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The Varduli were a pre- tribeJohn James Van Nostrand Jr, "The reorganization of Spain by Augustus" University of California Publications in History 4, 1916:122ff settled in the north of the Iberian Peninsula, in what today is the western region of the Basque Country.

Their historical territory corresponds with the current area; however, it is not entirely clear whether the Varduli were actually , related to the , Localización de algunas ciudades várdulas citadas por Mela y Ptolomeo Ildefonso Gurruchaga or tribes, related to or which later underwent Basquisation. It seems probable the group shared the proto-Basque cultural-ethnic identity of the people of this region.


Etymology
Their ethnonym Varduli is connected with an area that is referred to in documents from the early as , which is mentioned as the cradle of , following the decline of the Navarrese Kingdom.

Julio Caro Baroja, a Basque anthropologist and linguist asserted in his works that the term Varduli was not of origin.Caro Baroja, Julio. Los pueblos de España, 1976.


History
The Varduli are mentioned for the first time during times, by , who called them Bardyetai, and placed them on the Basque coast, between the and ; they are also mentioned by the geographer , who placed them roughly in present-day , and by Roman historians, notably Pliny the Elder in his Naturalis Historia,"In Cluniensem conventum Varduli ducunt populos xiiii" (Pliny iii.26); "A Pyranaeo per oceanum Vasconum saltus, Olarso, Vardulorum oppida..." iv.110. where he reported that Amanum Portus (Roman name: Flaviobriga), present-day , was a Varduli settlement. The Roman geographer located them also on the coast, but west of the Vascones and east of the . This lack of agreement about their exact position may have been caused by the continuous movement of the tribes of the northern Iberian Peninsula during events such as the . The first census of the Varduli population took place under the orders of . CIL vi, 1463, noted by Van Nostrand 1916:123.

According to Pliny the Elder,Book III, 26, 27, Book IV, 110 the main Vardulian settlement was Tullonium, that was in the present-day river basin, on a main from (capital of the ), to ( or Iruña) in land. According to several authors in Classical antiquity, such as , Pliny the Elder and other Vardulian cities were Alba and Gebala (today's Gebara), in the interior; while Tritium Tuboricum, a little west of the river ( Deva, Deua or Deba = Goddess), Menosca and Morogi or Morosgi, were on the Atlantic coast (on the south coast of the Bay of Biscay).

In 114 BC, had a personal guard composed of Varduli people, (who were called Barduaioí) as slaves in . By the year 44, according to Pomponius Mela, the Varduli inhabited lands close to the and composed a united society. The defeat of the by Augustus did not have any effect on the Varduli, as they had not joined the wars. The Varduli served in cohorts in the invasion of : Varduli are mentioned in an inscription on a Roman altar at Rochester, (Roman Bremenium) and at Milecastle 19 along Hadrian's Wall, where an altar inscription made by members of the First Cohort of Varduli cavalrymen is one of the few dedications to the , found in Roman Britain. The First Cohort of the Varduli are also mentioned in inscriptions at the , in Durham, and in Northumberland and on the in Cappuck in the Scottish Borders.

As with the , it is not totally clear whether the Varduli were an tribe or a one, related to the and . Some of their were clearly of Indo-European origin (probably in the Proto-Celtic language), as Uxama (comes from Upsama, meaning "the highest"), Deobriga (comes from Deiuo-Briga, meaning "holy hill"), Tullonium (comes from Tullo, meaning "valley"), among others. , such as Deva ( Deua or Deba for "Goddess") were also considered of Indo-European . As with the , not a single toponym related to the Aquitanian-Basque languages has been found, further supporting the theory of their Celtic origin and possible late Basquisation. However, apart from a few exceptions ( Deba, , Arakama) present-day place-names show a clear prevalence of the Basque linguistic element (sometimes mixed with Latin/Romance lexical roots).

The last reference to the Varduli appears on a chronicle from , in which he narrates the devastations that the suffered when, in the year 400, they attacked the Cantabrian coast and again in 456 after attacking .

Later in the next century, Saxons established on the Bordeaux estuary also were known to raid along the coast.
     

Some studies theorize that the Varduli underwent a late Basquisation process, as a result of the continuous presence of the on their territory. They are mentioned again in the Early Middle Ages in the area considered to be the precursors of the modern Basque province of . Other authorshttp://www.euskomedia.org/PDFAnlt/congresos/07217221.pdf guessed, following Classical references, the existence of some degree of ethnic, cultural or political affinity between the Vardulii, the and the , tribes who, later Roman sources, grouped under the name Varduli; this would explain later events in this region, for example, why, once the Caristii and Varduli were moved out of their original territories by the in the Early Middle Ages, these groups lost their names and were grouped together with the Varduli in the territory of the Autrigones. The tribes took refuge in their coastal areas behind the mountains from the Islamic military depredations of the new powers down the Ebro in Al-andalus. Eventually, after a century of resettlement, this area, along with the Meseta plains, became a frontier march or county of the Kingdom of Asturias in the middle years of the 8th century, the original core of the territory which would become Castile. The union, whatever the causes, between Varduli, Caristii and Autrigones in a single territory would later create the obscure , mentioned as part of the cradle of Proto-Castile.

The coat of arms of the Basque province of reads "Fidelissima Bardulia, Nunquam Superata", Juntas Generales de Gipuzkoa - Escudo y bandera meaning "Most loyal Bardulia, never conquered".


See also


Bibliography
  • Ángel Montenegro et alii, Historia de España 2 - colonizaciones y formación de los pueblos prerromanos (1200-218 a.C), Editorial Gredos, Madrid (1989)

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