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Perusia
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Ancient Perusia. A Roman city in central Italy situated between Lake Trasimenus and the Tiber River. Modern Perugia.
Perusia. Now Perugia; an ancient city in the eastern part of Etruria between the lake Trasimenus and the Tiber, and one of the twelve cities of the Etruscan confederacy. (See Etruria.) It was situated on a hill, and was strongly fortified by nature and by art. It is memorable in the Civil Wars as the place in which L. Antonius, the brother of the triumvir, took refuge when he was no longer able to oppose Octavianus (Augustus) in the field, and where he was kept closely blockaded by Octavianus from the end of B.C. 41 to the spring of 40. Famine compelled it to surrender; but one of its citizens having set fire to his own house, the flames spread, and the whole city was burned to the ground. It was rebuilt by Augustus. Portions of the ancient walls and several of the gates of Perusia still remain, the best preserved of the latter being the so-called Arco d'Augusta, which bears the inscription augusta perusina over the arch. A number of tombs with Etruscan relics have been found near the city. - Harry Thurston Peck. Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers. 1898.
Perusia. The ancient Perusia, now Perugia, first appears in history as
one of the 12 confederate cities of Etruria. It is first mentioned in the
account of the war of 310 or 309 BC between the Etruscans and the Romans. It
took, however, an important part in the rebellion of 295 and was reduced, with
Vulsinii and Arretium (Arezzo), to seek for peace in the following year. It
seems the city was in the Antonii's clientela since this period, as it was said
by historians during imperial times. In 216 and 205 it assisted Rome in the
Hannibalic war, but afterward it is not mentioned until 41-40 BC, when Lucius
Antonius took refuge there and was reduced by Octavian after a long siege. Some
of the refugees ran away toward Gauls to escape Octavian. -
Wikipedia
Perugia (Italian pronunciation: [peˈruːdʒa]) is the capital city of the
region of Umbria in central Italy, near the Tiber River, and the capital of the
province of Perugia. The city symbol is the griffin, which can be seen in the
form of plaques and statues on buildings around the city. Perugia is a notable
artistic center of Italy. The famous painter Pietro Vannucci, nicknamed
Perugino, was a native of Citt� della Pieve near Perugia. He decorated the local
Sala del Cambio with a beautiful series of frescoes; eight of his pictures can
also be admired in the National Gallery of Umbria. Perugino was the teacher
of Raphael, the great Renaissance artist who produced five paintings in
Perugia (today no longer in the city) and one fresco. Another famous
painter, Pinturicchio, lived in Perugia. Galeazzo Alessi is the most famous
architect from Perugia.
History of Perugia. Perugia was an Umbrian settlement but first
appears in written history as Perusia, one of the twelve confederate cities of
Etruria; it was first mentioned in Q. Fabius Pictor's account, utilized by
Livy, of the expedition carried out against the Etruscan league by Fabius
Maximus Rullianus in 310 or 309 BC. At that time a thirty-year indutiae
(truce) was agreed upon; however, in 295 Perusia took part in the Third
Samnite War and was reduced, with Volsinii and Arretium (Arezzo), to seek for
peace in the following year.
In 216 and 205 BC it assisted Rome in the Second Punic War but afterwards it is
not mentioned until 41-40 BC, when Lucius Antonius took refuge there, and was
reduced by Octavian after a long siege, and its senators sent to their death. A
number of lead bullets used by slingers have been found in and around the
city. The city was burnt, we are told, with the exception of the temples of
Vulcan and Juno� the massive Etruscan terrace-walls, naturally, can hardly
have suffered at all� and the town, with the territory for a mile round, was
allowed to be occupied by whoever chose. - Wikipedia
Perusia
PERU�SIA (?e???s?a: Eth. Perusinus: Perugia), one of the most important and
powerful cities of [2.580] Etruria, situated nearly on the eastern frontier of
that country, on a lofty hill on the right hank of the Tiber, and overlooking
the lake of Thrasymene which now derives from it the name of Lago di Perugia. It
closely adjoins the frontiers of Umbria, and hence the tradition reported by
Servius, that it was originally an Umbrian city, inhabited by the tribe called
Sarsinates, is at least a very probable one. (Serv. ad Aen. 10.201.) The same
author has, however, preserved to us another tradition, which ascribes the
foundation of Perusia to a hero named Auletes, the brother of Ocnus, the reputed
