Turduli Oppidani

Main language areas in Iberia c. 300 BC

The Turduli Oppidani or Turdulorum Oppida (Latin: "oppidums of the Turduli" or "Strongholds of the Turduli"), were a pre-Roman people of Lusitania in present-day Portugal, akin to the Lusitanians.

Location

They occupied the Portuguese region of Estremadura (coastal central Portugal), where they held the fortified towns (Oppida) of Aeminium (Coimbra), Conimbriga (Condeixa-a-Velha, near Coimbra), Coniumbriga (possibly Monte Meão), Collipo (S. Sebastião do Freixo, Batalha), Eburobrittium (Amoreira de Óbidos),[1] Ierabriga (Alenquer) and Olissipo (Lisbon).

History

An off-shot of the Turduli people, the Turduli Oppidani trekked northwards around the 5th century BC in conjunction with the Celtici[2][3][4] and ended settling the present-day central coastal Portuguese region of Estremadura. The Oppidani seem to have become clients of the Lusitani sometime prior to the mid-3rd Century BC and then of Carthage at the latter part of the century. Their history after the 2nd Punic War is less clear; is it almost certain that the Oppidani remained under Lusitani overlorship and bore the brunt of the first Roman thrusts into the Iberian northwest. In 138-136 BC Consul Decimus Junius Brutus devastated their lands in retaliation for them helping the Lusitani.[5] The Oppidani were certainly defeated and technically included in Hispania Ulterior province by the praetor Publius Licinius Crassus Dives in the wake of his campaign against the Lusitani and Celtici in 93 BC. Again the Oppidani and the Turduli Veteres suffered the same treatment in 61-60 BC, when they were incorporated into H. Ulterior by the Propraetor Julius Caesar.[6]

Romanization

They were later aggregated by Emperor Augustus into the new Lusitania Province in 27-13 BC.

See also

Notes

  1. Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia, IV, 21.
  2. Strabo, Geographikon, III, 3, 5.
  3. Pomponius Mela, De Chorographia, III, 8.
  4. Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia, IV, 112-113.
  5. Appian, Iberiké, 73.
  6. Cassius Dio, Romaïké istoría, 37, 52-55.

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.