180 plint's FATTJEAL HISTOET. [Book III. 



the territory of the Arecomici, Piscenae^ the Euteni"^, the 

 Sanagenses^, the Tolosani"* in the territory of the Tectosages 

 on the confines of Aquitania, the Tasconi^, the Tarusconi- 

 enses®, the TJmbranici', Vasio^ and Lucus Augusti^, the two 

 capitals of the federate state of the Vocontii. There are also 

 nineteen towns of less note, as well as twenty-four belonging 

 to the people of Nemausum. To this list^** the Emperor Galba 

 added two tribes dwelling among the Alps, the Avantici'^ 

 and the Bodiontici, to whom belongs the town of Dinia'^. 

 According to Agrippa the length of the province of Grallia 

 Narbonensis is 370 miles, and its breadth 248^^. 



CHAP. 6. (5.) — or ITALY. 



Next comes Italy, and we begin with the Ligures^^, after 



The remains of its aqueduct stL" survive, containing three rows of arches, 

 one above the other, and 180 feet in height. 



1 The people of the present PezMias, in the department of the H^rault. 



2 Their chief town is supposed to have been Albiga, now Albi, in the 

 department of Tarn. 



3 The inhabitants of the present Senez in the Basses Alpes. De la 

 Saussaye says tliat their coins read ' Samnagenses,' and not ' Sanagenses,' 

 and that they inhabited Senas, a town in the vicinity of Alx. 



4 Their chief town was Tolosa, now Toulouse, in the department of the 

 Haute- Garonne. 



* They probably lived in the vicinity of the present Montauban, in the 

 department of the Tarn et Garonne. 



* Probably the inhabitants of the site of the modem town of Tarascon. 

 There is, however, considerable doubt as to these two names, 



7 Poinsinet thinks that they occupied Yabres, a place situate in the 

 south of the department of Aveyron. 



8 Now Yaison, in the department of Vaucluse. 



9 " The Grove of Augustus." This town appears to have been over- 

 flowed by the river Druma, which formed a lake on its site. Its remains 

 were stiU. to be seen in the lake in modem times, and from it the toAi n 

 on the margin of the lake takes its name of Le Luc. 



10 Under the name " formula" Pliny perhaps alludes to the official Hst 

 of the Eoman government, which he had consulted for the purposes of 

 accuracy. 



11 Bouche places the site of this people at the village of Avan^on, be- 

 tween Chorges and Gap, in the department of the Hautes Alpes. 



12 The present town of Digne, in the department of the Basses Alpes. 



13 It is not known from what points these measurements of om* author 

 are taken. 



1* The modem names of these localities will form the subject of con- 



