The Lusones (Greek: Lousones) were an ancient Celtiberian (Pre-Roman) people of the Iberian Peninsula (the Roman Hispania), who lived in the high Tajuña River valley, northeast of Guadalajara. They were eliminated by the Romans as a significant threat in the end of the 2nd century BC.
They spoke a variety of the Celtiberian language and were a subdivision of the Celtiberians. There is an overwhelming amount of evidence that the ancestors of the Celtiberian groups were installed in the Meseta area of the Iberian Peninsula from at least 1000 BC and probably much earlier. A mixed people, they included elements of early Italic (Osco-Latin) and Gallic affiliation, the latter possibly related to the namesake Helvetic Lusones from present-day Switzerland or from Pannonia, who migrated to the Iberian Peninsula around the 4th Century BC. Some scholars also reasoned that they might bear some connection with the Lusitani, with the latter people being actually an off-shot of the Lusones that migrated to the west of the Peninsula during the 4th Century BC.
Sentimentale ? la tua luce che vola
come spuma sulle onde dell'oceano.
sentimentale ? la tua pelle che manca
quando scopro che non sfioro pi?,
quello che chiamavo cielo.
sei un respiro d'anima che pulsa dentro di me.
tu che vivi in me,
ed io che son polvere!!
di un amore ormai bruciato,
ma che ancora scalda!
sentimentale ? la tua voce che vibra
come un eco sulle corde della musica.
sentimentale ? il tuo sguardo limpido e lucente
come specchi che riflettono emozioni.
nelle vene sempre trema, l'alchimia pi? pura