The Novallas bronze tablet: An inscription in the Celtiberian language and the Latin alphabet from Spain
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
Celtiberian language Palaeohispanic epigraphy Bronze epigraphy Latinization Romanization Roman Spain
Date
2021-12-29Referencia bibliográfica
Beltrán Lloris, F... [et al.] (2021). The Novallas bronze tablet: An inscription in the Celtiberian language and the Latin alphabet from Spain. Journal of Roman Archaeology, 34(2), 713-733. doi:[10.1017/S1047759421000635]
Sponsorship
Spanish GovernmentAbstract
The Novallas Bronze may be considered one of the most important epigraphic finds in
recent years in Spain. It is a fragment of a public document datable to the last decades of the 1st
c. BCE, composed in the Celtiberian language but written in the Latin alphabet. The Novallas
Bronze is not only one of the latest inscriptions composed in this language – over half a century
later than the famous inscriptions from Contrebia Belaisca – but also the longest Celtiberian document
written in the Latin alphabet known thus far. This paper offers a complete publication of
this exceptional document, as well as an analysis of the principal developments that the artifact illuminates
and the consequent implications for the transformations that the Celtiberian people underwent
during the transition from Republic to Empire, with particular focus on the process of
Latinization.