Online Encyclopedia

HERNICI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 374 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HERNICI  , an

ancient
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people of Italy, whose territory was in
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Latium between the Fucine Lake and the Trerus, bounded by the Volscian on the S., and by the Aequian and the Marsian on the N . They long maintained their independence, and in 486 B.C. were still strong enough to conclude an equal treaty with the Latins (
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Dion .
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Hal. viii . 64 and 68) . They broke away from Rome in 362 (Livy vii . 6 ff.) and in 306 (Livy ix . 42), when their chief
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town Anagnia (q.v.) was taken and reduced to a praefecture, but Ferentinum, Aletrium and Verulae were rewarded for their fidelity by being allowed to remain
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free municipia, a position which at that date they preferred to the civitas . The name of the Hernici, like that of the
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Volsci, is missing from the list of
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Italian peoples whom Polybius (ii . 24) describes as able to furnish troops in 225 B.C.; by that date, therefore, their territory cannot have been distinguished from Latium generally, and it seems probable (Beloch, Ital . Bund, p . 123) that they had then received the full
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Roman citizenship . The
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oldest Latin inscriptions of the
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district (from Ferentinum, C.I.L. x .

5837-5840) are earlier than the Social

War, and
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present no
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local characteristic . For further details of their
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history see C.I.L. x . 572 . There is no evidence to show that the Hernici ever spoke a really different dialect from the Latins; but one or two glosses indicate that they had certain peculiarities of vocabulary, such as might be expected among folk who clung to their local customs . Their name, however, with its Co-termination, classes them along with the Co-tribes, like the Volsci, who would seem to have been earlier inhabitants of the west coast of Italy, rather than with the tribes whose names were formed with the No-suffix . On this question see Volsci and
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SABINI . See Conway's
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Italic Dialects (Camb . Univ . Press, 1897), p . 306 if., where the glosses and the local and
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personal names of the district will be found . (R . S .

End of Article: HERNICI
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