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The Vaccaei were an ancient tribe who settled in the Meseta Central of northern Hispania. According to Diodorus Siculus, they were the most cultured group of the Celtiberians, and Silius Italicus classed them as merchants and businessmen. Their existence is proved at least from the third century BC. Polybius relates, although he wasn't an eyewitness, the capture of the Vaccean cities of Helmantica (Salamanca) and Arbucala (Zamora) by Hannibal in 220 BCE.
When the Vaccaei are considered a part of the Celtiberian people group, though the Vaccean civilization was the result of the a process of local evolution, importing elements from other cultures, whether by new additions of people or contacts with neighboring groups. Other more recent theories have suggested that the Vaccaei are a Celtic people, who arrived in successive waves in the area along with similar groups, becoming the first permanent inhabitants.
In the study of their settlements one finds elements of the Vaccean culture on top of the remains of earlier cultures. For example, at Pintia (modern-day Padilla de Duero (Valladolid)), there is evidence of a population from Eneolithic times until the Iron Age, when the Vaccean period arose. The necropolis at Pintia is currently being excavated by international field school students every summer under the supervision of the University of Valladolid and the Federico Wattenberg Center of Vaccean Studies.
The Vaccean culture extended through the center of the Meseta Norte, along both banks of the Douro River. Although its frontiers are difficult to pin down and shifted from time to time, it can be said to have occupied all of the province of Valladolid, and parts of León, Palencia, Burgos, Segovia, Salamanca y Zamora. At the time of the arrival of the Romans, the Cea and
In the Dark Ages, Vaccaei became a synonym for the Vascones.
See also
Sources
- Collins, Roger (1992). "The Vaccaei, the Vaceti, and the rise of Vasconia." Studia Historica VI. Salamanca, 1988. Reprinted in Roger Collins, Law, Culture and Regionalism in Early Medieval Spain. Variorum. ISBN 0 86078 308 1.
External links
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