What country did rabbits come from originally?
Humans’ relationship with the European or ‘true’ rabbit was first recorded by the Phoenicians over 1,000 years BC, when they termed the Iberian Peninsula i-shfaním (literally, “the land of the hyraxes”). This phrase is pronounced absolutely identically in modern Hebrew, i (אי) meaning “island” and shafan (שפן) meaning “hyrax”, shfaním (שפנים) being the plural form. Phoenicians called the local rabbits “hyraxes” because hyraxes resemble rabbits in some way, and probably were more common than rabbits at that time in their native Levant. Hyraxes, like rabbits, are not rodents. The Romans converted the phrase i-shfaním to its Latin form, Hispania, and hence the modern word “Spain”.