coast of the Mediterranean Sea
.Occupations by the Carthaginians and then by
the Romans for her abundant
silverdeposits
developed Hispania into a thriving multifaceted economy. Besides
several metals, olives, salted fish, and wines were some of the
goods produced in Hispania and traded throughout the Empire.
Sources and references
Modern sources in Portuguese and Spanish
- Altamira y Crevea, Rafael Historia de España y de la
civilización española. Tomo I. Barcelona, 1900. Altamira was a
professor at the University of Oviedo, a member of the Royal
Academy of History, of the Geographic Society of Lisbon and
of the Instituto de Coimbra. (In Spanish.)
- Aznar, José Camón, Las artes y los pueblos de la
España primitiva. Editorial Espasa Calpe, S.A. Madrid, 1954.
Camón was a professor at the University of Madrid. (In
Spanish.)
- Bosch Gimpera, Pedro; Aguado Bleye, Pedro; and Ferrandis,
José. Historia de España. España romana, I,
created under the direction of Ramón Menéndez Pidal. Editorial
Espasa-Calpe S.A., Madrid 1935. (In Spanish.)
- García y Bellido, Antonio, España y los españoles
hace dos mil años (según la Geografía de Estrabón). Colección
Austral de Espasa Calpe S.A., Madrid 1945 (first edition
8-XI-1945). García y Bellido was an archeologist and a professor at
the University of Madrid. (In Spanish.)
- Mattoso, José (dir.), História de Portugal.
Primeiro Volume: Antes de Portugal, Lisboa, Círculo de
Leitores, 1992. (in Portuguese)
- Melón, Amando, Geografía histórica española
Editorial Volvntad, S.A., Tomo primero, Vol. I-Serie E. Madrid
1928. Melón was a member of the Royal Geographical Society of
Madrid and a professor of geography at the Universities of
Valladolid and Madrid. (In Spanish.)
- Pellón, José R., Diccionario Espasa Íberos.
Espasa Calpe S.A. Madrid 2001. (In Spanish.)
- Urbieto Arteta, Antonio, Historia ilustrada de
España, Volumen II. Editorial Debate, Madrid 1994. (In
Spanish.)
- El Housin Helal Ouriachen, 2009, La ciudad bética
durante la Antigüedad Tardía. Persistencias y mutaciones locales en
relación con la realidad urbana del Mediterraneo y del Atlántico,
Tesis doctoral, Universidad de Granada, Granada.
Other modern sources
- Westermann Grosser Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in
German)
- Hispania
Classical sources
- The notitia dignitatum
(circa AD 400; one edition online is
http://www.intratext.com/IXT/LAT0212/_PJ.HTM#1WJ)
Other classical sources have been accessed second-hand (see
references above):
- Strabo, Geographiká.
Book III, Iberia, written between the years 29 and 7 BC
and touched up in AD 18. The most prestigious and
widely used edition is Karl
Müller's, published in Paris at the end of the 19th century,
one volume, with 2 columns, Greek and
Latin. The most reputed French translation is Tardieu, París 1886.
The most reputed English
translation (with Greek text) is H.L. Jones, vol. I-VIII, London
1917ff., ND London 1931ff.
- Ptolemy (Greek astronomer of the 2nd century)
Geographiké Hyphaégesis, geographic
guidebook.
- Pacatus (Gallic rhetorician) directed a
panegyric on Hispania to the emperor
Theodosius I in 389, which he read to
the Senate.
- Paulus Orosius (390–418)
historian, follower of Saint
Augustine and author of Historiae adversus paganos,
the first Christian universal
history, and of Hispania Universa, an historical guide
translated into Anglo-Saxon by
Alfred the Great and into Arabic by Abd-ar-Rahman III.
- Lucius Anneus Florus
(between 1st and 2nd century). Compendium of Roman History
and Epitome of the History of Titus Livius (Livy). The
relevant texts of Livy have been lost, but we
can read them via Florus.
- Trogus Pompeius. Believed
to be a Gaul with Roman citizenship.
Historia universal written in Latin in the times of
Augustus Caesar.
- Titus Livius (Livy) (59 BC–17 BC).
Ab urbe condita, Book CXLII of Livy's surviving
work.
Neo-modern references
- E. Hübner, La Arqueologia de España
(Barcelona, 1888)
- E. S. Bouchier, Spain under the Roman Empire
(Oxford, 1914)
See also
References
External links