No. 1 (2023)

The appearance of Archeology as an auxiliary discipline to History meant a definitive reversal of its documentary limits. However, all knowledge is meaningless if it is not transmitted and made available to everyone, and that is what we propose to do in Archeology and History. The inaugural theme raised in this issue is Iberian culture, especially between the IV and III centuries B.C. The Iberians, as such, did not really exist as a self-defined group, although we can group them as a collective with a common sociocultural environment and a shared language. The Iberian world, both attractive and complex, presents the development of peoples with regional differences before the gaze of the Punics or the Romans fell on them. Furthermore, it is an excellent example of how a biased nineteenth-century image can lead to a much more complex vision, the result of decades of archaeological research.