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               <dc:title>‘Liquid spaces’ in NE Hispania Citerior during the Mid-Republican period: Introducing a new reality</dc:title>
               <dc:creator>Rodríguez Ventós, Gerard</dc:creator>
               <dc:creator>Cabezas-Guzmán, Gerard</dc:creator>
               <dc:subject>Civilització -- Influència romana</dc:subject>
               <dc:subject>Rome -- Civilization</dc:subject>
               <dc:subject>Roma -- Història -- 218-82 aC, República</dc:subject>
               <dc:subject>Rome -- History -- Republic, 218-82 B.C</dc:subject>
               <dc:subject>Ibèrica, Península -- Civilització -- Influència romana</dc:subject>
               <dc:subject>Iberian Peninsula -- Rome -- Civilization</dc:subject>
               <dc:description>During the period between the Second Punic War (218-202 BC) and the outbreak&#xd;
of the Sertorian War (82 BC), the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula experienced the&#xd;
emergence of a new reality deriving from the contacts between the Roman occupation&#xd;
forces and the indigenous communities. After a period of war stress and rebellion,&#xd;
ultimately suppressed by Cato in north-east Iberia (195 BC) (Liv. 34.13.4-16.7; 35.9.6;&#xd;
App. Hisp. 39-40; Zon. 9.17), the new native elites emerging as a result of — or thanks to&#xd;
— the conflict chose to embrace the Roman cause. However, Rome’s military conquest&#xd;
of the peninsula did not imply the imposition of a new cultural hegemony. Without a&#xd;
well-defined foreign policy, Rome showed no interest in directly undertaking the&#xd;
organisation and administration of the vanquished during the Mid-Republican period&#xd;
(e.g. Ñaco del Hoyo 2006: 81-103). On the contrary, it limited itself to currying the favour&#xd;
of the local elites in order to retain political control over the newly conquered territories&#xd;
through them. This lack of definition gave rise to ‘liquid realities’ and ‘spaces’, in which&#xd;
the ruling classes gradually became ‘Romanised’, but in which Iberian mores and&#xd;
customs not only survived but continued to predominate. An example of this can be seen&#xd;
through the continuation of the Iberian language and its epigraphic evolution (Sinner&#xd;
and Ferrer 2016: 201; Torra 2009: 21)</dc:description>
               <dc:date>2024-06-18T12:23:07Z</dc:date>
               <dc:date>2024-06-18T12:23:07Z</dc:date>
               <dc:date>2021-01</dc:date>
               <dc:type>info:eu-repo/semantics/article</dc:type>
               <dc:type>info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion</dc:type>
               <dc:type>peer-reviewed</dc:type>
               <dc:identifier>http://hdl.handle.net/10256/21368</dc:identifier>
               <dc:relation>info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/eissn/2732-4168</dc:relation>
               <dc:rights>Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International</dc:rights>
               <dc:rights>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/</dc:rights>
               <dc:rights>info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</dc:rights>
               <dc:publisher>Institute of Classical Studies</dc:publisher>
               <dc:source>New Classicists, 2021, núm. 04, p. 41 - 67</dc:source>
               <dc:source>Articles publicats (D-H)</dc:source>
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