Chap. 4.] ACCOTJKT Or COTJOTEIES, ETC. 
169 
nicenses\ and tlie Osicerdenses ; of federate states, there 
are the Tarragenses^ ; and of tributaries, the Arcobri- 
genses^, the Andologenses"*, the Aracelitani^, the Bursao- 
nenses^, the Calagurritani^, who are also surnamed the 
Fibularenses, the Complutenses^, the Carenses^, the Cin- 
censes^^, the Cortonenses, the Damanitani^^ the Lar- 
nenses^^, the Lursenses^^, the Lumberitani^^, the Lacetani, 
the Lubienses, the Pompelonenses^^, and the Segienses. 
1 The people of Leonica, probably the modern Alcaniz, on the river 
Guadalope, in Arragon. 
2 The people of Tarraga, tne present Tarrega, nine leagues east of 
Lerida, in Catalonia. 
3 The people of Arcobriga, now Loib Arcos, in Navarre, five leagues 
south of E Stella. 
Perhaps the same as the Andosini, a people mentioned by Polybius, 
B. iii. c. 35, as situate between the Iberus and the Pyrenees. There is a 
smaU town of Navarre called Androilla. 
^ The people probably of the site now occupied by Huarte AraquU, 
sLk leagues to the west of Pampeluna. 
® Probably the same as the Bursaones of Livy, the Bursavolenses of 
Hirtius, and the Bursadenses of Ptolemy. Their exact locahty is unknown. 
7 Mention has been made of Calagurris Fibularensis or Fibulicensis 
under Calagurris Nassica : see p. 168. 
^ The people of Complutum, the modern Alcala de Henares, on the 
river Henares, six leagues to the east of Madrid. It is not quite certain 
whether it stood on the exact site of Alcala, or on the hill of Zulema, on 
the other side of the Henares. 
^ The town of Cares, adjouiing the more modern one of Puente la 
Beyna, probably marks their site. 
10 Probably so called from the river Cinga, the modern Cinca : or they 
may have given their name thereto. 
11 The people probably of the present Mediana on the Ebro, sis 
leagues below Zaragoza. 
12 Their town was Larnum, situate on a river of the same name. It 
was probably the present Torderas, situate on the river of that name. 
1^ Of this people nothing appears to be known. In the old editions the 
next people mentioned are the " Ispalenses," but since the time of Har- 
douin, they have been generally omitted, as wrongly introduced, and as ut- 
terly unknown. Spanish coins have however been more recently discovered 
with the name ' Sblaie ' or ' Splaie,' inscribed in Celtiberian characters, 
and numismatists are of opinion that they indicate the name of the town 
of this people, which in Latin would be Ispala. This at aU events is the 
opinion of M. de Saulcy. 
1* The people of the present town of Lumbier in Navarre, called by its 
inhabitants Irumberri. 
1^ The people of the present city of Pampeluna. 
