In the twelfth
century B.C., Phoenicians arrived on the west coast of the
Iberian Peninsula in search of metals and founded trading
posts at Cádiz, Málaga, and Seville. They
traded with the peoples of the interior, taking out silver,
copper, and tin and bringing in eastern trade goods. Between
the eighth century and sixth century B.C., successive waves
of Celtic peoples from central Europe invaded the western
part of the peninsula, where the topography and climate were
well suited to their herding-farming way of life. They
settled there in large numbers and blended in with the
indigenous Iberos, giving rise to a new people known as
Celtiberians. Their settlements were hilltop forts called
castros, of which there are many vestiges in
northern Portugal. Later, during the
seventh century B.C., Greeks arrived and founded several
colonies, including Sargunto on the Mediterranean coast and
Alcácer do Sal on the Atlantic coast. During the
fifth century B.C., the Carthaginians replaced the
Phoenicians and closed the Straits of Gibraltar to the
Greeks. The Carthaginians undertook the conquest of the
peninsula but were only able to permanently occupy the
territory in the south originally controlled by their
Phoenician and Greek predecessors. The Carthaginian
occupation lasted until the defeat of Carthage by the Romans
in the third century B.C. The Romans made
the former Carthaginian territory into a new province of
their expanding empire and conquered and occupied the entire
peninsula. This invasion was resisted by the indigenous
peoples, the stiffest resistance coming from the Lusitanians
who lived in the western part of the peninsula. The
Lusitanians were led by warrior chieftains, the most
powerful of whom was Viriato. Viriato held up the Roman
invasion for several decades until he was murdered in his
bed by three of his own people who had been bribed by the
Romans. His death brought the Lusitanian resistance to an
end, and Rome relatively quickly conquered and occupied the
entire peninsula. The Portuguese have claimed Viriato as the
country's first great national hero. Early
Inhabitants
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Library of Congress Country StudyPhoenicians,
Greeks, and Carthaginians
Library of Congress Country Study
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