4.2 Article

The Phoenician diaspora in the westernmost Mediterranean: recent discoveries

Journal

ANTIQUITY
Volume 95, Issue 384, Pages 1495-1510

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2021.105

Keywords

Mediterranean; Spain; Bronze Age; Iron Age; Phoenicians; colonialism

Funding

  1. Universidad de Malaga/CBUA

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By combining Bayesian modelling of radiocarbon dates with archaeological data, this study investigates the Phoenician presence in southern Iberia and its significance for the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in the Western Mediterranean. The findings contribute to understanding the integration of the Phoenicians into local communities and the mechanisms of colonisation and pre-colonial situations in protohistoric Europe and other world contexts.
Important discoveries over the past 15 years in the coastal area between Huelva and Malaga in Spain have illuminated the beginnings of the eighth-century BC Phoenician diaspora into the Western Mediterranean. Here, the authors combine Bayesian modelling of recently published radiocarbon dates with the latest archaeological data to investigate the Phoenician presence in southern Iberia. Their assessment of its significance for the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in the Western Mediterranean contributes not only to understanding the integration of the Phoenicians into local communities, but also to apprehending the mechanisms of colonisation and pre-colonial situations elsewhere in protohistoric Europe and other world contexts.

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