After losing control of Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica in the
First Punic War, Carthage began to expand into the south of the Iberian peninsula. Soon afterwards, the
Second Punic War began. Much of that war between Carthage and Rome took place in Hispania until
Scipio Africanus effectively seized control of Hispania from
Hannibal and the Carthaginians in the
Battle of Ilipa in 206 BC. Four years later, Carthage surrendered and ceded its control of the region to Rome after Carthage's defeat in 201 BC. In 197 BC, the peninsula was divided into two provinces because of the presence of two military forces during its conquest. These two regions were
Hispania Citerior (Nearer Hispania) and Hispania Ulterior (Further Hispania). The boundary was generally along a line passing from Carthago Nova to the
Cantabrian Sea. Hispania Ulterior consisted of what are now
Andalusia,
Portugal,
Extremadura,
Castilla y León,
Galicia,
Asturias,
Cantabria, and the
Basque Country. There was peace in the region until 155 BC when the
Lusitanians attacked Hispania Ulterior. Twice defeating Roman
praetors, their success soon sparked a number of other rebellions in the peninsula. The Iberian Peninsula became a centre of military activity and an opportunity for advancement. As
Appian claimed, “[the consuls] took the command not for the advantage of the city [Rome], but for glory, or gain, or the honour of a triumph.” The area was largely conquered by the consul
Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus in 138 BC, but war continued until 19 BC when
Agrippa defeated the Cantabrians in Hispania Citerior and Hispania finally was completely conquered. That same year, with the subjugation of all Hispania and the end of the Cantabrian Wars, Augustus reorganised the provinces in the peninsula. Hispania Ulterior was divided into
Baetica (modern Andalusia) and
Lusitania (modern Portugal, Extremadura, and part of Castilla-León). Hispania Citerior, which now included Cantabria and Basque country, was renamed Hispania Tarraconensis.
Gaius Julius Caesar was the governor of Hispania Ulterior from 61-60 BC. In the early fifth-century AD, the
Vandals invaded and took over the south of Hispania. The Roman
Emperor Honorius commissioned his brother-in-law, the
Visigoth king,
Athaulf, to defeat the Vandals. The Visigoths seized control of Hispania and made
Toledo the capital of their country. ==Roman effects on Hispania==