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The Vettones (: Ouettones) were an Iron Age pre-Roman people of the Iberian Peninsula.Cremin, The Celts in Europe (1992), p. 57.


Origins
Lujan (2007) concludes that some of the names of the Vettones show clearly western Hispano-Celtic features.
(2025). 9781842174104, Oxbow Books.
Reissued in 2012 in softcover as .
A origin has also been claimed. Organized since the 3rd Century BC, the Vettones formed a tribal confederacy of undetermined strength. Even though their tribes' names are obscure, the study of local epigraphic evidence has identified the , , , , Römische Studien (Berlin, 1922)., Quaestiones Romanes, question 83. and ,Edmondson, "A criação de uma sociedade provincial romana" (2022), p. 36. but the others remain unknown.


Culture
A predominately horse-, Punica, III, 378. and cattle-herder people that practiced , has identified them with the local 2nd Iron Age ‘Cogotas II’ Culture, also known as the ‘Culture of the Verracos’ ( ), named after the crude sculptures representing pigs, and that still dot their former region. These are one of their most notable enduring legacies today, the other possibly being the game of Calva, which dates to the time of their influence. The sites and respective cemeteries of , , , , , , and Alcántara have provided enough elements – weapons, shields, , belt buckles, bronze cauldrons, and – which attest the strong contacts with the of the eastern meseta, the Iberian south and the Mediterranean.


Location
The Vettones lived in the western part of the meseta—the high central upland plain of the Iberian Peninsula—the region where the modern Spanish provinces of Ávila and Salamanca are today, as well as parts of Zamora, Toledo, Cáceres and also the eastern border areas of modern territory. Their own capital city, which the ancient sources mysteriously failed to mention at all, has not yet been found though other towns mentioned by , Geographiké Hyphegésis, II, 5, 7. were located, such as Capara (Ventas de Cápara), Obila (Ávila?), Mirobriga (?), Turgalium (Trujillo, Cáceres), Alea (Alía – Cáceres) and probably Bletisa/Bletisama (Ledesma, Salamanca)., Römische Studien (Berlin, 1922)., Quaestiones Romanes, question 83. Other probable Vettonian towns were Tamusia (Villasviejas de Tamuja, near Botija, Cáceres; Celtiberian-type mint: Tamusiensi), Ocelon / Ocelum (Castelo Branco), Cottaeobriga (Almeida) and Lancia (Serra d’Opa).


History
Traditional allies of the , the Vettones helped the latter in their struggle against the advancing Carthaginians led by Hasdrubal the Fair and in the late 3rd century BC. At first placed under nominal Punic suzerainty by the time of the Second Punic War, the Vettones threw off their yoke soon after 206 BC. However, a mercenary contingent of Vettones accompanied Hannibal on his march to Italy, led by the chieftain Balarus., Punica, III, 378-414. At the of the 2nd century BC they joined once again the Lusitani under , and in their attacks on , , the and the failed incursion on the North African town of Ocilis (modern , ) in 153 BC., Iberiké, 57., Periochae, 47.

Although technically incorporated around 134-133 BC into Hispania Ulterior, the Vettones continued to raid the more romanized regions further south and during the Roman civil wars of the early 1st century BC, they sided with Quintus Sertorius. In 79 BC, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius attempted to methodically secure the cities and tribes of central Hispania by establishing fortified bases for his military operations in Vettonia, mainly at Metellinum (Medellín), Castra Caecilia (Cáceres el Viejo), and Viccus Caecilius (somewhere in the Sierra de Gredos), but this did not prevented the Vettones from providing auxiliary troops to Sertorius' army in 77-76 BC.Matyszak, Sertorius and the struggle for Spain (2013), pp. 79; 144. Crushed by the provincial in 61 BC, they later rose in support of 's faction and fought at the battle of Munda ( – Córdoba) in Baetica., De Bello Civili, I, 38, 1-4.


Romanization
In the 1st Century BC, the Romans began to establish military colonies throughout Vettonia, first at Kaisarobriga or Caesarobriga (Talavera de la Reina – Toledo) and Norba Caesarina (near Cáceres), latter followed by Metellinum (Medellín), and in around 27-13 BC the Vettones were aggregated to the newly created Roman province of with Emerita Augusta (Mérida) as the capital of the new province.

Despite their progressive assimilation into the Roman world, the Vettones managed to retain their martial traditions, which enabled them to provide the Roman Army with an auxiliary cavalry unit ( Ala), the Ala Hispanorum Vettonum Civium Romanorum, which participated in Emperor ' invasion of Britain in AD 43–60.


