Archaeological evidence The earliest archaeological evidence of mining in the southeast comes from the numerous
Phoenician
shipwrecks that attest to commercial exchanges of mineral products with the East from the 7th century BC. Proof of this commercial traffic is, for example, the cargo of a sunken Phoenician ship found on the
island of Grosa, near
Cape Palos, consisting of lead and
tin ingots together with
Punic artefacts and
elephant tusks with Phoenician inscriptions. This cargo is preserved in the
National Museum of Subaquatic Archaeology in Cartagena. An exceptional site also on display at the National Museum of Subaquatic Archaeology is that of the
Phoenician ships of Mazarrón, whose lead cargo, although not exactly from the mining area of Cartagena, demonstrates the existence of mining operations in the region since the 7th century BC. The first archaeological evidence of a settlement dedicated to mining in the highlands dates back to the
Iberian period, since in the town of
Los Nietos, next to the
Mar Menor, a settlement was discovered in the 1960s that in the 4th century BC served as a commercial base for the area, where products derived from mining were exchanged for goods from
Greece, Campania and the
eastern Mediterranean. File:Cratera museo cartagena.jpg|Greek
krater of the Iberian mining settlement of
Los Nietos.
Archaeological Museum of Cartagena. File:Mazarron-cargamento.jpg|Lead ore cake from the
Phoenician shipwreck of Mazarron.
ARQUA. File:Colmilloselefante.jpg|Elephant tusks with Phoenician inscriptions.
ARQUA.
Carthaginian dominion over the mines of Cartagena , one of them with the probable effigy of
Hamilcar Barca, minted in Cartagena. Collection of the
Albacete Provincial Museum. According to some historians, such as the well-known archaeologist
Adolf Schulten, the establishment of the
Carthaginians in the southeast of the Iberian Peninsula and the foundation of the city of
Qart Hadasht, today's
Cartagena, in 227 BC by
Hasdrubal had as its main objective the control of the wealth generated by the silver mines of Cartagena. With the silver from the mines of Cartagena they paid their mercenaries, and, when by the capture of Cartagena in 209 BC Carthago lost these treasures, Hannibal was no longer able to resist the Romans, so that the capture of Cartagena also decided Hannibal's war. Adolf Schulten,
Fontes Hispaniae Antiquae.With this silver would most probably have been produced the minting in the city of a well-known series of Carthaginian coins with the effigies of the
Barca family found in
Mazarrón and in other points of the
Levant in the 19th century.
Mines of Carthago Nova in classical sources Mentions of the mineral abundance of all
Hispania are constant in the descriptions of the Peninsula made by classical historians in antiquity. The extraordinary richness of the silver mines of
Carthago Nova immediately attracted the attention of Greek and Roman geographers. The first written references that refer specifically to the mines of Carthago Nova come from the historian
Polybius of Megalopolis, who visited the area in 147 BC. After describing the city in detail, the writer relates the existence of a
hill with a temple dedicated to
Aletes, discoverer of the silver mines. The other elevations of the terrain, simply a few hills, surround the northern part of the city. Of these three, the one facing east is called Hephaestus', the next one, that of
Aletes, a personage who, it seems, obtained divine honors for having discovered the silver mines.
Polybius,
Histories 10, 11.1.A century later, the geographer
Strabo, paraphrasing Polybius, describes the silver mines of Carthago Nova at slightly greater length. Polybius, in mentioning the silver mines of Carthago Nova, says that they are very large, that they are about twenty stadia ('about four km') from the city, that they occupy an area of four hundred stadia ('about seventy-five km'), that forty thousand workers work in them and that in his time they brought the Roman people 25,000 drachmas a day. And I omit all that he relates of the working process, because it is too long to describe; but not that concerning the argentiferous gangue carried by a stream, which, he says, is crushed and separated from the water by means of sieves; the sediments are crushed again and again filtered and, thus separated from the water, crushed once more. Then, this fifth sediment is melted and, separated from the lead, pure silver remains. At present the silver mines are still active; but here, as elsewhere, they have ceased to be public.
