Arecomici

The Arecomici or Volcae Arecomici were a Gallic tribe dwelling between the Rhône and the Hérault rivers, around Nemausus (present-day Nîmes), during the Iron Age and the Roman period.

Name

The meaning of the ethnonym Arecomici remains unclear. The Gaulish prefix are- means 'in front of, in the vicinity of', but the translation of the second element, -comici, is unknown.[1] The name Volcae stems from Gaulish uolcos ('hawk').[2]

Geography

Their chief town Nemausus was inhabited since the Bronze Age, and its original name was possibly forgotten after the takeover of the settlement by the Volcae.[3]

History

The Arecomici were probably first officially recognized or defined by Rome as an entity around 75 BC.[4] According to anthropologist Michael Dietler, the Roman colonization of the region, which led to the organization of Nemausus as a colonia Latina in the late 1st century AD, "resulted in the ethnogenesis of the Volcae Arecomici out of a formerly fluid coalition of different polities and ethnic groups".[5]

They were indeed part of a political confederation encompassing multiple smaller tribes. In the early first century AD, the Volcae Arecomici were the dominant force of the confederation, ruling over twenty-four subject towns (oppida ignobilia) from their new capital Nemausus.[6]

Economy

Coins with the legend 'Volcae Arecomici' (AR/VOLC or VOLC/AREC) are dated to 70 BC, after the Roman conquest and the first emissions of coins in Nemausus.[7]

References

  1. de Hoz 2005, p. 178.
  2. Delamarre 2003, p. 327.
  3. de Hoz 2005, p. 179.
  4. Dietler 2015, p. 359.
  5. Dietler 2015, p. 90.
  6. Dietler 2015, pp. 88–89.
  7. Dietler 2015, p. 91.

Bibliography

  • de Hoz, Javier (2005). "Ptolemy and the linguistic history of the Narbonensis". In de Hoz, Javier; Luján, Eugenio R.; Sims-Williams, Patrick (eds.). New approaches to Celtic place-names in Ptolemy’s Geography. Ediciones Clásicas. pp. 173–188. ISBN 978-8478825721.
  • Delamarre, Xavier (2003). Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental. Errance. ISBN 9782877723695.
  • Dietler, Michael (2015). Archaeologies of Colonialism: Consumption, Entanglement, and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-28757-0.
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