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V.—Pre-Roman Bronze Votive Offerings from Despeñaperros, in the Sierra Morena, Spain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2011

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Extract

Before entering upon the consideration of the subject matter of this paper, I would mention that I found some difficulty in selecting an appropriate title for it. It appeared to me that although a generally descriptive title, perforce composed of several long names strung together, or of compound adjectives made up of such words as Greek, Phœnician, and Iberian, would be more correct, it might, at the same time, and without some previous knowledge of the subjects dealt in during the course of the paper, prove to be confusing. I hesitated between “Iberian” and “Pre-Roman.” I think that “Iberian” would, in some respects, have been a more appropriate title, because Iberian influences, both in a geographical and an ethnical sense, undoubtedly predominate, not only in the votive objects themselves, but also in other expressions of that phrase in art with which I am about to deal. “Iberian” is, however, so often and so loosely employed to denote anything and everything that comes from Hispania, that I finally decided upon “Pre-Roman.” It should, however, not be taken in this instance as the chronological definition of a period which ends with the Roman occupation of Spain in 200 B.C., because it may, and undoubtedly does, extend into several subsequent centuries; but rather as indicating that the influences which predominated in the inception of the offerings in no way derive from the Romans, and that they are traceable to pre-Roman times in the Peninsula.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1906

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References

page 73 note a El arte en España (Madrid, 1863), ii. 13.Google Scholar

page 74 note a I am indebted to Mr. R. Phené Spiers, F.S.A., for valuable assistance in describing this temple.

page 75 note a I am sorry that I cannot include English, archæologists among those who have studied these, but I do not know of a single English archæologist who has ever seen, carefully examined, or written of them.

page 76 note a Las Esculturas del Cerro de los Santos, Cuestion de Aunticidad. Por José Ramon Mélida. de la Revista de Archivos. Madrid, 1906.

page 76 note b The initials appended to the titles of the accompanying illustrations, J. R. M. or P. P. as the case may be, denote that they have been borrowed from the one or the other of the works above noted, Las Esculturas, etc. or Essai sur l'Art, etc.

page 77 note a Revue d'Assyriologie et d'Archéologie Orientate (Paris, 1891)Google Scholar, ii. No. iii. 105, “Statues Espagnoles de Style Gréco-Phénicien (Question d'Authenticité),” par Léon Heuzey.

page 78 note a Op. cit. 107.

page 79 note a Las Esculturas del Cerro de los Santos, 60.

page 80 note a Revue d'Assyriologie, etc. 99.

page 81 note a Op. cit.

page 88 note a In the possession of Don Antonio Vives, at Madrid.

page 90 note a Gould, S. Baring, A Book of Brittany (London, 1891), 76.Google Scholar