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Decumates agri
(603 words)
[German version] Problematic expression, attested only in Tac. Germ. 29,3: Tacitus does not count those peoples settled beyond the Rhine and Danube as belonging to the Germanic peoples, saying
eos qui decumates agros exercent: levissimus quisque Gallorum et inopia audax dubiae possessionis solum occupavere; mox limite acto promotisque praesidiis sinus imperii et pars provinciae habentur. The partly fanciful discussion of this quotation, difficult as it is on linguistic and factual grounds, is as wide-ranging as it is fruitless. If
decumates is generally viewed as an adject…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Aquae
(2,365 words)
I. Italy [German version] A. Albulae Sulphurous sources of the Lago della Soforata on the right bank of the Anio, 16 km from Rome; cult site. The springs are cold and have healing properties; Nero had them canalized into the
Domus Aurea. Large Roman
villa near Bagni della Regina. CIL XIV 3908-18. Uggeri, Giovanni (Florence) [German version] A. Angae In Bruttium between Consentia and Vibo Valentia, today Terme Caronte of Lamezia Terme. Uggeri, Giovanni (Florence) [German version] A. Apollinares Thermal springs between Careiae and Tarquinii (It. Ant. 300); unidentified (perhaps Bagni di Stigliano or Bagni di Vicarello; CIL XI 3285-94). Uggeri, Giovanni (Florence) [German version] A. Auguriae Healing springs in Italy, unidentified. Uggeri, Giovanni (Florence)…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Chattuarii
(114 words)
[German version] Germanic people; on the basis of etymology inhabitants of a former Chattian territory; possibly to be identified with the Chasuarii. As neighbours of the Bructeri and the Cherusci counted as the ‘weaker’ inland peoples (Str. 7,1,3f.; Vell. Pat. 2,105,1); possibly to be identified with the Attuarii, who show up in the 4th cent. as part of a Frankish confederacy (Amm. Marc. 20,10,2); during the Middle Ages the C. are settled from the lower Ruhr and Lippe to the left bank of the Rhine. Chatti; Francs Dietz, Karlheinz (Würzburg) Bibliography G. Neumann et al., s.v. Cha…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Lentienses
(65 words)
[German version] Sub-tribe (
pagus) of the Alamanni north of Lake Constance (cf. the later Linzgau). Directed against them in AD 355 was punitive action of the
magister equitum Arbetio and a victorious campaign of Gratianus in 378 (Amm. Marc. 15,4; 31,10,1-17). Dietz, Karlheinz (Würzburg) Bibliography R. Rollinger, Zum Alamannenfeldzug Constantius' II. an Bodensee und Rhein im J. 355 n.Chr., in: Klio 80, 1998, 163-194. …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Clarenna
(40 words)
[German version]
Statio between Ad Lunam and Grinario (Tab. Peut. 4,1), possibly the late Flavian garrison Donnstetten-Römerstein, which continued after about 150 into the 3rd cent. as a civilian settlement. …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Flevum
(114 words)
[German version] Germanic name (‘the flooding, streaming [body of water]’) for the most northerly branch of the delta of the Rhine: Plin. HN 4,101 (
Flevum ostium); Mela 3,24 (
lacus Flevo, formerly Zuidersee, modern IJsselmeer); cf. Ptol. 2,11,12. Tac. Ann. 4,72,3 mentions a Roman
castellum Flevum besieged by Frisii in AD 28, the locality of which is pinpointed in Velsen…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Marcomanni
(1,393 words)
[German version] A Germanic tribe belonging to the Suebi (border people [26. 161f.]) that was probably forced from the middle Elbe region into the upper and middle Main region by the migrations of the Cimbri and Teutoni. The M. supplied mercenaries: from 72 BC for the Sequani in their war against the Haedui, in 60 BC for the Dacians during the destruction of the Boii kingdom in Bohemia, in 58 for Ariovistus against Caesar (Caes. B Gall. 1,51,2). Severely defeated by Claudius [II 24] Drusus probabl…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly