Online Encyclopedia

BRUNDISIUM (Gr. Bpevrkwv, mod. Brindisi)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 680 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRUNDISIUM (Gr. Bpevrkwv, mod. Brindisi)  , an important harbour
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town of
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Calabria (in the ancient sense), Italy, on the E.S.E. coast . The name is said to mean " stag's head " in the Messapian dialect, in allusion to the shape of the harbour . Tradition varies as to its founders; but we find it hostile to Tarentum, and in friendly relations with Thurii . With a fertile territory round it, it became the most important city of the Messapians, but it was
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developed by the Romans, into whose hands it only came of ter the
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conquest of the Sallentini in 266 B.C . They founded a colony there in 245 B.C., and the Via
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Appia was perhaps extended through Tarentum as far as Brundisium at this period . Pacuvius was born here about 220 B.C . After the Punic
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Wars it became the chief point of embarkation for
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Greece and the East, via Dyrrachium or Corcyra . In the Social War it received
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Roman citizenship, and was made a
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free
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port by Sulla . It suffered, however, from a siege conducted by Caesar in 49 B.C . (Bell . Civ. i.) and was again attacked in 42 and 40 B.C . Virgil died here in 19 B.C. on his return from Greece .

Trajan constructed the Via Trajana, a more
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direct route from Beneventum to Brundisium . The remains of ancient buildings are unimportant, though a considerable number of antiquities, especially inscriptions, have been discovered here: one column 62 ft. in height, with an ornate capital, still stands, and near it is the
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base of another, the column itself having been removed to Lecce . They are said to have marked the termination of the Via Appia . See Ch . Hiilsen in Pauly-Wissowa, Realencyclopadie, iii . (1899), 902 ; Notizie degli Scavi, passim . Also BRINDISI . (T .

End of Article: BRUNDISIUM (Gr. Bpevrkwv, mod. Brindisi)
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