Vocontii

The Vocontii (Greek: Οὐοκόντιοι) were a Gallic tribe, dwelling in the modern Vaucluse and Drôme départements from at least the 3rd century BCE.[1]

Pompeius Trogus, a Gallo-Roman historian and citizen of Vasio during the 1st century BCE, was a member of the Vocontii tribe.[1]

Etymology

They are mentioned as Vocontiorum by Caesar (mid-1st c. BC), Livy (late 1st c. BC), Pliny (1st c. AD) and Pomponius Mela (mid-1st c. AD),[2][3][4][5] as Ouokóntioi (Οὐοκόντιοι) and Ouokontíōn (Οὐοκοντίων) by Strabo (early 1st c. AD),[6] as Ou̓okóntioi (Οὐοκόντιοι) by Ptolemy (2nd c. AD).[7] and as Bocontii on the Tabula Peutingeriana.[8][9]

The name Vocontii probably stems from Gaulish Uo-conti ('twenty', perhaps 'twenty-hundred'), after a Gaulish custom of including numbers in tribal names (see Tri-corii, Petru-corii, the 'three-', 'four-tribes').[10]

Geography

Territory

The territory of the Vocontii was bordered in the north by the Isère river, in the west by the valley of the Rhône river, in the south by the Mont Ventoux and the lower reaches of the Durance river, and in the east by the upper reaches of the Durance.[11][1] They lived south of the Allobroges, east of the Segovellauni and the Cavares, and north of the Salluvii.[11][1]

Settlements

During the Roman period, the Vocontii became a civitas foederata and had two capitals: Vasio (Vaison-la-Romaine) and Lucus Augusti (Luc-en-Diois), both benefiting from a ius Latii.[1]

The Roman town of Noviomagus was probably Nyons. This town and Vasio (Vaison-la-Romaine) were not on the mountains. They were at the foot of the first prealpine ridges, at the edge of the plain of the Rhône (the Dentelles de Montmirail were just to the south of Vasio; the Éssaillon, Garde-Grosse, Saint Jaumes and Vaux formed a half crescent by Noviomagus).

History

During the 4th century BCE, the Celtic Vocontii became settled there, with an oppidum south of modern Vaison (Garcia p. 168); this seems to have been used to control trade between the Rhône and Durance rivers (Meffre).

The earliest historical mention of the Vocontii is from 218 BCE during the crossing of the Alps by Hannibal, as recounted in Livy:

After composing the dissensions of the Allobroges, when he now was proceeding to the Alps, he directed his course thither, not by the straight road, but turned to the left into the country of the Tricastini, thence by the extreme boundary of the territory of the Vocontii he proceeded to the Tricorii; his way not being anywhere obstructed until he came to the river Druentia.[12] In 121 BC

The Vocontii were defeated by Marcus Fulvius Flaccus, a Roman consul, in 125 BCE and by Gaius Sextius Calvinus, a Roman proconsul, in 123 BCE during military campaigns against the Ligurians and Salluvii who lived to their south.[13][14] In 121 BC Quintus Fabius Maximus Allobrogicus and Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus defeated the Allobroges, who lived to the north of the Vocontii, and the Averni, who lived to the west of the River Rhône.[15][16][17] In 118 BC Gnaeus Domitius founded a Roman colony at Narbo, near Hispania.[18] Southern Gaul came under Roman control and was known as Gallia Transalpina. Over time it came to be organised as a province of the Roman Empire.[19] With the reorganisation of the provinces of the Roman Empire under Augustus, Gallia Transalpina was renamed Gallia Narbonensis. It was named after Narbo, which became its capital.

Pliny the Elder, who wrote in the 70s AD, referred to the Vocontii as allies.[20] This means that they were not turned into Roman subjects. They remained autonomous. They were allowed to continue to observe their own laws and did not have to pay a tribute. However, they had to supply auxiliary soldiers to Rome. The date of the grant of an alliance treaty (foedus) is unknown. Goudineau had speculated that it may have been made by Gaius Pomptinus after he suppressed the last rebellion of the Allobroges in 61 BCE when he was the governor of Gallia Transalpina [21] However, this is not certain. Pliny also named the town of Vasio in his record of people and places which had Latin rights.

