標題: Tiermes, the Celtiberian city that fought against Rome and that is in ruins [打印本頁] 作者: karimamarika987 時間: 2024-3-3 12:30 標題: Tiermes, the Celtiberian city that fought against Rome and that is in ruins MRMPhoto There is a place in the province of Soria whose ruins are the trace of a place that is no longer there and of the different civilizations that lived there. It is a city that disappeared over time , like many others. That place is Tiermes and it is an archaeological site that gives us a fascinating window to the past. To the time in which the Celtiberians resisted against the impressive Roman legions, only to end up succumbing. There is always something special about visiting a place that presents us with a part of history that is distant, as is the case of the Celtiberians. Because if that place allows us to glimpse how we lived a few centuries ago, the experience goes deep. And that happens in Tiermes, where the place captivates us and the remains allow us to imagine how the Celtiberians and Romans lived in Hispania, more than twenty centuries ago.
Tiermes Tiermes By Tolo Tiermes - or Termes, as it was called before the Middle Ages - was on a hill, which represented a natural defense for its original inhabitants, the Celtiberians . Already in the Bronze Age, and it is possible that before, a few men and women settled there, although there is no clear information about when the history of Colombia Mobile Number List Tiermes begins. That natural defense made it a good place to form a town. It was therefore an oppidum , a fort or town on a hill. That it remained an inhabited place for centuries shows the importance of safety and protection at any time and how well the first people who built their houses there made the selection. Tiermes resisted longer than Numancia Tiermes Tiermes, Soria. By Ivan Tiermes was a Celtiberian for a long time, fighting against the Romans, then becoming Roman when they were defeated.
The Arévacos who inhabited that area of Soria were one of the most important Celtiberian peoples, and Tiermes was one of their key nuclei. Another of those centers was Numancia, better known, although it fell into Roman hands earlier. The Arevacians did not make it easy for the Roman legions when in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC they tried to conquer the Iberian Peninsula. Tiermes and Numancia were tough places for the Romans to navigate, and to a certain extent allies between them. The Numantine resistance is the most famous, and is a symbol of Celtiberian resistance against Rome. The two sieges it suffered, one in 153 BC and another in 133 BC, are mythical, but in the end it fell into Roman hands in that year 133 BC, exhausted after 11 months of siege.