
,
Dordogne.]]
Image:Franco-Cantabrian region.gif|thumb|250px|Map of the Franco-Cantabrian region, showing the main caves containing mural art.
The Franco-Cantabrian region (also ''Franco-Cantabric region'') is a term applied in
archaeology and
history to refer to an area that stretches from
Asturias, in northern
Spain, to
Aquitaine and
Provence in southern
France. It includes the southern half of France and the northern strip of Spain looking at the
Bay of Biscay (known as Cantabrian Sea in Spanish, hence the name).
This region shows intense homogeneity in the
prehistorical record and possibly was the region of Europe with the densest population of humans during the Late
Paleolithic.
Vasco-Cantabria is part of the region, on the northern coast of Spain, covering similar areas to the adjacent modern regions of the
Basque country and
Cantabria.
Archaeology
Successively, the region experienced the
Chatelperronian,
Aurignacian,
Gravettian,
Solutrean,
Magdalenian,
Azilian, and
post Azilian geometric cultures, with their respective cultural expressions, noticeably the most famous
mural art. Solutrean, Magdalenian, and Azilian cultures evolved locally in this area.
Glacial refugium and Late Glacial population expansion
The region may have been a major
refugium for Paleolithic peoples during the
Last Glacial Maximum, apparently playing a major role as source for the repopulation of Europe after that extremely cold period ended.
From an archaeological viewpoint, Jean-Pierre Bocquet-Appel has argued that ''"there are grounds for considering that the Aquitaine and French-Cantabrian refuge zone, may have been the principal source of Late Glacial re-colonization"''. His demographic simulations, based in archaeological data, suggest that it was the most densely populated region of Europe through all the
Upper Paleolithic. Kieran O'Hara has suggested in his book Cave Art and Climate Change that climate controlled the Franco-Cantabrian cave depictions.
[O'Hara, K. (2014). Cave Art and Climate Change, Archway Publishing.]
Dissolution of the regional homogeneity in the Neolithic
The area became culturally divided between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic subareas during the
Neolithic period, losing its homogeneity as the Eastern part strongly incorporated the
Cardium pottery culture, while the Western remained less developed (
subneolithic).
Arguably,
Basques and
Gascons are the direct descendants of the peoples of the Atlantic area, who remained more closed (relatively) to the new tendencies from the Mediterranean and Central Europe.{{cn|date=December 2019
Main sites
*
Altamira,
Cantabria, Spain
Important cave paintings
*
Cave of Chufín, Cantabria, Spain
*
Cave of El Castillo, Cantabria, Spain
*
Cave of La Pasiega, Cantabria, Spain
*
La Garma cave complex, Cantabria, Spain
*
Tito Bustillo Cave,
Asturias, Spain
*
Santimamiñe,
Basque Country, Spain
*
Aurignac,
Occitanie, France
*
Lascaux,
Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
*
La Madeleine,
Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
*
Grotte Chauvet,
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France
See also
*
Prehistoric art
*
Upper Paleolithic
*
Cro-Magnon
References
Category:Prehistoric Europe
Category:Aquitaine
Category:Asturias
Category:Basque Country (autonomous community)
Category:Cantabria
Category:Peopling of Europe
Category:Azilian