There
are two theories concerning the origins of Iberians:
The Celts arrived in the Iberian
Peninsula in two waves in the early first
millennium B.C. The Celtic culture dominated the Northern and Western
Peninsula while the Iberians held the South. In the center, Celtic and Iberian
culture mixed to give birth to the Celtiberians.
This group, which fused both cultures, spread to the Eastern coast of what
today is Spain.
The
Iberians and the Celtiberians traded extensively with other Mediterranean
cultures. Iberian pottery
has been found in France,
Italy, and North
Africa. The Iberians also had extensive contact with Greek colonists who shared their cultural knowledge.
The Iberians may have adopted some of the Greeks' artistic
skill. Statues
such as the Lady of Baza and the Lady of Elx
are thought to have been made by Iberians relatively well studied in art.
The
Iberians and Celtiberians were placed under Carthaginian
rule for a short time between the Second
and Third Punic Wars. Both groups supplied troops to Hannibal's
army. The Romans subsequently conquered the Iberian Peninsula
and slowly repressed the local culture and language, but it was only until the
reign of Emperor Augustus after the fall of the Roman
Republic that the entire peninsula was conquered.