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See also: ancient city of Gallia Transpadana, founded on the See also: banks of the See also: river of the same name (mod
.
Ticino) a little way above its confluence with the Padus (Po)
.
It is said by See also: Pliny to have been founded by the Laevi and Marici, two Ligurian tribes, while See also: Ptolemy attributes it to the See also: Insubres
.
Its importance in See also: Roman times was due to the extension of the Via Aemilia from See also: Ariminum to the Padus (187 B.c.), which it crossed at Placentia and there forked, one branch going to Mediolanum and the other to See also: Ticinum, and thence to Laumellum where it divided once more—one branch going to Vercellae (and thence to Eporedia and See also: Augusta Praetoria) and the other to Valentia (and thence to Augusta Taurinorum or to See also: Pollentia)
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The branch to Eporedia must have been constructed before See also: loo B.C
.
Ticinum is not in-frequently mentioned by classical writers
.
It was a municipium, and from an inscription we know that a triumphal See also: arch was erected in honour of See also: Augustus and his See also: family, but we learn little of it except that in the 4th century A.D. there was a manufacture of bows there
.
It was pillaged by See also: Attila in A.D
.
452 and by See also: Odoacer in 476, but See also: rose to importance as a military centre in the See also: Gothic See also: period
.
At Dertona and here the grain stores of See also: Liguria were placed, and See also: Theodoric constructed a palace, See also: baths and amphitheatre and new See also: town walls; while an inscription of See also: Athalaric See also: relating to repairs of seats in the amphitheatre is preserved (A.D
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528-529)
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From this point. too, navigation on the Padus seems to have begun
.
Narses recovered it for the Eastern See also: Empire, but after a long siege, the garrison had to surrender to the See also: Lombards in 572
.
The name Papia, from which the See also: modern name See also: Pavia comes, does not appear until Lombard times, when it became the seat of the Lombard See also: kingdom, and as such one of the leading cities of See also: Italy
.
Cornelius Nepos, the biographer, appears to have been a native of Ticinum
.
Of Roman remains little is preserved—there is, for example, no sufficient proof that the See also: cathedral rests upon an ancient See also: temple of Cybele—though the See also: regular ground See also: plan of the central portion, a square of some 1150 yds., betrays its Roman origin, and it may have sprung from a military See also: camp
.
This is not unnatural, for Pavia was never totally destroyed; even the fire of 1004 can only have damaged parts of the city, and the plan of Pavia remained as it was
.
Its See also: gates were possibly pre-served until early in the 19th century
.
The picturesque covered See also: bridge which joins Pavia to the suburb on the right See also: bank of the river was preceded by a Roman bridge, of which only one pillar, in blocks of granite from the See also: Baveno quarries, exists under the central arch of the See also: medieval bridge, the rest having no doubt served as material for the latter
.
The medieval bridge See also: dates from 1351-1354
.
See A
.
Taramelli in Notizie degli scavi (1894), 73 sqq. and reff
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(T
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