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October 10, 2025 13 mins
For over 15,000 years, the Basques have carved out a mysterious corner of Europe—speaking a language unrelated to any other, surviving empires, and holding tight to traditions rooted in caves, mountains, and the sea. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, Amy takes you from Paleolithic cave art to Bronze Age DNA, from the Kingdom of Navarre to Basque whalers in Canada, from the bombing of Gernika to today’s thriving Basque Country and diaspora. Discover why Basques are both ancient and modern, how their genetic story reveals survival through isolation, and why Idaho is a surprising Basque stronghold. With tongue-in-cheek sponsor reads and plenty of humor, this is the strange, stubborn, and spectacular story of the Basques.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Here we go. Dear listeners, grab your tiksapila, a glass
of tiksakoli, and your best I can roll that are voice,
because today on the Strange History Podcast, I'm taking you
on a timeline trek from ice age caves to pink
soos bars, from Bronze age DNA to Boise Idaho. Picture this.

(00:21):
You're standing in a cool echoing cave on the Bay
of Biscay. On the walls are horses painted twelve thousand
to fifteen thousand years ago, ink black silhouettes, still glossy
with mystery. Outside the Atlantic hammers the coast. Inside you
can almost hear a whisper of words from a language
that somehow survives to this day. Not Latin, not Celtic,

(00:46):
not anything else in Europe. Uscura, the Basque language, stubborn, musical,
and gloriously unlike its neighbors. Welcome to the Basque Country.
I'm Amy your guide through the weird, wonderful corridors of time.
Today we're tackling the ancient history of the Basque people.
Who they are, where their DNA points, how migrations sculpted

(01:10):
their story, and how that story marches straight into the present.
If you're new here, hit follow and leave a review
so our little podcast family can grow like a healthy oak,
preferably the one in Gernica. We'll get to that.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
Deep time caves, cold and clues.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
The Basque Homeland hugs the western Pyrenees, a green, steep
quilt of valleys that faces the Bay of Biscay. This
corner of Europe is laced with ice Age art Ekane's
Great Panel of Horses, Alcheri's by Soon and Santimamigne's galleries
masterpieces of the Franco Cantabrian tradition. These caves testify to

(01:52):
continuous human presence here through the last glacial periods and
into the Holocenely, this region was a refuge during the
Ice Age. Ancient DNA shows Iberian hunter gatherers retained lineages
tied to the last glacial populations, with a distinctive Western
hunter gatherer flavor that persisted especially in Iberia. That enduring

(02:17):
Ice Age footprint helps explain why the human story here
feels so old. Linguistically, we get a rare precious breadcrumb trail.
Roman era inscriptions north of the Pyrenees preserved names in Aquitanian,
widely regarded as closely related to ancestral Basque Protobasque. No
full texts survive, but those names Andre Lady, baylex Crow,

(02:43):
jaison Man, mirror Basque roots almost eerily. It's one of
the clearest windows we have into Basque antiquity.

Speaker 3 (02:52):
Tired of boring vacations, forget Disney, Come spend three days
staring at paleolithic horses in a damp cave just forty
nine euros a night, You too can marvel at fifteen
thousand year old graffiti that makes your kids stick figures
look like trash. Basque cave tours because nothing says romance

(03:12):
like a headlamp and batguano.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Farmers, stepper riders, and the Basque genetic shape.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
Fast forward to the Neolithic. Around five thousand, seven hundred
to five thousand, five hundred BCE, farmers from Anatolia spread
along the Mediterranean into Iberia, mixing with local hunter gatherers. Later,
during the Bronze Age, approximately two thousand, four hundred to
two thousand BCE, newcomers with step ancestry swept into Iberia,

(03:44):
causing a dramatic turnover in y chromosomes and introducing ancestry
that would become standard across Western Europe. The marquee marker
on the mail line here is R one B, especially
the DF twenty seven branch, very common in Iberia and
strikingly high among Basques. A major twenty nineteen time transsect

