The Iberian
Peninsula is a geographic unit that contains a number of
distinct regions based on climate and geomorphology, such as
Andalusia, Castile, Galicia, and Lusitania. Lusitania, which
now encompasses the modern nation-state of Portugal, is
generally set off from the other regions of the peninsula by
areas of higher elevation that run parallel to the Atlantic
coast, greater rainfall, and a more moderate climate. It was
this regional distinctiveness, as well as the internal
geography of Lusitania--largely open to the south but hemmed
in by mountains on the east and the Atlantic Ocean on the
west--that gave rise to a culturally and socially distinct
people, the Portuguese, and later to an independent
nation-state, Portugal. Lusitania has
been inhabited since the Paleolithic period. Implements made
by humans have been found at widely scattered sites. The Ice
Ages did not touch Lusitania, and it was only after the
disappearance of the Paleolithic hunting cultures that a
warmer climate gave rise to a river-centered culture. At the
end of the Paleolithic period, about 7000 B.C., the valley
of the Tagus River (Portuguese, Rio Tejo) was populated by
hunting and fishing tribes, who lived at the mouths of the
river's tributaries. These people left huge kitchen middens
containing the remains of shellfish and crustaceans, as well
as the bones of oxen, deer, sheep, horses, pigs, wild dogs,
badgers, and cats. Later, perhaps about 3000 B.C., Neolithic
peoples constructed crude dwellings and began to practice
agriculture. They used polished stone tools, made ceramics,
and practiced a cult of the dead, building many funerary
monuments called dolmens. By the end of the Neolithic
period, about 2000 B.C., regions of cultural differentiation
began to appear among the Stone Age inhabitants of the
Iberian Peninsula, one of these being the western Megalithic
culture. Present-day Portugal is thus rich in Megalithic
neocropolises, the best known of which are at Palmela,
Alcalar, Reguengos, and Monsaraz. The Paleolithic
and Neolithic periods were followed by the Bronze Age and
the Iron Age (probably between 1500 and 1000 B.C.). During
this time, the Iberian Peninsula was colonized by various
peoples. One of the oldest were the LÌgures, about
whom little is known. Another were the Iberos, thought to
have come from North Africa. The Iberos were a sedentary
people who used a primitive plow, wheeled carts, had
writing, and made offerings to the dead. Historical
Setting
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Library of Congress Country StudyEarly
Inhabitants
Library of Congress Country Study
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