Namesake
The Vettones are not to be confused with the Vettonenses, inhabitants of Vettona (today's ) in .


Gallery
File:Cogotas-II (dagas)-Segunda Edad del Hierro.jpg File:Avila 60 museo by-dpc.jpg File:Tahalí vetón de tipo Monte Bernorio -M.A.N.jpg File:Broche de cinturón vetón procedente de la Necrópolis de La Osera - M.A.N.jpg File:Puñal y vaina vetones - M.A.N.jpg File:Cogotas II (Nielado) Edad del Hierro.jpg File:Contera de vaina y tahalí de puñal vetones - M.A.N.jpg File:Vasija funeraria vettona de la Necrópolis de Trasguija (Museo Arqueológico Nacional, Madrid).JPG File:Avila 59 museo by-dpc.jpg File:Espada vetona de antenas y vaina de espada vetona de la Necrópolis de La Osera - M.A.N.jpg File:Espada (32713788491).jpg File:Fíbulas con forma de caballitos y jinete - M.A.N. 02.jpg


See also


Notes

Bibliography
  • Aedeen Cremin, The Celts in Europe, Sydney, Australia: Sydney Series in Celtic Studies 2, Centre for Celtic Studies, University of Sydney (1992)
  • Ángel Montenegro et alii, Historia de España 2 - colonizaciones y formación de los pueblos prerromanos (1200-218 a.C), Editorial Gredos, Madrid (1989)
  • Christophe Bonnaud, Les castros vettons et leurs populations au Second Âge du Fer (Ve siècle-IIe siècle avant J.-C.), I: implantation et systèmes défensives in Revista Portuguesa de Arqueologia, pp. 209–242, volume 8, número 1, IPA Lisboa (2005)
  • Christophe Bonnaud, Les castros vettons et leurs populations au Second Âge du Fer (Ve siècle-IIe siècle avant J.-C.), II: l’habitat, l’économie, la société in Revista Portuguesa de Arqueologia, pp. 209–242, volume 8, número 2, IPA Lisboa (2005)
  • Eduardo Sánchez Moreno, Vetones: Historia y Arqueología de un pueblo prerromano, Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma, Madrid (2000)
  • Francisco Burillo Mozota, Los Celtíberos, etnias y estados, Crítica, Grijalbo Mondadori, S.A., Barcelona (1998, revised edition 2007)
  • Isabel Baquedano Beltrán, La necrópolis vettona de La Osera (Chamartín, Ávila, España) – volumen I, Zona Arqueológia número 19-I, Museo Arqueológico Regional, Alcalá de Henares (2016)
  • Isabel Baquedano Beltrán, La necrópolis vettona de La Osera (Chamartín, Ávila, España) – volumen II, Zona Arqueológia número 19-II, Museo Arqueológico Regional, Alcalá de Henares (2016)
  • Manuel Salinas de Frías, Los vettones: indigenismo y romanización en el occidente de la meseta, Ediciones Universidad Salamanca, Salamanca (2001)
  • Martín Almagro-Gorbea & Ana Maria Martín, Castros y Oppida en Extremadura, Editorial Complutense, Madrid (1994)
  • Jesús R. Álvarez-Sanchís, Los vettones, Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid (2003)
  • Jesús R. Álvarez-Sanchís, Los señores del ganado – Arqueología de los pueblos prerromanos en el occidente de Iberia, Colección Arqueología, Editorial Akal, Madrid (2003)
  • Jonathan Edmondson, "A criação de uma sociedade provincial romana" in A Lusitânia Romana: fronteira do mundo antigo, National Geographic História, edição especial, RBA Revistas S.L., Barcelona (2022), pp. 34-43.
  • Philip Matyszak, Sertorius and the struggle for Spain, Pen & Sword Military, Barnsley (2013)


Further reading
  • Barry Cunliffe, The Celts – A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press (2003) .
  • Dáithí Ó hÓgáin, The Celts: A History, The Collins Press, Cork (2002)
  • Daniel Varga, The Roman Wars in Spain: The Military Confrontation with Guerrilla Warfare, Pen & Sword Military, Barnsley (2015)
  • (2004). 9781134451128, Routledge. .
  • Ludwig Heinrich Dyck, The Roman Barbarian Wars: The Era of Roman Conquest, Author Solutions (2011) ISBNs 1426981821, 9781426981821
  • Luis Silva, Viriathus and the Lusitanian resistance to Rome 155-139 BC, Pen & Sword Military, Barnsley (2013)
  • John T. Koch (ed.), Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO Inc., Santa Barbara, California (2006) , 1-85109-445-8


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