After its defeat
by the Romans in the First Punic War (264-41 B.C.), Carthage
compensated for its loss of Sicily by rebuilding a
commercial empire in Spain. The country became the staging
ground for Hannibal's epic invasion of Italy during the
Second Punic War (218-201 B.C.). Roman armies also invaded
Spain and used it as a training ground for officers and as a
proving ground for tactics during campaigns against the
Carthaginians and the Iberians. Iberian resistance was
fierce and prolonged, however, and it was not until 19 B.C.
that the Roman emperor Augustus (r. 27 B.C.-A.D. 14) was
able to complete the conquest of Spain. Romanization of
the Iberians proceeded quickly after their conquest. Called
Hispania by the Romans, Spain was not one political entity
but was divided into three separately governed provinces
(nine provinces by the fourth century A.D.). More important,
Spain was for more than 400 years part of a cosmopolitan
world empire bound together by law, language, and the Roman
road. Iberian tribal
leaders and urban oligarchs were admitted into the Roman
aristocratic class, and they participated in governing Spain
and the empire. The latifundios (sing.,
latifundio), large estates controlled by the aristocracy,
were superimposed on the existing Iberian landholding
system. The Romans
improved existing cities, established Zaragoza, Merida, and
Valencia, and provided amenities throughout the empire.
Spain's economy expanded under Roman tutelage. Spain, along
with North Africa, served as a granary for the Roman market,
and its harbors exported gold, wool, olive oil, and wine.
Agricultural production increased with the introduction of
irrigation projects, some of which remain in use. The
HispanoRomans --the romanized Iberians and the Iberian-born
descendants of Roman soldiers and colonists--had all
achieved the status of full Roman citizenship by the end of
the first century A.D. The emperors Trajan (r. 98-117),
Hadrian (r. 117-38), and Marcus Aurelius (r. 161-80) were
born in Spain. Christianity was
introduced into Spain in the first century, and it became
popular in the cities in the second century. Little headway
was made in the countryside, however, until the late fourth
century, by which time Christianity was the official
religion of the Roman Empire. Some heretical sects emerged
in Spain, but the Spanish church remained subordinate to the
Bishop of Rome. Bishops who had official civil, as well as
ecclesiastical, status in the late empire continued to
exercise their authority to maintain order when civil
governments broke down in Spain in the fifth century. The
Council of Bishops became an important instrument of
stability during the ascendancy of the Visigoths, a Germanic
tribe. In 405 two
Germanic tribes, the Vandals and the Suevi, crossed the
Rhine and ravaged Gaul until the Visigoths, drove them into
Spain. The Suevi established a kingdom in the remote
northwestern corner of the Iberian Peninsula. The hardier
Vandals, never exceeding 80,000, occupied the region that
bears their name--Andalusia (Spanish, Andalucia). Because large
parts of Spain were outside his control, the western Roman
emperor, Honorius (r. 395-423), commissioned his sister,
Galla Placidia, and her husband Ataulf, the Visigoth king,
to restore order in the Iberian Peninsula, and he gave them
the rights to settle in and to govern the area in return for
defending it. The highly romanized Visigoths managed to
subdue the Suevi and to compel the Vandals to sail for North
Africa. In 484 they established Toledo as the capital of
their Spanish monarchy. The Visigothic occupation was in no
sense a barbarian invasion, however. Successive Visigothic
kings ruled Spain as patricians who held imperial
commissions to govern in the name of the Roman
emperor. There were no
more than 300,000 Germanic people in Spain, which had a
population of 4 million, and their overall influence on
Spanish history is generally seen as minimal. They were a
privileged warrior elite, though many of them lived as
herders and farmers in the valley of the Rio Tajo and on the
central plateau. Hispano-Romans continued to run the civil
administration, and Latin continued to be the language of
government and of commerce. Under the
Visigoths, lay culture was not so highly developed as it had
been under the Romans, and the task of maintaining formal
education and government shifted decisively to the church
because its Hispano-Roman clergy alone were qualified to
manage higher administration. As elsewhere in early medieval
Europe, the church in Spain stood as society's most cohesive
institution, and it embodied the continuity of Roman
order. Religion was the
most persistent source of friction between the Roman
Catholic Hispano-Romans and their Arian Visigoth overlords,
whom they considered heretical. At times this tension
invited open rebellion, and restive factions within the
Visigothic aristocracy exploited it to weaken the monarchy.
In 589 Recared, a Visigoth ruler, renounced his Arianism
before the Council of Bishops at Toledo and accepted
Catholicism, thus assuring an alliance between the
Visigothic monarchy and the Hispano-Romans. This alliance
would not mark the last time in Spanish history that
political unity would be sought through religious
unity. Court
ceremonials--from Constantinople--that proclaimed the
imperial sovereignty and unity of the Visigothic state were
introduced at Toledo. Still, civil war, royal
assassinations, and usurpation were commonplace, and
warlords and great landholders assumed wide discretionary
powers. Bloody family feuds went unchecked. The Visigoths
had acquired and cultivated the apparatus of the Roman
state, but not the ability to make it operate to their
advantage. In the absence of a well-defined hereditary
system of succession to the throne, rival factions
encouraged foreign intervention by the Greeks, the Franks,
and, finally, the Muslims in internal disputes and in royal
elections. Iberia
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Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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