One of the most politically charged regions in today's Europe is Catalonia, officially an autonomous region of Spain. However, this post won't delve into the current political scenario but rather highlight important historical milestones that led Catalonia to a point of conflict with the Spanish government. This post aims to scratch the surface of the starting point of discontent between the two parties and help those who don't have much idea on the subject understand.
In the 4th century BC, when the Carthaginian Empire was spreading on the southern coast of Iberia, minor Greek settlements were the first to occur on the Catalonian coast. The colony of Emporion (Empúries) was the first one on the list, which started from a small island in the Bay of Roses but gradually moved towards the mainland. The current city of Roses was found a bit later after Emporion's establishment, by the name of Rhode. Both these settlements were important Greek settlements on the Catalonian coast that minted coins and maintained a healthy trade and commerce facility. This was followed by Iberian migration of groups such as Indigetes, Laietans, Ilergetes, Ausetanis, Lacetanis, Ceretanis, Bergestanis, etc. These pre-Roman tribes were soon to be absorbed into the Empire by the 2nd century BC when it spread only in mainland Italy, the islands of Corsica, Sardinia and Sicily, northern Albania, and the eastern coast of Iberia. The conquest of Catalonia by the Romans was a result of the various Punic Wars fought between the Carthaginian and Roman Empires between 264 to 146 BC; while the former controlled coasts of Iberia and Northern Africa. These forces fought against the Iberian tribes ultimately leading to Roman victory over the Iberians in 202 BC.
The forever capital of Catalonia, the city of Barcelona, was first established as a Roman settlement in 15 BC by the name Colonia Julia Augusta Faventia Paterna Barcino, considered the most immediate antecedent of the current Barcelona. Apart from the various names it got, the one unique alteration that the Muslims gave it in the 8th century AD was Barjelunah, a part of various Arabic spellings Iberian settlements got.
The period of the Crisis of the Third Century (235 to 284 AD) was when the Roman Empire faced tremendous military and political instability in Europe that resulted in several territorial changes such as the annexation of Palmyrene and Gallic territories, thus adding Levant, Turkey, Egypt in the east, and France, England, and Low Countries in the west to the Roman Empire. This period, apart from affecting Catalan settlements such as Barcino (Barcelona), Tarraco (Tarragona), Gerunda (Gerona), brought Christianity to Catalonia as well. But the fallout of the Romans in the 5th century AD was subsequently followed by the rise of the Visigoths who arrived as the allies of Romans, later to take over the Iberian Peninsula until the arrival of the Muslims in the 8th century.
Between 711 to 1492, Iberia (known as Al Andalus in Arabic) was under the rise and fall of several Islamic empires. Starting from the Umayyads, followed by Emirate and Caliphate of Cordoba till the 10th century, and then the periods of smaller taifas, Almoravid, Almohad and Nasrid (Caliphate of Grenada) dynasties, almost 8 centuries of Islamic rule in Iberia were toppled by the Christian Reconquista, to bring back Iberia from Islamic to Christian rule. None of them covered regions of Catalonia. In fact, it was the Frankish conquests (especially under the Carolingian Empire) during the medieval period where Catalonia was created as a buffer zone (part of the Marcae Hispaniae or Hispanic March) between the various Islamic dynasties and the Kingdom of France. But Catalonia was at this time not a singular unified unit but a conglomeration of small Catalan-speaking counties that existed between 878 AD to 1487. The various counties are listed below:
- Ribagorça
- Pallars Jussa
- Pallars Sobira
- Urgell
- Cerdanya
- Osona
- Barcelona
- Girona
- Empúries
- Besalu
- Vallespir
- Conflent (today in France)
- Capcir (today in France)
- Donasac (Donazac, today in France)
- Fenolleda (Fenouillèdes, today in France)
- Peratertusès (today in France)
- Rossello (today in France)
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