settlement-modern
Creators:
Sean Gillies
Copyright © The Creators. Sharing and remixing permitted under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (cc-by).
Last modified
Sep 09, 2009 09:46 AM
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- Boia(i) — by G. Reger — last modified Jul 17, 2024 10:40 AM
- An ancient settlement on the west coast of the Parnon peninsula (Peloponnese), now the site of modern Neapolis.
- Bovianum — by N. Purcell — last modified Jan 11, 2024 04:12 PM
- Bovianum was a Samnite center and the capital of the Pentri tribe. It received Roman municipium status ca. 87 B.C. By the late first century A.D. it was occupied by veterans of Legio XI and known as the "colonia Bovianum Undecimanoruin".
- Camarina — by R.J.A. Wilson — last modified Apr 06, 2024 03:10 PM
- Camarina was founded by Syracuse in 599 B.C., but subsequently destroyed in 552 B.C. The city was re-founded by Gela in 461 B.C. Carthage razed the site in 405 B.C., but Timoleon restored it in 339 B.C. From the late third century B.C. the town fell under Roman administration.
- Canneto — by I.E.M. Edlund Berry — last modified Jul 11, 2024 05:05 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 45 E2 Canneto
- Cantigi — by P.O. Spann — last modified Feb 27, 2023 06:02 AM
- An ancient settlement attested by an ethnic name in a single, fragmentary funerary inscription. The 19th century findspot of the inscription, presumably in the immediate vicinity of the ancient town, was at a locality called "Plaza de Armas" located to the northeast of (and across the Guadalquivir from) the modern Spanish town of Espelúy (Jaén, Andalucia).
- Capdenac — by Johan Åhlfeldt — last modified Aug 02, 2024 11:05 PM
- Site of a Gallic promontory fort that continued in use during the Roman period. It is one of several sites that have been suggested for identification with Uxellodunum, which was mentioned by Caesar.
- Capitium — by R.J.A. Wilson — last modified Mar 11, 2023 04:47 PM
- Capitium was an ancient settlement in the Monti Nebrodi of Sicily.
- Capitulum Hernicum — by N. Purcell — last modified Dec 21, 2022 10:30 AM
- A Hernican town that still existed in Pliny's time, Capitulum Hernicum received colonists under both Sulla and Iulius Caesar. An inscription found in the area of Piglio mentions the town, but its precise location is uncertain.
- Capo Testa — by S.L. Dyson — last modified Feb 24, 2023 06:09 PM
- A promontory on the northern coast of Sardinia. It is probably to be identified with the "Errebantion Akron" mentioned by Ptolemy.
- Capsa (Iustiniana) — by R.B. Hitchner — last modified Jul 10, 2023 07:26 PM
- Capsa (Iustiniana) was an ancient city of Byzacium in north Africa.
- Castel Savello — by L. Quilici — last modified Feb 23, 2023 11:32 PM
- Castel Savello takes its name from a fifteenth-century fortress of the Savelli family at Albano Laziale. Funerary evidence associated with the Latial culture has been documented here.
- Cercina (Etruria) — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified May 03, 2024 09:11 AM
- A now-unlocated place near Florentia in Etruria (Regio VII) known from epigraphic sources. Caius Caesar, the father of Iulius Caesar, helmed a veterans' colony there.
- Chatracharta — by M. Roaf — last modified Jul 18, 2024 10:38 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 3 H2 Chatracharta
- Chios (settlement) — by C. Foss — last modified Aug 29, 2023 10:40 AM
- The principal ancient city on the Aegean island of Chios.
- Civita — by W.V. Harris — last modified Mar 31, 2024 10:49 AM
- The Civita di Bagnoregio was originally founded by the Etruscans.
- Cività di Bagno — by W.V. Harris — last modified Apr 01, 2024 03:43 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 42 E4 Cività di Bagno
- Civitas Namnetum/Kondeouinkon? — by H.S. Sivan — last modified Mar 08, 2023 04:59 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 14 D1 Civitas Namnetum/Kondeouinkon?
- Clusium — by W.V. Harris — last modified Aug 15, 2024 05:12 PM
- Clusium, the Etruscan Clevsin (modern Chiusi), was a major city of Etruria. Lars Porsena was a sixth century B.C. king of Clusium.
- Colle Rasto Settlement — by L. Quilici — last modified Feb 04, 2022 10:03 AM
- A site to the west of modern Praeneste in Italy where surface material, remains of structures, and graves were discovered in the 19th century. These finds provide evidence for a settlement possibly dating to as early as the fifth or fourth century BCE but with likely occupation throughout the subsequent Roman period.
- Corchiano — by W.V. Harris — last modified Apr 05, 2022 05:41 PM
- Corchiano was the site of a wealthy settlement in the Ager Faliscus that was in proximity to the Via Amerina.