In contrast to the old paradigms that opposed a Mediterranean of cities and states to a Celtic Europe of villages and tribes, new archaeological research now depicts the end of the Second Iron Age as a complex and dynamic world, in which state structures developed and a characteristic urbanism germinated. Following the publication of the volume Oppida. Cities of Celtic Europe, published by the journal Desperta Ferro Archaeology and History, the symposium brings together a dozen researchers to analyse the keys to these phenomena in different areas of the Celtic world – demography, society, urban planning, identities and warfare – from the Iberian Peninsula to Gaul, in the period before the intervention of Rome.
Collection: Multimedia
Project: 3. Rural world and urban world in the formation of the European identity., 5. Power and powers in the history of Europe: oligarchies, political participation and democracy.
Chronology: -
Scope: Secondary Education
Link: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSTkYuU6iPdmyxj_HRYA0A86FJ46sbOfQ
Resource type: Lista de reproducción en Youtube
Format: Multimedia
Owner: Arqueological National Museum of Spain (MAN) (Modernalia)
Abstract: In contrast to the old paradigms that opposed a Mediterranean of cities and states to a Celtic Europe of villages and tribes, new archaeological research now depicts the end of the Second Iron Age as a complex and dynamic world, in which state structures developed and a characteristic urbanism germinated. Following the publication of the volume Oppida. Cities of Celtic Europe, published by the journal Desperta Ferro Archaeology and History, the symposium brings together a dozen researchers to analyse the keys to these phenomena in different areas of the Celtic world - demography, society, urban planning, identities and warfare - from the Iberian Peninsula to Gaul, in the period before the intervention of Rome.
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