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      Image courtesy of scienceinfo.net

      scienceinfo.net

      • Asturias was inhabited first by Homo erectus, then by Neanderthals.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asturias
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  2. From the sites known to date, it is believed that the first settlers of Asturias inhabited the Cantabrian coast and the river valleys: the Pindal caves (Ribadedeva), Posada, Tito Bustillo (Ribadesella), Buxu (Cangas de Onís), Peña de Candamo (Candamo), and Covaciella (Cabrales). [1]

  3. Asturias was an independent Christian kingdom between 718 and 910, formed by Visigothic nobles and officials who had been displaced by the Muslim invasion of Spain. The Visigoths elected Pelayo as king and set up a capital at Cangas de Onís.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AsturesAstures - Wikipedia

    The Astures or Asturs, also named Astyrs, [1] [2] were the Hispano-Celtic [3] [4] inhabitants of the northwest area of Hispania that now comprises almost the entire modern autonomous community of the Principality of Asturias, the modern province of León, and the northern part of the modern province of Zamora (all in Spain), and eastern Trás ...

  5. Asturias was inhabited first by Homo erectus then by Neanderthals. Since the Lower Paleolithic era, and during the Upper Paleolithic, Asturias was characterized by cave paintings in the eastern part of the area.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AsturiasAsturias - Wikipedia

    Asturias was inhabited first by Homo erectus, then by Neanderthals. Since the Lower Paleolithic era, and during the Upper Paleolithic, Asturias was characterized by cave paintings in the eastern part of the area.

  7. Created just seven years after the collapse of the Visigothic kingdom, Asturias was a Christian revival of that former kingdom and its Suevi antecedent (although not the earliest - the County of Barcelona was established one year before, in 717). It was centred on Oviedo, until expansion saw the capital moved.

  8. Lucio Anneo Floro. The Asturian kingdom had as its site the western and central territories of the Cantabrian Mountains, particularly the Picos de Europa and the central area of present-day Asturias, areas where the main political-military events took place during the first decades of the existence of the kingdom.