Strabo,
Geographica, Book III.Traditionally it has been considered that the following text of
Diodorus of Sicily, a contemporary of Strabo, referred to the silver mines of Cartagena, although without mentioning them explicitly. At first, the
workings of the mines were under the direct control of the State. Rome exploited the mines of Cartagena using both the
underground mining and "
open-pits". From this period comes the famous
Cabezo Rajao mine, where a superficial vein of argentiferous galena was emptied, leaving a large crack in the mountain, the origin of its current etymology. As already mentioned in Strabo's text, up to forty thousand
slaves worked in the extraction of the mineral in very poor human conditions. Those who work in the mines provide their owners with incredible profits, while they exhaust their bodies working day and night, under the earth, in the galleries, and many die from excessive suffering. There is no rest or respite for them in their work. On the contrary, they are forced by the whips of the foremen to endure a terrible series of pains that miserably end their lives. Some, who resist for a long time by the power of their body or by the courage of their spirit, endure the sufferings for a long period; but for them death is preferable to life. Such is the magnitude of their sufferings. Diodorus of Sicily,
Bibliotheca historica.Although the intense and extensive mining activity of the 19th and 20th centuries erased many of the archaeological sites of ancient mining, throughout the mining area and around the
Campo de Cartagena there are still numerous traces of mining in antiquity. These archaeological remains can be classified into four types: • Mining operations and establishments. It includes shafts and galleries, as well as open pit mines, earthworks and slag heaps. Most of the deposits are concentrated in the area of the aforementioned
Cabezo Rajao and on the
Sancti Spíritus hill. • Ore treatment facilities, such as ore washing facilities, mills for crushing the rock and tailings deposits. • Foundries with their slag heaps where the ore was processed to obtain ingots. • Living quarters for the mine workers and for the administration and storage of the mining product. With the reactivation of the mining activity in the middle of the 19th century, the first archaeological evidence of the ancient exploitation of the mining sierra began to appear. Systematic excavations and archaeological studies, both of the
Cartagena and
Mazarrón mines, were not carried out exhaustively until the 1940s. The fruit of these excavations can currently be seen on display in the
Municipal Archaeological Museum of Cartagena, as well as in the
Archaeological Museum of La Unión, a unique collection of Roman mining tools, among which are pieces such as: • Iron tools such as hammers, picks, wedges and bells. • Wooden ladders and pulleys. • Spurs, canteens and clothing —spargatas, hats, knee pads, etc.— made of
esparto and
chamaerops fiber. File:Portman Museo Arqueologico4.jpg|Mining tools from Roman times.
Archaeological Museum of La Unión. File:Lingotesplomocarthagonova.jpg|Lead ingots from the mines of
Carthago Nova.
Archaeological Museum of Cartagena. File:Utilesesparto.jpg|Roman mining tools made of
esparto fiber.
Museum Arq. of Cartagena. File:Espartoromano.jpg|
Esparto fiber
basket used in the Roman mining works.
Museum Arq. of Cartagena. File:Alpargata romana0073.jpg|Esparto fiber
espadrille used in Roman mining work.
Museum Arq. of Cartagena. semis minted in
Carthago Nova. Carthago Nova became the economic center of mining, not only of the nearby exploitations of the Cartagena-La Unión mountain range, but also of those of
Mazarrón,
Águilas and mining areas of
Almería —
Sierra Almagrera and
Sierra de Gádor—, and became one of the most prosperous cities of
Roman Hispania. The growing economic and commercial strength of the city meant that in 44 BC it was granted the title of
colony under the name of
Colonia Vrbs Iulia Nova Karthago (C.V.I.N.K), being the third city in
Hispania to receive colonial status after
Corduba and
Tarraco, and during the
principate of the
Emperor Augustus (27 BC-14 BC), the city underwent an ambitious program of urbanization and monumentalization, which included, among other urban interventions, the construction of an impressive
Roman theater and a large
forum.
Depletion of mining activity in ancient times During the first century, the first signs of exhaustion of the mining activity in Cartagena began to appear. The lower profitability caused the Roman state to abandon the direct exploitation of the mines and to
lease them to private individuals or large private companies. Mining production continued to decline until it came to a complete standstill at the end of the 2nd century. The end of mining led to the rapid decline of the city of
Carthago Nova, the abandonment of half of the urban area and the ruin of most of the buildings constructed in the
Augustan period. During the following centuries there would be no activity in the mines of
Carthago Nova except in a very residual form. == Reactivation of the mining activity ==