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NORICUM (Noricus ager)

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 748 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NORICUM (Noricus ager)  , in ancient geography, a
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district bounded on the N. by the Danube, on the W. by Raetia and
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Vindelicia, on the E. by
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Pannonia, on the S. by Pannonia and Italy, corresponding to the greater
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part of the
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modern Styria and Carinthia, and part of Austria, Bavaria and
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Salzburg . The
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original population appears to have consisted of Illyrians, who after the
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great emigration of the Gauls became subordinate to various
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Celtic tribes, chief amongst them being the Taurisci, probably called Norici by the Romans from their capital Noreia (Neumarkt) . The country is mountainous and the
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soil poor, but it was rich in iron, and supplied material for the manufactories of arms in Pannonia, Moesia and
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northern Italy . The famous Noric steel was largely used for the
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Roman weapons (" Noricus ensis," Horace, Odes, i . 16 . 9) . The inhabitants were a brave and warlike
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people, who paid more attention to cattle-breeding than to; agriculture, although it is probable that the Romans, by draining the marshes and cutting down
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timber, increased the fertility of the soil . Gold and salt were also found in considerable quantities; the plant called saliunca (the wild or Celtic nard) grew in abundance, and was used as a perfume (Pliny, Nat . Hist. xxi . 20.43) . Noricum was the
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southern outpost of the northern or Celtic peoples and the starting-point of their attacks upon Italy . It is in Noricum that we first hear of almost all these Celtic invaders .

Archaeological researches, particularly in the cemeteries of

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Hallstatt (q.v.), less than 40 M. from Noreia, have shown that for centuries before recorded
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history there was a vigorous
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civilization . The Hallstatt cemeteries contained weapons and ornaments from the
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Bronze age, through the period of transition, up to the fully-
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developed Iron age . Professor Ridgeway (Early Age of
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Greece, i. ch . 5) has made out a strong case for the theory that in Noricum and the neighbouring districts was the cradle of the Homeric Achaeans . For a long time the Noricans enjoyed independence under princes of their own, and carried on commerce with the Romans . In 48 B.C. they took the side of Caesar in the
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civil war against
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Pompey . In 16, having joined with the Pannonians in invading Histria, they were defeated by Publius Silius, proconsul of Illyricum . From this time Noricum is called a province, although not organized as such, but remaining a
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kingdom with the title regnum Noricum . It was under the control of an imperial procurator . It was not until the reign of
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Marcus Antoninus that the Legio II . Pia (afterwards called Italica) was stationed at Noricum, and the
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commander of the legion became the governor of the province . Under Diocletian, Noricum was divided into Noricum ripense (along the Danube) and mediterraneum (the southern mountainous district) .

Each

division was under a praeses, and both belonged to the diocese of
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Illyria in the prefecture of Italy . The Roman colonies and chief towns were Virunum (near Mariasaal), Ovilava (
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Wels), Celeia (Cilli), Juvavum (Salzburg), Lauriacum (
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Lorch, at the mouth of the
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Enns, the ancient Anisus) . See A . Muchar, Das romische Norikum (Gratz, 1825) ; T . Mommsen, Corpus inscriptionum Latinarum, iii . 587; J . Marquardt, Romische Staalsverwaltung, i . (2nd ed., 1881) p . 290; Smith's Dict. of Gk. and Roman Geog . (1873) ; Mary B . Peaks, The General Civil and Military Administration of Noricum and Raetia (Chicago, 1907) ; full references to ancient authorities in A . Holder, Alt-celtischer Sprachschatz, ii .

(1904) . (J . H .

End of Article: NORICUM (Noricus ager)
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