This
presentation
aims to report the conclusions of our dissertation,
titled
The
Phoenician communities of the Iberian Peninsula and
their integration in the Roman
world: an identity perspective
. The period under discussion extends from the end of the
Second Punic War in 206 BCE to the Flavian era.
Above all, the paper focuses on the cultural and ethnic dimensions of the process of
inte
gration of communities of Phoenician origin and tradition in the southern part of the
Iberian Peninsula into the structures of Roman Empire.
Our investigation has as its primary goal the explanation of the mechanisms of
construction of collective identity
and forms of expression
which have come about in
the midst of these communities along the road to becoming established as Roman
ciuitates
. This dissertation also attempts to improve upon the one
-
dimensional classical
perspectives concerning the poorly
-
nam
ed process of «Romanization». This in turn
leads us to reinterpret the known «Phoenician» cultural «persistences» as a reflection of
the possible existence of ethnic workings and re
-
workings by means of falsely or
actually ancient components with the goal
of legitimation within the dynamic Roman
world.