[QUOTE = halfalp; 530440] Es bastante cierto que los hombres de Phoenicians se han casado con algunas mujeres locales, hijas de padres que tendrían algún interés en hacer negocios con los comerciantes recién llegados. Este es un patrón social y cultural que podemos ver en cada paso de la historia humana y en cada lugar del mundo. Así que nunca creo realmente en los "únicos puestos de avanzada de comerciantes" de los fenicios. [/ QUOTE]
The foundation of Cádiz (walled enclosure) by the Phoenicians would be the beginning of a new Tartessos with time, and also eventually its end.
Founding a city next to the kingdom of Tartessos must have been hard, because in the beginning I do not believe that the tartessos received the Phoenicians with open arms, the city of Cádiz was walled and the vigilance of the city was uninterrupted, it must have been a labor patient from the Phoenicians to gain the confidence of the tartessos and that they saw that the alliance with Phoenicians would be more positive than negative.
l o l
They identify Phoenician DNA in skeletal remains of two corpses found in the Comic Theater
They identify Phoenician DNA in skeletal remains of two corpses found in the Comic Theater
Thus, in the first individual several genetic lines have been detected (haplogroups HVOa1 and U1A) that are found primarily in populations of the Near East, where the Phoenician presence was more notable. That is to say, we are facing a subject of Phoenician origin of first or second generation (son of Phoenician father and mother settled in Gadir). The second subject is remarkably different from the previous one, because although genetic markers linked to geographic populations coinciding with ancient Phenicia have been detected (Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, with haplogroups K and HV1), haplogroup H, the highest presence in Western Europe.
http://www.europapress.es/andalucia...es-hallados-teatro-comico-20120214144746.html
I doubt it was hard, thousands of Phoenician pottery shards were found in Huelva, there was a lot of collaboration between the natives and the Phoenicians. Assuming the hut village of Huelva was Tartessos, as it was the biggest native site in Andalusia (20 hectares):
"Among the 8009 pottery shards studied, which just represent the
9% of the total fragments found, 4,703 are autochthonous, 3233 Phoenician, 33 Greek, 8 are Cypriot, 40 are Sardinian
and 2 are from Thyrrenian peninsular Italy
It has also been observed that in the calculation of fragments if we were limited to selecting the edges and the funds, the gap between the indigenous and the Phoenician materials would even be reversed in favor of the
second, with 3112 vessels imported against the 3000 of local production (González de Canales, Serrano and Llompart, 2006, 107)."
"Regarding the Phoenician materials- This is without a doubt the most ancient ceramic ensemble found in the Iberian Peninsula, prior to the foundation of the first colonies (Ramon Tor-
res, 2010, 218), characterized by luxury "services" from the motherland
(González de Canales, Serrano and Llompart, 2006, 108-109"