CARPETA´NI
Eth.
CARPETA´NI,
CARPE´SII (Eth.
Καρπήσιοι,
Plb. 3.14;
Liv. 23.26;
Steph. B. sub voce Καρπητανοι,
Plb. 10.7; Strab. iii. pp. 139, 141, 152, 162;
Ptol. 2.6.57;
Liv. 21.5;
Plin. Nat. 3.3. s. 4), a people of Hispania Tarraconensis, one of the most numerous and most powerful in the whole peninsula, in the very centre of which they inhabited the great valley of the Upper Tagus, and the mountains on its S. margin, to the Anas, from the borders of Lusitania on the W. to the Oretani and Celtiberi on the S. and E., having on the N. the Vaccaei and Arevacae and some smaller tribes. Their country, called CARPETANIA (
Καρπητανία), extended over great part of
Old and New Castile, and a portion of
Estremadura. (Appian.
Hisp. 64; Polyb., Liv., Strab., &c.
ll. cc.) Their chief city was
TOLETUM (
Toledo), and Ptolemy mentions 17 others, most of them upon the great road from Emerita to Caesaraugusta, along the Tagus, which was crossed at Titulcium, above Toletum, by another running from Asturica Augusta to Laminium near the source of the Anas.
There was also a road from Toletum to Laminium. On the first of these roads no town is named below Toletum: above it were Titulcia, 24 M. P., the Tituacia (
Τιτουακία) of Ptolemy (
Getafe or
Bayona);
COMPLUTUM (
Κόμπλομτον), 30 M. P.;
ARRIACA 22 M. P., the Caracca (
Κάρακκα) of Ptolemy, between which and Caesada, 24 M. P. the road passed into Celtiberia. (
Itin. Ant. pp. 436, 438.) On the second road, 24 M.P. NW. of Titulcia, and the same distance from Segovia, and at the foot of the mountains, was Miacum, of which it is not clear whether it belonged to the Carpetani or the Arevacae (
Itin. Ant. p. 435). Some identify this place with the modern capital
Madrid, which others take for the Mantua (
Μάντουα) of Ptolemy: but both opinions are probably wrong: Mantua is perhaps
Mondejar. Again, to the SE. of Titulcia, on the road to Laminium, was Vicus Cuminarius, 18 M. P., the name of which is illustrated by Pliny's statement, that the cumin of Carpetania was the best in the world (19.8. s. 47): cumin is still grown at
Santa Cruz de la Zarza, which has therefore been identified with Vicus Cuminarius, but the numbers of the Itinerary better suit
Ocaña, SE. of Aranjuez: Alce 24 M. P. (near
Alcazar: comp.
Liv. 11.48,
49); 40 M. P. from Alce was
LAMINIUM (
Itin. Ant. p. 445). On the road from Toletum to Laminium, were Consabrum, 44 M.P. (
Consuegra), a municipium, belonging to the conventus of Carthago Nova (
Itin. Ant. p. 446;
Plin. Nat. 3.3. s. 4; Geogr. Rav. 4.44; Frontin.
Stratag. 4.5.22; Inscr. ap. Gruter, p. 402, no. 5, p. 909, no. 14): and Murus (prob.
Morotales) 28 M. P. from Laminium, and 28 from Consabrum (
Ant. Itin. l.c.). Among the other cities of the Carpetani were
AEBURA (probably the
Λιβόρα of Ptolemy); HIPPO; Alea (
Ἀλέα, Steph. B. sub voce prob.
Alia, E. of.
Truxillo); and other places of less importance.
The name of Varcilenses is mentioned in inscriptions at
Varciles, where Roman ruins are found (Morales,
Antig. pp. 17, 26, 28). Besides the dwellers in these cities, there was a people, called Characitani (
Χαρακιτανοί), whose only abodes were the caverns in the hills on the banks of the Tagonius (
Tajuña), and whose conquest by Sertorius by the stratagem, not of
smoking, but of
dusting them out of their caves is related with admiration by Plutarch (
Plut. Sert. 17) and Mr. Landor (
Fawn of Sertorius). Their caves are seen in the neighbourhood of
Alcalá and
Cuenca, and their name is preserved in that of the town of
Caracena, W. of the latter place. (Ukert, vol. ii. pt. i. p. 429; Laborde,
Itin. vol. iii. p. 323.)
At the time of Hannibal's campaigns in Spain, before the breaking out of the second Punic War, the Carpetani are mentioned as the most powerful people beyond the Iberus. United with the Olcades and Vaccaei. they brought 100,000 men into the field against Hannibal, who had some trouble in defeating them (
Plb. 3.14;
Liv. 21.5), and found them ready to seize the least opportunity for revolt (
Liv. 21.11), a disposition which they again showed during the war between Hasdrubal and the Scipios (
Liv. 23.26;
Plb. 10.7.5), and also towards the Romans in the Celtiberian War, of which their country was one of the chief seats (
Liv. 39.30,
40.30,
33). Their country, which is described as being very productive, suffered much in the war with Viriathus (Appian.
Hisp. 64).
The names of this people suggest an interesting inquiry.
According to general analogy, the
Carpetani would be the people of
Carpe, that is, they should have a chief city Carpe. Now we find a city of that name, in the celebrated place on the Straits, variously called Calpe, Carpeia, Carteia, &c. [CARTEIA]; and, moreover, in the other, and apparently more ancient form of the name,
Carpesii, we may fairly trace a connection with
Carpessus, which is only another form of
Tartessus, the still more ancient name of Calpe or Carteia.
The obvious inference would be that the Carpetani had been displaced, in the course of time, probably by the growing power of the Phoenician settlers, from their original possessions in the S. of the peninsula, and driven back over the mountains into the great table-land of the centre.
But, without doubting that such a process may have taken place, it deserves consideration whether the people may not have originally possessed the central districts in which history finds them, as well as the southern regions in which the names above referred to mark their former presence; whether, in short, the name which we find in the earliest records in the various forms of Tarshish, Tartessus, Carpessus, Carpe, Calpe, Carteia, &c., was not applied to the peninsula as far as those who have recorded the names possessed any knowledge of it. Nay, we even find a people Calpiani beyond the boundary of the peninsula, near the
Rhone (Herodor. ap. Const. Porph.
de Adm. Imp. 2.23; Ukert, vol. ii. pt.]. p. 252).
At all events, there can be little doubt that the Carpetani were a part of the old Iberian population of Spain, notwithstanding the vague statement of Stephanus (s. v.
Ἀλέα) that they were a Celtic race.
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