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CANTABRIA

Volume 6 · 235 words · 1860 Edition

a district of Hispania Tarraconensis, lying on the south coast of the Bay of Biscay. By the more ancient geographers, the name was applied to the entire country now occupied by the provinces of Asturias, Santander, Biscay, and Guipuzcoa. After the conquest of Spain by the Romans, the name of Cantabria was restricted to what is now the province of Santander and the eastern portion of Asturias. The Cantabrians were the most warlike of all the native Spanish tribes that the Romans had to encounter, and were never finally subdued. Along with the Astures, they offered for many ages a successful resistance to the Roman arms, and were only at last compelled to acknowledge the supremacy of Rome by Augustus. They revolted a few years after, but were cut off nearly to a man by Agrippa, n.c. 19. When their numbers began once more to increase, they again revolted, and were only kept in check by the most vigorous exertions of the emperor Tiberius. Their indomitable spirit is frequently alluded to in the ancient classics; among others, Horace alludes to the "Cantabrum indoctum juga ferre nostra." Cantabria under the Roman empire comprehended five principal tribes,β€”the Pleitani, the Varduli, the Autrigones, the Conisci or Concani (who fed on the blood of their horses,β€”"lactum equino sanguine Concanum"), and the Tuisci. There were numerous towns and villages distributed throughout the country, of which the most important was Juliobriga.