Ripensando i contatti fra Sardegna e Penisola Iberica all’alba del I millennio a.C. Vecchie e nuove evidenze
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Abstract
Nel seguente articolo è affrontato lo studio delle
relazioni fra la Sardegna e la Penisola Iberica durante
i secoli iniziali del I millennio a.C. con particolare
attenzione al ruolo svolto dalle popolazioni
nuragiche. Il rinvenimento di un numero sempre
maggiore di ceramiche di tradizione nuragica
nella Spagna meridionale impone una riflessione
sui tempi e sui modi che portarono marinai e
artigiani sardi a operare sul suolo iberico. La
discussione sarà soprattutto indirizzata da un
lato a valutare l’incidenza di questi contatti sulle
popolazioni locali dall’altro a chiarire in che modo
la Sardegna nuragica si inserisca all’interno di un
più ampio contesto di relazioni internazionali fra
Mediterraneo orientale e Atlantico in cui l’elemento
fenicio viene ad assumere in progresso di tempo un
ruolo sempre più determinante.
The following article addresses the study of the relations between Sardinia and the Iberian Peninsula during the first centuries of the 1st millennium BC with particular attention to the role of the Nuragic populations. The discovery of an increasing amount of Nuragic tradition pottery in southern Spain requires a reflection on the times and ways that led Sardinian sailors and craftsmen to work on Iberian soil. The discussion will be mainly addressed on the one hand to assessing the impact of these contacts on the local population and on the other to clarifying how Nuragic Sardinia fitted into a wider context of international relations between the eastern Mediterranean and the Atlantic in which, over time, the Phoenician element took on an increasingly important role.
The following article addresses the study of the relations between Sardinia and the Iberian Peninsula during the first centuries of the 1st millennium BC with particular attention to the role of the Nuragic populations. The discovery of an increasing amount of Nuragic tradition pottery in southern Spain requires a reflection on the times and ways that led Sardinian sailors and craftsmen to work on Iberian soil. The discussion will be mainly addressed on the one hand to assessing the impact of these contacts on the local population and on the other to clarifying how Nuragic Sardinia fitted into a wider context of international relations between the eastern Mediterranean and the Atlantic in which, over time, the Phoenician element took on an increasingly important role.







