Closely related with both the
Arevaci – to whom they were a dependant tribe, though regarded as a separated people – and the
Vettones, they threw off the Arevacian yoke possibly with
Roman help in the late 2nd century BC, receiving the town of Numantia and respective lands when the Romans partitioned the territory of the defeated Arevaci amongst their neighbours. However, they lost these lands to the
Uraci after supporting the ill-fated early 1st Century BC anti-Roman uprisings in
Celtiberia (the 4th
Celtiberian War). Later during the
Sertorian Wars, they sided with
Quintus Sertorius and provided auxiliary troops to his army. It remains unclear what role the Pellendones played during the period of unrest that rocked northern Celtiberia in 50-25 BC and in the subsequent
Astur-Cantabrian Wars between 29-13 BC.
Romanization In the late 1st Century BC, the Pellendones were aggregated to the new
Hispania Tarraconensis province created by Emperor
Augustus, who founded on the site of
Arekorata the Roman colony of
Augustobriga (
Muro de Ágreda) in their territory. ==See also==