founder of Mantua. (Ib. 10.198.) Justin�s assertion that it was of Achaean
origin (20.1) may be safely rejected as a mere fable; but whatever historical
value may be attached to the statements of Servius, it seems probable that
Perusia, in common with the other chief places in the same part of Etruria, was
in the first instance an Umbrian city, and subsequently passed into the hands of
the Etruscans, under whom it rose to be a powerful and important city, and one
of the chief members of the Etruscan confederacy. It is not till B.C. 310, when
the Romans had carried their arms beyond the Ciminian forest, that the name of
Perusia is heard of in history; but we are told that at that period it was one
of the most powerful cities of Etruria. (Liv. 9.37.) The three neighbouring
cities of Perusia, Cortona, and Arretium, on that occasion united in concluding
a peace with Rome for thirty years (Liv. l.c.; Diod. 20.35); but they seem to
have broken it the very next year, and shared in the great defeat of the
Etruscans in general at the Vadimonian lake. This was followed by another defeat
under the walls of Perusia itself, which compelled that city to sue for peace;
but the statement that it surrendered at discretion, and was occupied with a
Roman garrison, is one of those obvious perversions of the truth that occur so
frequently in the Roman annals. (Liv. 9.40.) When we next meet with the name of
Perusia, it is still as an independent and powerful state, which in B.C. 295, in
conjunction with Clusium, was able to renew the war with Rome; and though their
combined forces were defeated by Cn. Fulvius, the Perusians took the lead in
renewing the contest the next year. On this occasion they were again defeated
with heavy loss by Fabius, 4500 of their troops slain, and above 1700 taken
prisoners. (Id. 10.30, 31.) In consequence of this disaster they were compelled
before the close of the year to sue for peace, and, by the payment of a large
sum of money, obtained a truce for forty years, B.C. 294. (Id. 10.37.) At this
time Livy still calls the three cities of Perusia, Volsinii, and Arretium (all
of which made peace at. the same time) the three most powerful states and chief
cities of Etruria. (Id. l.c.)
We find no other mention of Perusia as an independent state; and we have no
explanation of the circumstances or terms under which it ultimately became a
dependency of Rome. But during the Second Punic War it figures among the allied
cities which then formed so important a part of the Roman power: its cohorts
were serving in her armies (Liv. 23.17), and towards the end of the contest it
was one of the �populi� of Etruria which came forward with alacrity to furnish
supplies to the fleet of Scipio. Its contribution consisted of corn, and timber
for shipbuilding. (Id. 28.45.) With this exception, we meet with no. other
mention of Perusia till near the close of the republican period, when it bore so
conspicuous a part in the civil war between Octavian and L. Antonius, in B.C.
41, as to give to that contest the name of Bellum Perusinum. (Suet. Aug. 9; Tac.
Ann. 5.1; Oros. 6.18.) It was shortly after the outbreak of hostilities on that
occasion that L. Antonius, finding himself pressed, on all sides by three armies
under Agrippa, Salvidienus, and Octavian himself, threw himself into Perusia,
trusting in the great natural strength of the city to enable him to hold out
till the arrival of his generals, Ventidius and Asinius Pollio, to his relief.
But whether from disaffection or incapacity, these officers failed in coming to
his support, and Octavian surrounded the whole hill on which the city stands
with strong lines of circumvallation, so as to cut him off from all supplies,
especially on the side of the Tiber, on which Antonius had mainly relied. Famine
soon made itself felt in the city; the siege was protracted through the winter,
and Ventidius was foiled in an attempt to compel Octavian to raise it, and drew
off his forces without success. L. Antonius now made a desperate attempt to
break through the enemy's lines, but was repulsed with great slaughter, and
found himself at length compelled to capitulate. His own life was spared, as
were those of most of the Roman nobles who had accompanied him; but the chief
citizens of Perusia itself were put to death, the city given up to plunder, and
an accidental conflagration having been spread by the wind, ended by consuming
the whole city. (Appian, App. BC 5.32-49; D. C. 48.14; Vell. 2.74; Flor. 4.5;
Suet. Aug. 14, 96.) A story told by several writers of Octavian having
sacrificed 300 of the prisoners at an altar consecrated to the memory of Caesar,
is in all probability a fiction, or at least an exaggeration. (Dio Cass. l.c.;
Suet. Aug. 15; Senec. de Clem. 1.11 ; Merivale's Roman Empire, vol. iii. p.
227.)
Perusia was raised from its ashes again by Augustus, who settled a fresh body of
citizens there, and the city assumed in consequence the surname of Augusta
Perusia, which we find it bearing in inscriptions; but it did not obtain the
rank or title of a colony; and its territory was confined to the district within
a mile of the walls. (D. C. 48.14; Orell. Inscr. 93--95, 608.) Notwithstanding
this restriction, it appears to have speedily risen again into a flourishing
municipal town. It is noticed by Strabo as one of the chief towns in the
interior of Etruria, and its municipal consideration is attested by numerous
inscriptions. (Strab. v. p.226; Plin. Nat. 3.5. s. 8; Ptol. 3.1.48; Tab. Peut.;
Orell. Inscr. 2531, 3739, 4038.) From one of these we learn that it acquired
under the Roman Empire the title of Colonia Vibia; but the origin of this is
unknown, though it is probable that it was derived from the emperor Trebonianus
Gallus, who appears to have bestowed some conspicuous benefits on the place. (Vermiglioli,
Iscriz. Perug. pp. 379--400; Zumpt, de Colon. p. 436.) The name of Perusia is
not again mentioned in history till after the fall of the Roman Empire, but its
natural strength of position rendered it a place of importance in the troubled
times that followed; and it figures conspicuously in the Gothic wars, when it is
called by Procopius a strong fortress and the chief city of Etruria. It was
taken by Belisarius in A.D. 537, and occupied with a strong garrison: in 547 it
was besieged by Totila, but held out against his arms for nearly two years, and
did not surrender till after Belisarius had quitted Italy. It was again
recovered by Narses in 552. (Procop. B. G 1.16, 17, 3.6, 25, 35, 4.33.) [2.581]
It is still mentioned by Paulus Diaconus Hist. Lang. 2.16) as one of the chief
cities of Tuscia under the Lombards, and in the middle ages became an
independent republic. Perugia still continues a considerable city, with 15,000
inhabitants, and is the capital of one of the provinces of the Roman states.
The modern city of Perugia retains considerable vestiges of its ancient
grandeur. The most important of these are the remains of the walls, which agree
in character with those of Chiusi and Todi, being composed of long rectangular
blocks of travertine, of very regular masonry, wholly different from the ruder
and more massive walls of Cortona and Volterra It is a subject of much doubt
whether these walls belong to the Etruscan city, or are of later and Roman
times. The ancient gates, two of which still exist, must in all probability be
referred to the latter period. The most striking of these is that now known as
the Arco d'Augusto, from the inscription �Augusta Perusia� over the arch: this
probably dates from the restoration of the city under Augustus, though some
writers would assign it to a much more remote period. Another gate, known as the
Porta Marzia, also retains its ancient arch; while several others, though more
or less modernised, are certainly of ancient construction as high as the
imposts. It is thus certain that the ancient city was not more extensive than
the modern one; but, like that, it occupied only the summit of the hill, which
is of very considerable elevation, and sends down its roots and underfalls on
the one side towards the Tiber, on the other towards the lake of Thrasymene.
Hence the lines of circumvallation drawn round the foot of the hill by Octavian
enclosed a space of 56 stadia, or 7 Roman miles (Appian, App. BC 5.33), though
the circuit of the city itself did not exceed 2 miles.
The chief remains of the ancient Etruscan city are the sepulchres without the
walls, many of which have been explored, and one--the family tomb of the
Volumnii--has been preserved in precisely the same state as when first
discovered. From the inscriptions, some of which are bilingual, we learn that
the family name was written in Etruscan �Velimnas,� which is rendered in Latin
by Volumnius. Other sepulchres appear to have belonged to the families whose
names assumed the Latin forms, Axia, Caesia, Petronia, Vettia, and Vibia.
Another of these tombs is remarkable for the careful construction and regular
masonry of its arched vault, on which is engraved an Etruscan inscription of
considerable length. But a far more important monument of that people is an
inscription now preserved in the museum at Perugia. which extends to forty-six
lines in length, and is the only considerable fragment of the language which has
been preserved to us. [ETRURIA p. 858.] Numerous sarcophagi, urns, vases, and
other relics from the various tombs, are preserved in the same museum, as well
as many inscriptions of the Roman period. (Vermiglioli, Iscrizioni Perugine, 2
vols. 4to., Perugia, 1834; Id. Il Sepolcro dei Volunni, 4to., Perugia, 1841;
Dennis's Etruria, vol. ii. pp. 458-489.)
We learn from ancient authors that Juno was regarded as the tutelary deity of
Perusia till after the burning of the city in B.C. 40, when the temple of Vulcan
being the only edifice that escaped the conflagration, that deity was adopted by
the surviving citizens as their peculiar patron. (D. C. 48.14; Appian. B.C.
5.49.)
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed.
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