The foundation of the new colony was a result of the end of the wars against the Cantabrians in the north of Hispania. |
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This is a good time to do the famous Hispania dive and revel in the vivid orange coloration caused by its complete encrustation. |
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The word spaniel is probably a derivation of the Latin word for Spain, Hispania, reflecting the dog's Spanish heritage. |
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In 2008, the expansion of the Sygma Bank subsidiary, Banco Sygma Hispania, was paused in light of the particularly adverse economic conditions. |
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A service agreement was signed on the 7th November 2007 with Eurofactor Hispania. |
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Eurofactor France reimburses Eurofactor Hispania the costs incurred by the latter under this service agreement. |
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Tarragona, capital of the Roman province Hispania Citerior during the Roman empire, preserves many buildings from this period. |
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They next extended their authority into Hispania at the expense of the Suebi and Vandals. |
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After that, the Visigoth kingdom was limited to Hispania, and they never again held territory north of the Pyrenees other than Septimania. |
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Strabo says that the Romans use Hispania and Iberia synonymously, distinguishing between the near northern and the far southern provinces. |
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Hispania supplied the Roman Empire with silver, food, olive oil, wine, and metal. |
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The latter, writing in the early 1st century AD, deals with Britain and Gaul as well as Hispania, Italy and Galatia. |
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Slaves were drawn from all over Europe and the Mediterranean, including Gaul, Hispania, Germany, Britannia, the Balkans, Greece. |
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Emperors Hadrian, Trajan, Theodosius I, and the philosopher Seneca were born in Hispania. |
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He traveled in Greece, Hispania, Italy, Sicily, Dalmatia, Gaul, Liguria, North Africa, and on the eastern shores of the Adriatic. |
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The hero visigodo Wulfric live in Segovia with his beautiful manacles hispanorromana, treating to put order in a Hispania sumida in the chaos by the constants oleadas bárbaras and the fault of government. |
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Navion Hispania, a tanker operated by Graypen carrying crude oils from Norway. |
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Successive Visigothic kings ruled Hispania as patricians who held imperial commissions to govern in the name of the Roman emperor. |
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In 102 BC the Cimbri returned from Hispania into Gaul and together with the Teutones decided to invade Italy. |
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Some Roman coins of the Emperors Trajan and his son Hadrian, born in Hispania, depict Hispania and a rabbit. |
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In Hispania, the struggle against the Moors continued unabated throughout the latter half of his reign. |
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Trajan built several new buildings, monuments and roads in Italia and his native Hispania. |
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Additionally, minor Germanic tribes, like the Vandals, the Suebi, and the Visigoths established kingdoms in Hispania. |
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A man of Umbrian origins, he was born in Italica, a colony of Italian settlers in Hispania. |
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Theoderic's payoff included precious metal from stripping the remaining public ornaments of Italia, and an unsupervised campaign in Hispania. |
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Hannibal, son of Hamilcar Barca, rapidly marched through Hispania to the Italian Alps, causing panic among Rome's Italian allies. |
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The Republic's focus now was only to the Hellenistic kingdoms of Greece and revolts in Hispania. |
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Lucius Steritinus erected two in 196 BC to commemorate his victories in Hispania. |
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Aqueducts were built to bring water to urban centers and wine and oil were imported from Hispania, Gaul and Africa. |
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The major suppliers for the city of Rome were the west coast of Italy, southern Gaul, the Tarraconensis region of Hispania, and Crete. |
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Hispania served as a granary for the Roman market, and its harbors exported gold, wool, olive oil, and wine. |
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The former Kingdom of the Suebi then became the sixth province of the Visigothic Kingdom of Hispania. |
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During his stay in Hispania he became familiar with the agriculture and especially the gold mines of the north and west of the country. |
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The heresy, notwithstanding the severe measures taken against it, continued to spread in Gaul as well as in Hispania. |
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Theoderic's payoff included precious metal from stripping the remaining public ornaments of Italy, and an unsupervised campaign in Hispania. |
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In 459, Roman Emperor Majorian defeated the Suebi, briefly restoring Roman rule in northern Hispania. |
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More importantly, Hispania was for 500 years part of a cosmopolitan world empire bound together by law, language, and the Roman road. |
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The long wars of conquest lasted two centuries, and only by the time of Augustus did Rome managed to control Hispania Ulterior. |
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This Hispania produces tough soldiers, very skilled captains, prolific speakers, luminous bards. |
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Some heretical sects emerged in Hispania, most notably Priscillianism, but overall the local bishops remained subordinate to the Pope. |
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The Cimbri conveniently marched into Hispania and the Teutoni milled around in northern Gaul, leaving Marius to prepare his army. |
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In 585 the Visigoths conquered the Suebic Kingdom of Galicia, and thus controlled almost all of Hispania. |
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As elsewhere in early medieval Europe, the church in Hispania stood as society's most cohesive institution. |
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In Historia Gothorum, the Visigoth Suinthila appears as the first monarch where Hispania is dealt with as a Gothic nation. |
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Occupations by the Carthaginians and then by the Romans for her abundant silver deposits developed Hispania into a thriving multifaceted economy. |
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Instead of immediately gathering their allies and marching on Rome, the Cimbri proceeded to Hispania. |
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Gaul and the provinces of Hispania and Italia were placed in the hands of Octavian. |
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Lepidus was left with the province of Africa, stymied by Antony, who conceded Hispania to Octavian instead. |
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Fragments of amphoras contain traces of olive oil from Hispania Baetica, doubtless transported by sea and then up the Rhine by ship. |
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During their governance of the Kingdom of Hispania, the Visigoths built several churches that survive. |
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Lisbon's name was written Ulyssippo in Latin by the geographer Pomponius Mela, a native of Hispania. |
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The city was conquered by the Visigoths in the early 5th century, becoming for a few years the capital of all Hispania. |
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The first incident occurred during the summer of 60 BC, when Caesar was returning home from his propraetorship in Hispania Ulterior. |
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Caesar, by virtue of his military victories over the raiders and bandits in Hispania, had been awarded a triumph by the Senate. |
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The acquisition of Cementos de Hispania S. A. with retrospective effect from January 1, 2003 has enabled Holcim Spain to strengthen its position long-term in the country's most dynamic regional market. |
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Spain's convoluted history dates back to prehistoric times, yet its richly emergence as a defined territory points to the times when the Iberian Peninsula was a Roman Empire called Hispania. |
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Already in the Roman Hispania as names were Seneca, a man of wide culture and stoic character whose literature was very influential in other Spanish writers from the fifteenth-century humanism, or Lucan. |
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The Roman geographers and other prose writers from the time of the late Roman Republic called the entire peninsula Hispania. |
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Some surviving structures are almost complete, such as the town walls of Lugo in Hispania Tarraconensis, now northern Spain. |
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Gratian appointed a new Augustus, a proven general from Hispania called Theodosius. |
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Gerontius went to Hispania where he may have settled the Sueves and the Asding Vandals. |
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Aetius campaigned vigorously, somewhat stabilizing the situation in Gaul and in Hispania. |
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Aetius concentrated his limited military resources to defeat the Visigoths again, and his diplomacy restored a degree of order to Hispania. |
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This selection of facts, in large part, enables him to write about patriotism, for example, as he always pays a lot of attention to events in Hispania. |
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Eventually, however, Hispania was reunited under Visigothic rule. |
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Seneca and Lucan were from Hispania, as was the later epigrammatist and keen social observer Martial, who expressed his pride in his Celtiberian heritage. |
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Consequently, the three bishops, Instantius, Salvianus and Priscillian, went in person to Rome, to present their case before Pope Damasus I, himself a native of Hispania. |
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Serving as a legatus legionis in Hispania Tarraconensis, in 89 Trajan supported Domitian against a revolt on the Rhine led by Antonius Saturninus. |
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Late in the 2nd century BCE, Roman sources recount the migrating Germanic people of Gaul, Italy and Hispania who invaded areas considered part of Imperial Rome. |
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Priscillianism continued in the north of Hispania and the south of Gaul. |
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Villas specializing in the seagoing export of olive oil to Roman legions in Germany became a feature of the southern Iberian province of Hispania Baetica. |
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Up to that date, Hispania designated all of the peninsula's lands. |
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Following Roman rule, there were successive conquests of the Roman province of Hispania Baetica by the Vandals, the Suebi and the Visigoths during the 5th and 6th centuries. |
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To compensate the Western court for the loss of Gaul, Hispania, and Britannia, Theodosius ceded the diocese of Dacia and the diocese of Macedonia to their control. |
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The Cimbri were initially successful, particularly at the Battle of Arausio, in which a large Roman army was routed, after which they raided large areas in Gaul and Hispania. |
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Apart from the losses in the Diocese of Africa, Hispania was slipping out of central control and into the hands of local rulers and Suevic bandits. |
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During the Principate, Hispania Ulterior was divided into two new provinces, Baetica and Lusitania, while Hispania Citerior was renamed Hispania Tarraconensis. |
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The name, Hispania, was also used in the period of Visigothic rule. |
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However, his general Litorius was badly defeated by the Visigoths at Toulouse, and a new Suevic king, Rechiar, began vigorous assaults on what remained of Roman Hispania. |
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The modern placenames Spain and Hispaniola are both derived from Hispania. |
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This would have allowed the Empire land access to Hispania again. |
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The war began with the audacious invasion of Hispania by Hannibal, the Carthaginian general who had led operations on Sicily in the First Punic War. |
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Isidore of Sevilla considered Hispania derived from Hispalis. |
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In the west, organized Arianism survived in North Africa, in Hispania, and parts of Italy until it was finally suppressed in the 6th and 7th centuries. |
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All these wars resulted in Rome's first overseas conquests, of Sicily, Hispania and Africa and the rise of Rome as a significant imperial power and began the end of democracy. |
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Several metals, olives, oil from Baetica, salted fish and garum, and wines were some of the goods produced in Hispania and traded throughout the Empire. |
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Similarly Hispania had been populated by peoples who spoke various languages, including Celtic, but the area was now populated primarily by Romance language speakers. |
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Hispania Citerior comprised the eastern part of former Castilla la Vieja, and what are now Aragon, Valencia, Catalonia, and a major part of former Castilla la Nueva. |
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There is also evidence of British migration to Gallaecia, in Hispania. |
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The defeat of Carthaginian forces by Scipio Africanus in Eastern Hispania allowed the pacification of the west, led by Consul Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus. |
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During this period, he organised the tribes of Lusitania and Hispania and was on the verge of forming an independent province in the Sertorian War when he was assassinated. |
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Orosius, at that time resident in Hispania, shows a rather pacific initial settlement, the newcomers working their lands or serving as bodyguards of the locals. |
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In 711, Visigothic Hispania was very weakened because it was immersed in a serious internal crisis caused by a war of succession to the throne involving two Visigoth suitors. |
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