Berones

Main language areas, peoples and tribes in Iberian Peninsula c. 300 BC., according to epigraphy and toponymy, based on the map by Luís Fraga.
The extent of the Berones people is shown in green. In other colours, the extent of the Celtiberians.

The Berones were a pre-Roman Celtiberian people of ancient Spain who lived north of the Celtiberians and close to the Cantabrian Conisci[1] in the middle Ebro region between the Tirón and Alhama rivers.

Origins

The ancestors of the Berones were Celts[2] who migrated from Gaul to the Iberia around the 4th century BC[3][4] to settle in La Rioja and the southern parts of the Soria, Alava and Navarra provinces.

Culture

A stock-raising people that practiced transhumance, their capital was Varia or Vareia (Custodia de Viana; Celtiberian-type mint: Uaracos Auta?), situated near Logroño at the middle Ebro in La Rioja and controlled the towns of Libia (Herramélluri or LeivaLa Rioja), Tritium Megallum (Tricio), Bilibium (Bilibio, near Conchas de Haro) and Contrebia Leukade (Aguillar del Rio Alhama – La Rioja).

History

Allies of the Autrigones, the Berones appear to have kept themselves out of the Celtiberian confederacy throughout the 3rd-2nd centuries BC but later came under pressure of the Vascones. Their earliest contact with Rome might have occurred during the early 2nd century BC, when they allegedly fought as allies of the Celtiberians at the battle of Calagurris in 186 BC,[5] being defeated by Lucius Manlius Adicinius. According to a Roman ephigraphic source, the Ascoli-Picenum bronze (now at the Museo Capitolino, Rome),[6] Beronian mercenary cavalrymen later entered Roman service at the Social War (91–88 BC), fighting alongside other Spaniards in the Turma Saluitana[7] as auxiliary cavalry in Italy though they subsequently aided their Autrigones’ allies in the defence of their respective territories in northern Celtiberia against Sertorius’ invasion attempt in 76 BC.[8]

See also

Notes

  1. Strabo, Geographikon, III, 4, 12.
  2. Strabo, Geographikon, III, 4, 5.
  3. Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia, III, 29.
  4. Strabo, Geographikon, III, 4, 12.
  5. Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, 37: 46, 7-8.
  6. Criniti, N., L'Epigrape di Asculum di Gn. Pompeo Strabone, Milan 1970.
  7. Fatás-Cabeza, G., La Sedetania - Las Tierras Zaragozanas hasta la fundación de Caesaraugusta, Zaragoza 1973a, pp.8.
  8. Livy, Frag. Lib., 91.

References

Further reading

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