The Berones were a pre-Roman Celtic people of ancient Spain, although they were not part of the Celtiberians, they lived north of the Celtiberians and close to the CantabrianConisci[1] in the middle Ebro region between the Tirón and Alhama rivers.
Origins
The ancestors of the Berones were Celts[2] who migrated from Gaul to the Iberia around the 4th century BC[3][4] to settle in La Rioja and the southern parts of the Soria, Álava and Navarre provinces.
Allies of the Autrigones,[5] the Berones appear to have kept themselves out of the Celtiberian confederacy throughout the 3rd-2nd centuries BC but later came under pressure of the Vascones. Their earliest contact with Rome might have occurred during the early 2nd century BC, when they allegedly fought as allies of the Celtiberians at the battle of Calagurris in 186 BC, being defeated by the Praetor of Hispania CiteriorLucius Manlius Adicinus Fulvianus.[6] According to a Roman epigraphic source, the Ascoli-Picenum bronze (now at the Museo Capitolino, Rome),[7] Beronian mercenary cavalrymen later entered Roman service at the Social War (91–88 BC), fighting alongside other Spaniards in the Turma Saluitana[8] as auxiliary cavalry in Italy though they subsequently aided their Autrigones' allies in the defence of their respective territories in northern Celtiberia against Sertorius' invasion attempt in 76 BC.[9]
They disappear as an independent people in the classical sources in about 72 BC, after the end of the Sertorian Wars, although some towns maintained their culture for a certain time due to a late Romanization.
Ángel Montenegro Duque et alli, Historia de España 2 – colonizaciones y formacion de los pueblos prerromanos, Editorial Gredos, Madrid (1989) ISBN84-249-1013-3
Francisco Burillo Motoza, Los Celtíberos – Etnias y Estados, Crítica, Grijalbo Mondadori, S.A., Barcelona (1998, revised edition 2007) ISBN84-7423-891-9
The Madeira, Azores, and Canary Islands were not occupied by the Romans. The Madeira and Azores islands were unoccupied until the Portuguese in the 15th century; the Canary islands, the Guanches occupied the territory until the Castilians.