Genua - Clickable Map of the Roman Empire - First Century AD
Genua
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Ancient Genua (Modern Genoa) A coastal city in northwest Italy. It was more important during the later Roman Empire, its chief exports included cattle, honey and timber.
Genua The modern Genoa, a thriving commercial town in Liguria, situated at the extremity of the Ligurian Gulf (Gulf of Genoa), and subsequently a Roman municipium. For some time during the Second Punic War it was held by Mago, the Carthaginian. The place had no political importance before the Middle Ages, when it was called Janua. - Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers.
Genoa Genoa's history goes back to ancient times. The first historically known inhabitants of the area are the Ligures. A city cemetery, dating from the 6th and 5th centuries BC, testifies to the occupation of the site by the Greeks, but the fine harbor probably was in use much earlier, perhaps by the Etruscans. It is also probable that the Phoenicians had bases in Genoa, or in the nearby area, since an inscription with an alphabet similar to that used in Tyre has been found. In the Roman era, Genoa was overshadowed by the powerful Marseille and Vada Sabatia, near modern Savona. Different from other Ligures and Celt settlements of the area, it was allied to Rome through a foedus aequum ("Equal pact") in the course of the Second Punic War. It was therefore destroyed by the Carthaginians in 209 BC. The town was rebuilt and, after the end of the Carthaginian Wars, received municipal rights. The original castrum thenceforth expanded towards the current areas of Santa Maria di Castello and the San Lorenzo promontory. Genoese trades included skins, wood, and honey. Goods were shipped in the mainland up to important cities like Tortona and Piacenza. Medieval gates of Genoa is a rare survival of the city's golden age and its best known landmark.After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Genoa was occupied by the Ostrogoths. - WikipediaGenua GE�NUA
GE�NUA (Γένουα, Strab., Ptol.: Eth. Genuensis: Genoa), the chief maritime city
of Liguria, situated on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, at the bight of the
extensive bay now known as the Gulf of Genoa, but in ancient times called the
Sinus Ligusticus. It appears to have been from a very early period the chief
city on the coast of Liguria, and the principal emporium of trade in this part
of the Mediterranean; an advantage which it naturally owed to the excellence of
its port, combined with the facility of communication with the interior by the
valley of the Porcifera. Its name, indeed, is not mentioned in history until the
Second Punic War; but it then appears at once as a place of considerable
importance. Hence, when the consul P. Scipio abandoned the in. tention of
pursuing Hannibal up the valley of the Rhone, he at once returned with his fleet
to Genua, with the view of proceeding from thence to oppose the Carthaginian
general in the valley of the Padus. (Liv. 21.32.) And at a later period of the
war (B.C. 205), when Mago sought to renew the contest in Liguria and Cisalpine
Gaul, it was at Genua that he landed, and made himself master of that city in
the first instance; though he subsequently transferred his head-quarters to Savo,
for the purpose of carrying on operations against the Ingauni. (Liv. 28.46,
29.5.) He appears to have destroyed the town before he quitted the country; on
which account we find (in B.C. 203) the Roman praetor Sp. Lucretius charged with
the duty of rebuilding it. (Id. xxx. l.) From this time Genua is rarely
mentioned in history, and its name only occurs incidentally during the wars of
the Romans with the Ligurians and Spaniards. (Liv. 32.29; V. Max. 1.6.7.) It
afterwards became a Roman municipium, and Strabo speaks of it as a flourishing
town and the chief emporium of the commerce of the Ligurians; but it is evident
that it never attained in ancient times anything like the same importance to
which it rose in the middle ages, and retains at the present day. (Strab. iv.
p.202, v. p. 211: Plin. Nat. 3.5. s. 7; Ptol. 3.1.3; Mel. 2.4.9.) It was from
thence, however, that a road was carried inland across the Apennines, proceeding
by Libarna to Dertona; and thus opening out a direct communication between the
Mediterranean and the plains of the Po (Strab. v. p.217; Itin. Ant. p. 294; Tab.
Peut.), a circumstance that must have tended to increase its commercial
prosperity. The period of the construction of this road is uncertain. Strabo
ascribes it to Aemilius Scaurus; but from an inscription we learn that it was
called the Via Postumia.
A curious monument, illustrative of the municipal relations of Genua under the
Roman government, is preserved in an inscription on a bronze tablet, discovered
in the year 1506, and still preserved in the Palazzo del Comune at Genoa. It
records that, a dispute having arisen between the Genuates and a neighbouring
people called the Veiturii, concerning the limits of their respective
territories, the question was referred to the senate of Rome, who appointed two
brothers of the family of Minucius Rufus to decide it; and their award is given
in detail in the inscription in question. This record, which dates from the year
of Rome 637 (B.C. 117), is of much interest as a specimen of early Latin; and
would also be an important contribution to our topographical knowledge; but that
the local names of the rivers (or rather streamlets) and mountains therein
mentioned are almost without exception wholly unknown. Even the position of the
two tribes, or �populi,� most frequently mentioned in it, the Veturii, and
Langenses or Langates, cannot be determined with any certainty; [1.988] but the
name of the latter is thought to be preserved in that of Lanyareo, a castle in
the valley of the Polcevera; and it is evident that both tribes must have
bordered on that valley, the most considerable in the neighborhood of Genoa, and
opening out to the sea immediately to the W. of that city. The name of this
river, which is called Porcifera by Pliny (3.5. s. 7), is variously written
PORCOBERA and PROCOBEBRA in the inscription, which was itself found in the
valley of the Polcevera, about 10 miles from Genoa. The orthography of that
document is throughout very irregular; and the ethnic forms Genuates and
Genuenses, as well as Langates and Langenses, are used without any distinction.
(The inscription itself is published by Gruter, vol. i. p. 204, and Orelli,
Inscr., 3121; and from a more accurate copy by Rudorff, 4to., Berlin, 1842; and
Egger, Reliq. Latini Sermonis, p. 185.)
On the E. of Genua flows the river now called the Bisagno, which must be the
same with the FERITOR of Pliny (l.c.); it is a less considerable stream than the
Polcevera, and is always dry in summer.
No ancient authority affords any countenance to the orthography of Janua for
Genua, which appears to have come into fashion in the middle ages, for the
purpose of supporting the fabulous tradition that ascribed the foundation of the
city to Janus. This form of the name is first found in Liutprand, a Lombard
writer of the tenth century. (Cluver. Ital. p. 70). - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography,
William Smith, LLD, Ed.
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