174 PLimr's natueal histoet. [Book III. 



copper, silver, and gold ; in the Nearer Spain there is also 

 found lapis specularis^ ; in BaBtica there is cinnabar. There 

 are also quarries of marble. The Emperor Vespasianus 

 Augustus, while still harassed by the storms that agitated 

 the Boman state, conferred the Latian rights on the whole 

 of Spain. The Pyrenean mountains divide Spain from Graul, 

 their extremities projecting into the two seas on either side. 



CHAP. 5. (4.) — OF THE PEOVINCE OF GALLIA NAEBOITENSIS. 



That part of the G-allias which is washed by the inland sea^ 

 is called the province of [GraUia] Narbonensis^, having 

 formerly borne the name of Braccata''. It is divided from 

 Italy by the river Varus^, and by the range of the Alps, the 

 great safeguards of tlie Roman Empire. From the remainder 

 of Gaul, on the north, it is separated by the mountains Ge- 

 henna^ and Jura''. In the cultivation of the soil, the man- 

 ners and civilization of the inhabitants, and the extent of its 

 wealth, it is surpassed by none of the provinces, and, in short, 

 might be more truthfully described as a part of Italy than 

 as a province. On the coast we have the district of the 

 Sordones^, and more inland that of the Consuarani^. The 



^ Transparent stone. Further mention is made of it by PHny in 

 B. XXXV, c. 45. 2 Or Mediterranean. 



3 From the chief city Narbo Martins, and later Narbona, now Nar- 

 bonne, situate on the river Atax, now Aude. It was made a Roman 

 colony by the Consul Q. Martins B.C. 118, and from him received its sur- 

 name. It was the residence of the Roman governor of the province and 

 a place of great commercial importance. There are scarcely any remains 

 of the ancient city, but some vestiges of the canal, by which it was con- 

 nected with the sea at twelve miles' distance. 



* From the linen breeches which the inhabitants wore, a fashion which 

 was not adopted by the Romans tiU the time of the Emperors. Severus 

 wore them, but the use of them was restricted by Honorius. 



6 Still called the ' Var.' It divides France from Nice, a province of 

 Sardinia. 



^ Now the Cevennes. They lie as much to the west as the north of 

 GaUia Narbonensis. 



7 The range of the Jura, north of the Lake of Geneva. 



8 Inhabiting the former Comte de Roussillon, or Departement des Py- 

 renees Orientales. They were said to have been originally a Bebrycian 

 or Thracian colony. 



* Probably the inhabitants of the present Conserans, on the west of 

 the Departement de 1' Arriege. 