When Marcus Fonteius, was governor of Gallia Transalpina, either in 76-74 or 74-72 BC, he was attacked by the Vocontii. He defeated them.[22] Cicero did not say why they rebelled. Presumably this was connected to the heavy indebtedness with was incurred by the Gauls in the region which was due to taxes which were levied by Fonteius to raise money for the Roman troops which were fighting in the Sertorian War (80-72 BCE) in Hispania. Pompey, one of the commanders in that war, had crossed Gaul to go to Hispania and subdued some (unspecified) rebellious tribes there. Pompey used Gallia Transalpina, which was on the road to Hispania and, therefore, his line of communications, as a base for his operations in the Iberian Peninsula. He wintered in Gaul in 75/74 BCE. Fonteius also raised corn for the Roman troops and a Gallic cavalry to support them.[23][24]

The Vocontii were mentioned by Julius Caesar (note that Further Province and Hither Province stand for Gallia Transalpina and Gallia Cisalpina; the latter was in northern Italy) :

... Here (in the Alps) the Ceutrones and the Graioceli and the Caturiges, having taken possession of the higher parts, attempt to obstruct the army in their march. After having routed these in several battles, he arrives in the territories of the Vocontii in the Further Province on the seventh day from Ocelum, which is the most remote town of the Hither Province; thence he leads his army into the country of the Allobroges,...[25]

Caesar was marching from Italy to the vicinity of Lake Geneva to confront the Helvetii.

The historian Pompeius Trogus was a Vocontian. His grandfather served in the army of Pompey in Hispania during the Sertorian War .[26]

The Vocontii are later mentioned by Tacitus (Histories, in relation to the Revolt of Vitellius, which took place in 69 CE:

The army then proceeded by slow marches through the territory of the Allobroges and Vocontii, the very length of each day's march and the changes of encampment being made a matter of traffic by the general, who concluded disgraceful bargains to the injury of the holders of land and the magistrates of the different states, and used such menaces, that at Lucus, a municipal town of the Vocontii, he was on the point of setting fire to the place, when a present of money soothed his rage.[27]

The administrative reforms of Diocletian (reigned 284-305) abolished the old provinces and created new, smaller ones. The number of provinces was doubled. The Roman towns built on the site of or near Vocontian settlements close to the Rhône, Vasio and Noviomagus, and those on the River Drôme, Dia Augusta and Lucius Augustii, came under the Provincia Viennensis. Segusturo, and the area in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department came under the Provincia Narbonensis II

Rivet gives an account of the archaeological finds in Roman towns in Vocontian territory.[28] These towns were:

Dea Auguta and Lucus Augustii were in the north, on the River Drôme. Vasio and Noviomagus were on the southwestern edge of Vocontian territory. Segusturo was in the southeast, on the River Durance.

  • Dea Auguta (Die). At some point it took over control of the northern region from Lucus Augustii. It was a substantial settlement which owed its prosperity to its position on a main route from the Rhône to Italy. Its importance is shown by the fact that it had two aqueducts. One was seven km long and came from the northeast. The other was five km long and came from the southeast. It is not clear when it first became a bishopric. It is possible that Nicasius, who attended the Council of Nicaea in 325 came from Dea.
  • Lucus Augustii (Luc-en-Diois). Only two inscriptions have been found, one dedicated to Mercury and the other to Dea Augusta Andarta, the dominant local deity.
  • Noviomagus, which was most probably Nyons. Ptolemy attributed the town to the Tricastini. Archaeology has not yielded much, and the plan of the town is unknown. Mosaics, statues and funerary inscriptions have been found.
  • Vasio (Vaison-la-Romaine). The pre-Roman settlement must have been an Oppidum. The Roman town was built on the other bank of the river. It was in Pomponius Mela's list of wealthy towns. It had a theatre capable of seating 7,000 people, several public baths and an aqueduct. It was laid out in the formal Roman way. The oldest traces of buildings, which were slightly improved in 20-30 BCE and reconstructed in fully Roman style in the Flavian period (69-96 BCE), go back to the 40-30 BCE.
  • Segusturo (Sisteron). Excavations have not unearthed much. A second century funerary monument, a few fourth century graves and traces of some buildings have been found.