(04:05):
of ancient DNA from Iberia made the picture far clearer.
Present day Basques best match Iron Age Iberians, who had
already absorbed Step ancestry, but unlike most of their neighbors,
they missed later waves of gene flow Roman, Eastern Mediterranean,
and North African that reshaped much of Iberia. That relative

(04:27):
isolation not some mythic untouched. Since the Paleolithic story underlies
the Basque genetic distinctiveness, think of it as a population
that kept an older Iberian genetic profile while everyone else
kept remixing. Basques share broad origins with neighboring Iberians, but
long periods of reduced gene flow since the Iron Age,

(04:50):
likely aided by language and mountainous geography, drove their differentiation.
In short, its continuity plus isolation, not total separateness. As
for that y DNA signature, the DF twenty seven branch
likely rose to high frequency during after the Bronze Age,

(05:10):
fitting with the big demographic shifts of that time. Among
Basques it can reach seventy percent, while averaging forty percent
across Iberia. Mitochondrial DNA maternal lines adds more texture. Subclades
like H one and H three are common in the
Franco Cantabrian area. Several lineages appear to have deep local

(05:32):
histories here, suggesting long standing maternal continuity in the region.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
Vasconas and Rome, the Ager and the Saltus.

Speaker 1 (05:43):
By classical times, this landscape hosted tribes the Romans called Vascones, Karisti,
Vardouli and Outragonis. Rome touched the Plaines, built roads, collected
taxes the usual Empire starter pack, but mountain zones the
Saltis remain aimed less Romanized than the lowland Ager. The

(06:03):
result Basque communities that navigated Empire without losing their rugged
autonomy or their language. Aquitanian personal names north of the
Pyrenees and the Roman record south of them helped triangulate
where early Basque Proto Basque speakers likely lived, even though
the literary trail is thin. It's like mapping a vanished

(06:27):
city from its manhole covers.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
Feeling a little gloomy, light up your medieval hovel with
the finest lamp oil from whales You'll never meet again
Basque whale oil illuminating Europe since the fifteen hundreds. Warning
may cause fishy smell, slippery floors, and awkward questions from greenpeace.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
Oaks, oaths, and a kingdom in the mountains.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
In the early medieval period, the Kingdom of Pamplona later
Navarre emerged in the Basque heartland. For centuries, Basque territories
lived under fueros, local charters guarding customary rights. The symbol
of those freedoms is the Tree of Gernica, under which
lords and later leaders swore to respect biscuy and liberties.

(07:14):
It's hard to find a cleaner emblem of identity than
an oak promising we were here before you and we
will be hereafter. In fifteen twelve, Castile conquered Upper Navarre
south of the Pyrenees. The northern slice Lower Navarre later
folded into France. The map changed, but Basque institutions and

(07:35):
identities adapted, endured, and when possible, dug in their heels.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
Want to raise your kids bilingual? Too bad? At Franco's
School of Silence, we specialize in one language. One anthem
and one very long dictatorship, now with thirty percent more censorship.
Franco school because nothing says fun like banning lullabies in Basque.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
Harpoons and her horizons Basques at sea.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
Basques didn't just look to the hills, They looked to
the ocean. Basque shipwrights and sailors helped power the age
of exploration. After Magellan died, the Basque navigator Juan Sebastian
Elcano captained the expedition that completed the first circumnavigation of
the globe in one thousand, five hundred twenty two, and

(08:24):
in the fifteen hundreds, Basque whalers ran large seasonal stations
as far away as Red Bay, Labrador, today a UNESCO
World Heritage Site rendering whale oil for Europe's lamps, mountain
people with serious sea legs.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
Dreaming of Idaho pastures. For only nineteen dollars. In ninety
nine cents, you can get your authentic sheeprider starter kit,
a crook, a beret, and a pecan punch recipe card.
Some assembly required. Sheep not included.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
Wars, iron and the price of modernity.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
The eighteen hundreds were rough. The carlist war's convulsed northern Spain,
and when the Third Carlist War ended in eighteen seventy six,
Madrid abolished the Basque Fueros, a legal earthquake for communities
that had relied on their charters for centuries. Almost at once,
the region hurtled into industrialization. Bilbao's iron and steel shipyards

