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The Ethnicity of the Iberian Peninsula: DNA Examined Whether you have only a trace of Iberian, or a whopping 20% Iberian on your DNA results, you can learn more about the ethnicity of the people of the Iberian Peninsula in this article
Chapter One - Iberian Women in the Old World and the New Because both Spain and Portugal had experienced years of Moslem conquest, followed by years of Christian reconquest, the position of women in the Iberian Peninsula was quite different from that throughout the rest of Europe
Iberians - Wikipedia Their first colony on the Iberian Peninsula was founded in 1100 BC and was originally called Gadir, later renamed by the Romans as Gades (modern Cádiz) Other Phoenician colonies in southern Iberia included Malaka (Málaga), Sexi and Abdera
Lady of Elche - Wikipedia Experts in Spanish archaeology have rejected Moffitt's theory and accept the Lady of Elche as a genuine ancient Iberian work Antonio Uriarte of the University of Madrid has stated: "Decade by decade, research has reinforced the coherence of the Lady within the corpus of Iberian sculpture
Women of the Iberian Atlantic : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming . . . The ten essays in this interdisciplinary collection explore the lives, places, and stories of women in the Iberian Atlantic between 1500 and 1800 Contributors utilize the complexities of gender to understand issues of race, class, family, health, and religious practices in the Atlantic basin
More than Muses A digital library of texts by Iberian Women from the Middle Ages through the Nineteenth Century
A New History of Iberian Feminisms on JSTOR A New History of Iberian Feminisms is an account of feminist activity and writing in all areas of the Iberian Peninsula – the Basque Provinces, the Castilian-speaking areas, Catalonia, Galicia, and Portugal – from the eighteenth century, when a modern feminism began to argue for the equal treatment of women before the law and in society, to
Full article: Introduction: women’s and gender history in the Iberian . . . This special issue explores diverse experiences of women in the early modern Iberian world, revealing how innovative methodological approaches can recover the agency and voices of women who have been marginalised or silenced in traditional colonial historiographies
Women Artists in Iberia | A Process of Rediscovery Few of the women I studied have ever been the subject of significant historiographical attention Despite their absence from popular history, the artistic work that they left proclaims, even celebrates, their identities