RT Book, Section T1 Unraveling Numantia: Celtiberian and Roman settlement (Soria, North-Central Spain) A1 Jimeno Martínez, Alfredo A1 Liceras Garrido, Raquel A1 Quintero Cabello, Sergio A1 Chaín, Antonio A2 Sastre Blanco, José Carlos A2 Rodríguez Monterrubio, Óscar AB The work carried out in Numantia has supplied new stratigraphical information, revealing the superposition of the different cities. After the city was destroyed by Scipio Aemilianus in 133 BCE, it was rebuilt and destroyed again during the Sertorian War (75-72 BCE). During the times of Augustus, it was populated again as a pilgrimage city on Roman Road XXVII of the Antonine Itinerary, maintaining its indigenous urban planning. During the Flavian period, the city obtained the ius latii and the municipium titles, which entailed demographical growth and a monumentalising process of the public buildings, while maintaining its indigenous urban planning and domestic structures to a large extent. PB Cambridge Scholar Publishing SN 978-1-5275-1307-5 YR 2018 FD 2018 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/88666 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/88666 LA eng NO Jimeno, A.; Liceras-Garrido, R.; Quintero, S. & Chaín, A. (2018): Unraveling Numantia: Celtiberian and Roman settlement (Soria, North-Central Spain). In J.C. Sastre & O. Rodríguez (eds.), Archaeology in the River Duero valley (Spain and Portugal): From Paleolithic to Medieval Age. New perspectives and advance in the investigation of the past. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle upon Tyne: 199-220. DS Docta Complutense RD 23 abr 2025