Online Encyclopedia

PICENUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 581 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PICENUM  , a

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district of ancient Italy, situated between the Apennines and the Adriatic, bounded N. by the
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Senones and S. by the
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Vestini . The inhabitants were, according to tradition, an offshoot of the Sabines . Strabo (v . 4, I) gives the story of their
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migration, led by a
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woodpecker (
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picus), a
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bird sacred to Mars, from which they derived their name Picentini (cf .
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Dion . Ital. i . 14, r), just as the Hirpini derived theirs from hirpus, a wolf . The district was conquered by the Romans early in the 3rd century Inc. and the whole territory was divided up among Latin-speaking settlers by the Lex
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Flaminia in 232 B.C . Hence we have very scanty records of any non-Latin Language that may have been spoken in the district before the 3rd century . Besides the problematic inscriptions from Belmonte, Nereto and
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Cupra Maritima (see
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SABELLIC), we have one or two Latin inscriptions (probably of the 2nd or even the 1st century B.C.) which contain certain forms showing a distinct affinity with the dialect of Iguvium (cf. the name Pasdi=Latin Pacidii) . Hence there seems some ground for believing that the population which the Romans dispossessed, or held in subjection, really spoke a dialect very much like that of their neighbours in Umbria . For inscriptions, see R .

S .

Conway, The
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Italic Dialects, p . 449, where the place-names and
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personal names of the district will also he found; see further, Livy, Epit. xv.; B . V . Head, Historia nun:arum, p . 1g . (R . S . C.) It was in Picenum, at Asculum, that the Social War broke out in 90 B.C . At the end of the war the district became connected with Pompeius Strabo, and his son
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Pompey the
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Great threw intothe scale on the side of Sulla, in 83 B.C., all the influence he possessed there, and hoped to make it a
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base against Caesar's legions in 49 B.C . Under Augustus it formed the fifth region of Italy, and included twenty-three
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independent communities, of which five, Ancona, Firmum, Asculum, Hadria and Interamnia, were coloniae . It was reached from Rome by the Via
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Salaria, and its branch the Via Caecilia .

It was also on a branch leading from the Via Flarninia at Nuceria Camellaria to Septempeda . There were also communications from

north to south; a road led from Asculum to Urbs
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Salvia and Ancona, another from Asculum and Firmum and the coast, another from Urbs Salvia to Potentia, while finally along the whole
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line of the coast there ran a prolongation of the Via Flaminia, the name of which is not known to us . At the end of the and century A.D. the north-eastern portion of Umbria was divided from the rest and acquired the name Flaminia, from the high road . For the time it remained
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united with Umbria for administrative purposes, but passed to Picenum at latest in the time of
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Constantine, and acquired the name of Flaminia et Picenum Annonarium, the main portion of Picenum being distinguished as Suburbicarium . In an inscription of A.D . 309 Ravenna is actually spoken of as the chief
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town of Picenum . When the exarchate of Ravenna was founded the
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part of Picenum Annonarium near the sea became the Pentapolis Maritima, which included the five cities of Ariminum, Pisaurum, Fanum Fortunae, Sena Gallica and Ancona . The exarchate was seized by Luitprand in 727, and Ravenna itself was taken by Aistulf in 752 . In the next
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year, however, the Emperor Pippin took it from him and handed it over to the pope, a grant confirmed by his son Charlemagne . (T .

End of Article: PICENUM
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