Online Encyclopedia

CASILINUM (mod. Capua)

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 446 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CASILINUM (mod. Capua)  , an ancient city of
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Campania, Italy, 3 M . N.W. of the ancient Capua . Its position at the point of junction of the Via
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Appia and Via
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Latina, and at their
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crossing of the
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river Volturnus by a three-arched:
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bridge, which still exists, gave it considerable importance under the
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Roman republic; and while the
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original pre-Roman
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town, which was doubtless dependent on the neighbouring Capua, stood entirely on the
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left (S.)
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bank, surrounded on three sides by the river, the Roman city extended to the right bank also; remains of it have been found at some 25 ft. below the
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modern ground-level, the river-bed having risen considerably . In the Second Punic War it was occupied by
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Fabius Cunctator in 217 B.C., taken by Hannibal after a gallant defence by troops from Praeneste and Perusia in the winter of 216-215, but recaptured in the following
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year, serving the Romans as their
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base of operations against Capua . It lost its independence and became a praefectura . Caesar conducted a colony thither in 59 B.C., which was renewed by Antony in 44 B.C . The veterans took Octavian's side after Caesar's
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death, but it seems to have been
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united with Capua before the time of
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Vespasian, and it does not occur in the list of
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independent communities given by Pliny, who indeed (His' . Nat. iii . 70) speaks of the morientis Casilini reliquiae, and only its position at the junction of the roads redeemed it from utter insignificance . (T .

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