One finds a praetor and a senate leading the city of Vaison, assisted by praefecti sent to the surrounding districts (pagi), which were advised by local assemblies (vigintiviri). Public municipal officials and slaves supplemented this administrative system.[29]

Military unit

A 500-strong auxiliary cavalry unit, the Ala Augusta Vocontiorum civium Romanorum, was raised among the Vocontii. The troopers were Roman citizens. From 122, after service in Germania Inferior, it served at Trimontium, a mixed cavalry and infantry fort near Newstead, Scottish Borders. The unit is known by an inscription, (RIB 2121):

Campestr(ibus) / sacrum Ael(ius) / Marcus / dec(urio) alae Aug(ustae) / Vocontio(rum) / v(otum) s(olvit) l(ibens) l(aetus) m(erito)

(To the sacred Goddesses of the Parade-Ground, Aelius Marcius, decurion¹ of the Vocontian Wing, willingly, gladly and deservedly fulfilled his vow.)

This is also attested in two military diplomas, dated 122 and 126; the former from Brigetio in Pannonia (CIL XVI, 65) and the latter from Britannia (AE 1997.1779a).

References

  1. Rivet & Drinkwater 2016.
  2. Caesar. Commentarii de Bello Gallico, 1:10:5
  3. Livy. Ab Urbe Condita Libri, 21:31:9
  4. Pliny. Naturalis Historia, 3:37
  5. Pomponius Mela. De situ orbis, 3:27:1
  6. Strabo. Geōgraphiká, 4:6:4; 4:1:3
  7. Ptolemy. Geōgraphikḕ Hyphḗgēsis, 2:10:8
  8. Tabula Peutingeriana, 2:1
  9. Falileyev 2010, p. entry 3661.
  10. Delamarre 2003, pp. 125, 326.
  11. Winkle 2006.
  12. Livy, The Hisrory of Rome from its Foundation, 21.31
  13. Livy, Periochae, 60.1; 61.1
  14. Ebel, C. Transalpine Gaul. The emergence of a Roman province, pp. 72-73
  15. Livy, Periochae, 61.5
  16. Florus> Florus, Epitome of Roman History, 37.4-6
  17. Strabo, Geography, 4.2.3
  18. Velleius Paterculus, Roman History, 15.5
  19. Badian, E. “Notes on Provincia Gallia in the Late Republic.” In Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire offerts à André Piganiol, vol. 2, pp. 901-03
  20. Pliny the Elder, Natural History, 3.37
  21. Goudineau, C., Les fouilles de la Maison du Dauphin a Vaison-la-Romaine, in (Suppl. XXXVII to Gallia), 1979, pp.251-64
  22. Cicero, For Fonteius, 20
  23. Cicero, Pro Fonteius, 17, 20
  24. Ebel, C. Transalpine Gaul. The emergence of a Roman province, pp. 78-81
  25. Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Gallic War, 1.10
  26. Justinus, Epitome of Trogus' Philippic Histories, 43.3.47, 43.5.11
  27. Tacitus, Histories, 1.66
  28. Rivet, A.L.F.,Gallia Narbonensis: Southern Gaul in Roman Times, pp.286-99
  29. Meffre, JC, L'Âge du Fer dans la région de Vaison, pp. 213–215

Bibliography

  • Delamarre, Xavier (2003). Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental (in French). Errance. ISBN 9782877723695.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Falileyev, Alexander (2010). Dictionary of Continental Celtic Place-names: A Celtic Companion to the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World. CMCS. ISBN 978-0955718236.
  • Garcia, Dominique (2004). La Celtique méditerranéenne: Habitats et sociétés en Languedoc et en Provence du VIIIe au IIe siècle avant J-C (in French). Editions Errance. ISBN 978-2-87772-286-5.
  • Rivet, Albert L. F. (1988). Gallia Narbonensis: With a Chapter on Alpes Maritimae : Southern France in Roman Times. Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-5860-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Rivet, Albert L. F.; Drinkwater, John Frederick (2016). "Vocontii". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.001.0001/acrefore-9780199381135-e-6844.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Winkle, Christian (2006). "Vocontii". Brill’s New Pauly.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Primary

  • Caesar,The Gallic War, General Books LLC, 2012; ISBN 978-0217761222
  • Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL) vol XVI, Diplomata militaria.
  • Livy, The War with Hannibal: The History of Rome from its Foundation, Books 21-30, Penguin Classics, new impression edition, 2004; ISBN 978-0140441451
  • Livy, Rome's Mediterranean Empire, Books 41-45 and the Periochae (Oxford Worlds' Classics), Oxford University Press, 2010; ASIN: B00F40FKZ6
  • Strabo, Geography, v. 4 (Loeb Classical Library), Loeb, 1989: ISBN 978-0674992160
  • Tacitus, The Histories(Oxford World's Classics), Oxford University Press, 2008; ISBN 978-0199540709
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.