Online Encyclopedia

VESTINI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 1056 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VESTINI  , an

ancient Sabine tribe which occupied the eastern and
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northern
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bank of the Aternus in central Italy, entered into the
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Roman
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alliance, retaining its own independence, in 304 B.C., and issuing coins of its own in the following century . A northerly section round
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Amiternum near the passes into Sabine country probably received the Caerite franchise soon after . In spite of this, and of the influence of Hadria, a Latin colony founded about 290 B.C . (Livy, Epit. xi.), the
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local dialect, which belongs to the north Oscan
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group, survived certainly to the
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middle of the 2nd century B.e . (see the inscriptions cited below) and probably until the Social War . The
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oldest Latin inscriptions of the
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district are C.I.L. ix . 3521, from Furfo with Sullan alphabet, and 3574, " litteris antiquissimis," but with couraverunt, a form which, as inter-mediate between coir- or coo.- and cur-, cannot be earlier than 100 B.C . (see LATIN LANGUAGE) . The latter inscription contains also the forms magist[rles (nom. pl.) and ueci (gen. sing.), which show that the Latin first spoken by the Vestini was not that of Rome, but that of their neighbours the
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Marsi and
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Aequi (qq.v.) . The inscription of Scoppito shows that at the time at which it was written the upper Aternus valley must be counted Vestine, not Sabine, in point of dialect . See further
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PAELIGNI and
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SABINI, and for the inscriptions and further details, R . S .

Conway, The
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Italic Dialects, pp . 258 if., on which this article is based . (R . S .

End of Article: VESTINI
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