(09:25):
and banks turned the estuary into one of Southern Europe's
industrial powerhouses. Tradition met smokestacks, and both left deep marks.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
Fire and silence the twentieth century.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
On April twenty sixth, nineteen thirty seven, during the Spanish
Civil War, the Basque town of Gernica, the symbolic heart
of Basque liberties, was bombed by German and Italian planes.
The attack shocked the world and inspired Picasso's Gernica, a
stark howl against modern war. Under Franco nineteen thirty ane

(10:00):
nine through nineteen seventy five, Basque language and culture were repressed.
Public use was punished, Basque names banded, schools silenced. Out
of this terrain grew both a fierce cultural resilience and
on the militant fringe Eta, whose violence scarred thousands before
the group disbanded in twenty eighteen. Meanwhile, the Democratic Transition

(10:24):
brought a new settlement. The nineteen seventy nine Statute of
Gernica restored wide autonomy, including co official status for Basque,
and set up the modern basque institutions we see today.
Just as pivotal linguists and educators built Uscara Batua standard
Basque in the late nineteen sixties, giving a common written

(10:47):
form to a highly dialectal language. That decision helped fuel
a remarkable revival in schools, media, and public life.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Across the Ocean Basque a Maria.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, economic hardship
pushed many basques to the American West, where they became
legendary sheep herders and boarding housekeepers. Nowhere wears that history
more proudly than Boise, Idaho, home to the Basque Bloc,
the Basque Museum and Jayaldi, a massive festival held every

(11:22):
five years. This year's was held July twenty ninth to
August third, twenty twenty five. If you've ever wondered why
Nevada's state drink is Pecan punch, well now you know.

Speaker 2 (11:34):
Today's basques autonomy innovation and the long.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
View Modern Basque country, The autonomous community of Uscatti in
Spain plus Navarre and the three provinces in France mix's
high tech industry, world class cuisine and deep traditions Bert
solaritza improvised sung poetry, Polota courts and gastronomic societieties, alongside

(12:01):
research hubs and a globally admired urban makeover in Bilbao. Politically,
debates about identity and sovereignty continue, but within a framework
of democratic autonomy and with Uscura very much alive and
the genetic story the cutting edge continues to refine, but
the chorus is consistent. Basques are not aliens beamed in

(12:23):
from the Paleolithic. There are Western European people whose ancestors
absorbed the same big prehistoric pulses Ice Age hunter gatherers,
Neolithic farmers, Bronze Age step then spent the last approximately
three thousand years relatively insulated from the later admixture that
swept much of Iberia. AD Mountains, language, endogamy, and time,

(12:46):
and you get a population that is both of Iberia
and somehow set apart from it. So what do we
make of it all? A language that outran empires, a
people shaped by glaciers and bronze oaths under oth oaks
and harpoons on the Labrador Coast, bombings that shocked the world,
and books that rebuilt a tongue. The Basques remind us

(13:08):
that history can be both granite and water, unyielding, an identity,
fluid and survival.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
Ever been conquered by Rome. We've got a loyalty program
for that with our Salt to Savor card. Every tenth
rate into your mountain valley comes with a free amfer
of wine, Roman roads and spa paving your countryside and
your sense of autonomy since two hundred BCE.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
If you enjoyed this deep dive into the strange, stubborn,
spectacular story of the Basque people, please follow the Strange
History podcast, drop a rating and share this episode with
the linguistics nerd or cave art fan in your life.
I'm Amy escaric Asco for listening, and I'll see you
next time.
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