Online Encyclopedia

AEQUI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 259 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

AEQUI  , an

ancient
See also:
people of Italy, whose name occurs constantly in Livy's first decade as hostile to Rome in the first three centuries of the city's existence . They occupied the upper reaches of the valleys of the Anio, Tolenus and Himella; the last two being mountain streams
See also:
running northward 'to join the Nar . Their chief centre is said to have been taken by the Romans about 484 B.C . (Diodorus xi . 40) and again about ninety years later (id. xiv . 1o6), but they were not finally subdued till the end of the second Samnite war (Livy ix . 45, rX . 1; Diod. xx . 'or), when they seem to have received a limited form of franchise (Cic . Off. i . 1 r, 35) . All we know of their subsequent
See also:
political condition is that after the Social war the folk of Cliternia and Nersae appear
See also:
united in a res publica Aequiculorum, which was a municipium of the ordinary type (C.I.L. ix. p .

388) . The Latin colonies of

See also:
Alba Fucens (304 B.C.) and Carsioli (298 B.C.) must have spread the use of Latin (or what passed as such) all over the
See also:
district; through it
See also:
lay the chief (and for some time the only) route (Via
See also:
Valeria) to Luceria and the south . Of the language spoken by the Aequi before the
See also:
Roman
See also:
con-quest we have no record; but since the
See also:
Marsi (q.v.), who lived farther east, spoke in the 3rd century B.C. a dialect closely akin to Latin, and since the
See also:
Hernici (q.v.), their neighbours to the south-west, did the same, we have no ground for separating any of these tribes from the Latian
See also:
group (see LATINI) . If we could be certain of the origin of the q in their name and of the relation between its shorter and its longer form (note that the i in Aequiculus is long—Virgil, Aen. vii . 744—which seems to connect it with the locative of aequum " a plain," so that it would mean " dwellers in the plain "; but in the
See also:
historical period they certainly lived mainly in the hills), we should know whether they were to be grouped with the q or the p dialects, that is to say, with Latin on the one hand, which preserved an
See also:
original q, or with the dialect of Velitrae, commonly called Volscian (and, the
See also:
Volsci were the constant allies of the Aequi), on the other hand, in which, as in the Iguvine and Samnite dialects, an original q is changed into p . There is no decisive evidence to show whether the q in Latin aequus represents an Indo-
See also:
European q as in Latin quis, Umbro-Volsc. pis, or an Indo-European k + u as in equus,
See also:
limb. ekvo- . The derivative adjective Aequicus might be taken to range them with the Volsci rather than the
See also:
Sabini, but it is not clear that this adjective was ever used as a real ethnicon; the name of the tribe is always Aequi, or Aequicoli . At the end of the Republican period the Aequi appear, under the name Aequiculi or Aequicoli, organized as a municipium, the territory of which seems to have comprised the upper
See also:
part of the valley of the
See also:
Salto, still known as Cicolano . It is probable, however, that they continued to live in their villages as before . Of these Nersae (mod . Nesee) was the most considerable . The polygonal terrace walls, which exist in considerable numbers in the district, are shortly described in Romische Mitteilungen (1903), 147 seq., but require further study .

See further the articles MARSI, VOLSCI, LATINI, and the references there given; the

place-names and other scanty records of the dialect are collected by R . S . Conway, The
See also:
Italic Dialects, pp . 300 if . (R . S .

End of Article: AEQUI
[back]
FRANZ ULRICH THEODOR AEPINUS (1724-1802)
[next]
AER

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.