GAUL. 
were reduced into ae = Alpes Maritime and Graiz, and 
a of the Gauls. The city o 
Bourges was withdcarn rom | Aqu uitania, and 
Prine. 
nea aie ‘Cogéutnte Prins and Secunda, Belgica Prima 
and Sec Germ and Secunda, uilma 
~ 
me 
aegis 
Narbor 
d Secunda, and 
- 
of Gaul, when Honorius A.D. 
ffior 
e Got 
time province, betwe 
n 
Loir e, the limits of which were gradually extended by the. 
_ About the fame pe- 
ten 
aul, according to my, was aii vid 
vinces, viz. Aquit itania, ee eo 
nenfi 
Ga lia Na kage fis, comprehending Dauphiné, Provence, 
and Languedoc, with a Savoy, was at firft divided 
into Prima and ena: and afterwards into three provinces, 
viz. Narbonenfis Propria, Viennenfis, and Narbonenfis Se- 
cunda; to which were added, Alpes Maritime, and Alpes 
Gra Narbonenfis Propria, fince called rel eas was 
chiefly inhabited by two confiderable tribes, wiz. the “ 
hea 4 on the Rhone, and 
“Volex Tectofage, - the weftern parts of the province.. 
The Viennenfis, whi wa rovi ing fro 
ne ara or Marfeille i“ oe ae left bank o 
the lake of Geneva, was iahabited by feveral {mall tribes, 
among w ahi were the Allobroges, who occupied the northern 
<diftridt of Dauphiné, with a {mall part of Savoy ; on the 
S. bounded by the bese on the W. by the Eee and on 
and Nar- 
art © 
aly 
io) 
pital, Si nomagus, now v St. Paul des Tro 
the he and - - Rho 
—a s, who peor 
Venaifn, nae with the principality of Orange in Pro- 
Le eer, fis Secunda was occupied by the territories of the 
Salues, or Saluvii and Salices, a tribe of the Ligures, 
+ 
Me reached from the fprings of the Durance to the gulf 
_ ns, and from the fettlements of the Cavares to the 
Ube Ipes + Maritime confifted of a mountainous territor ry on 
the eaftern border o Provence, terminating at the mouth of 
the Varus, or — mall river confidered as the boundary 
of Gauland I 
Gallia Lagden . _ ee from Lugdunum its capital; 
and fometim om Celtz, the general appellation 
of its biog, vee from the Rhone oe the 
ocean ; on the S. bounded by Aquitania, and on the N. by 
Belgica. It was divided into eae Secunda, Tertia and 
ta. 
Lugdunenfis Prima comprehended almoft the anole of the 
modern provinces of Lyonnois, Nivernois, and Bourgogne ;. 
and was peopled by the Segufiani, planted pear the 
Rhone and the Loire :—the /Edui, one of the moft power- 
ful ae nations in Gaul, and ftyled the eer of the 
Romans, who occupied the fouthern parts of Bourgogne and 
Nivernovs, viz. the diocefes of Autun, ean M mee au 
Nevers ;—an » a confiderable t 
Le ingon 
nated by Pliny Roman allies, who eftablifhe themfelves on the 
a ee edie 
5 
9 
zB. 
ourc 
0 erly including that of Dijo 
Lugdunenfis Senda was nearl of the Cx extent with 
Normandy, and was peppled by the ee saat on the right 
hand of the eae: in the diocefe of Rou 
on the S. coaft called Littus Saxonicun, Ne 
of the Seine, in the diftri€&t of Caux :—the Lexovii on the 
fea-coatt, on the left of the Seine, | a the Carautes and. 
the left hand of the Seine :—the Sati, to the wedward of 
the Aulerci, near the S. border of Normandy, in the dio. 
S 
cefs of Seez :—the Viducaffes, a et es of the A&dui, be-. 
low the ee on the Orne, in the iocefe ieux :—the 
Bajocafies, on the -coaft, in iri& watered by the 
ure :—the nelli, or Venelli, planted along the weft coal 
of Normandy :—and the Abrincatui, who pofleifed a {mall 
iftr ia, now ie Avranchin, near the fouth-w eft extremi- 
ty of Normandy. 
Legion ‘1 ertia comprehended the provinces fince called 
Bretagne, Maine, and Anjou, with a part of Touraine ; 
inhabited by different tribes, of whichthe moft éeniderubic 
were the Turones, whofe c capi ital is now Tours on the Liger, 
or Loire, or was near that city :—the Andes, or Andecavi, 
in Anjou :—the Aulerci_Cenomani, in the diocele of 
Mans :—the Diablintes or Diaulite, in Maine :—the Arvii, 
in tl . diftrick o ine, on the border ‘of a river 
ich falls into the Sart h ones in the diocefes. of 
Rennes, St. Malo, and Dol in Bretagne :—the Namnetes, 
inthe diocefe of Nantes, between the Andecavi and the fea- 
on the north fide of the Loire :—the Veneti, in a 
peel called by Cefar Venetia, now Vannes, feparated from 
e Namnetes a the river Herms, or Vilaine:—the Cu- 
riofolites, or Cariofuelites, on the E. bounded by the Re- 
ones, 5. by the Veneti, W. by the ee N. by the fea, 
in the diocefes- of St. Brieuc and St. —the Ofifmii, 
on the N.W. coat of Bretagne, in the dicce fos of Quimper 
and Leon :—and the maaan ais o whom no inention occurs 
before the 5th century, int 
cE cap! is ee or _ Senos included par 
leanoi ‘ranee, and of Chan mpagne. 
peo pled by the follow ing. tebe, viz. the es, a brave 
nat xten ory, on the left fad of the river 
Qu 
the Carnutes, an ancient and. powerful tribe, in Orleanois, 
between the Seine and the Loire :—the Parifii, N. of the Car. 
