o 



Cnap. 28.] ACCOU]S"T OF COTj:N^TEIES, ETC. 2G3 



the Boii^ ; tliey are however now inhabited by the people 

 of Sabaria^, a colony of the now deified emperor Claudius, 

 and the town of Scarabantia Julia^. 



CHAP. 28. (25.) — PANKONIA. 



Xext to them comes acorn-bearing Pannonia"*, alon_ 

 which the chain of the Alps, gradually lessening as it runs 

 through the middle of Illyricum from north to south, forms 

 a gentle slope on the right hand and the left. The portion 

 which looks towards the Adriatic Sea is called Dalmatia 

 and Illyricum, above mentioned, while Pannonia stretches 

 away towards tlie north, and has the Danube for its extreme 

 boundary. In it are the colonies of ^mona^ and Siscia. 

 The following rivers, both known to fame and adapted for 

 commerce, flow into the Danube ; the Draus^, which rushes 

 from Xoricum with great impetuosity, and the Sa\Tis'', which 

 flows with a more gentle -current from the Carnic Alps, there 

 being a space between them of 120 miles. The Draus runs 

 through the Serretes, the Serrapilli^, the lasi, and the An- 

 dizetes ; the Savus through the Colapiani^ and the Breuci ; 

 these are the principal peoples. Besides them there are 

 the Arivates, the Azali, the Amantini, the Belgites, the 

 Catari, the Cornacates, the Eravisci, the Hercuniates^", the 



far from Yienna. Mannert, however, is of opinion that the name ought 

 to be written Pelso, and that the modern Balaton or Flatten See is meant. 



^ The mountainous and woody tract in the vicinity of the Lake 

 Balaton, on the confines of ancient Noricum and Pannonia. 



2 Now Sarvar on the river Raab, on the confines of Austria and 

 Hungary. 



2 Accorduig to Hardouin, the modem Sopron or CEdenburg. 



* This province corresponded to the eastern part of Austria, St}-ria, 

 Carinthia, Carniola, the whole of Hungary between the Danube and 

 Saave, Slavonia, and part of Croatia and Bosnia. It was reduced by 

 Tiberius, acting under the orders of Augustus. 



* Now Laybach, previously mentioned in c. 22. Sissia has been suc- 

 ceeded by the modern Sissek on the Saave. 



^ The modem Draave or Drau. <" Now the Sau or Saave. 



8 According to Hardouin the Serretes and the Serrapilli inhabited 

 the modern Carinthia on both sides of the Draave. The sites of the other 

 nations here mentioned arc unknov^Ti. 



* So called from the river Colapis. The other tribes are unknown. 



^0 Probably the same as the mountain range near Warasdiu on tho 



