Venafro
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Gentile.paglia 13:17, 31 December 2006 (UTC)Venafro (Latin: Venafrum; Greek: Οὐέναφρον) is a commune in the province of Isernia, region of Molise, Italy. It has a population of around 12,000, having expanded quickly in the post-war period.
Venafro is the main gateway for the Molise region, since it's crossed by the SS 85 "Venafrana" route.
[edit] History
Venafrum, in ancient times assigned to Campania, was situated in the upper valley of the Vulturnus (modern Volturno), and on the Via Latina, 25 km from Casinum (modern Cassino) and 30 from Teanum. (Itin. Ant. p. 303.) It was the last city of Campania towards the north, its territory adjoining on the west that of Casinum (Cassino), which was included in Latium, in the more extended sense of that name, and that of Aesernia (modern Isernia) on the northeast, which formed part of Samnium. It stood on a hill rising above the valley of the Vulturnus, at a short distance from the right bank of that river. (Strabo v. p. 238.) No mention is found in history of Venafrum before the Roman conquest of this part of Italy, and it is uncertain to what people it originally belonged; but it is probable that it had fallen into the hands of the Samnites before that people came into collision with Rome. Under the Roman government it appears as a flourishing municipal town: Cato, the most ancient author by whom it is mentioned, notices it as having manufactures of spades, tiles, and ropes (Cato, R. R. 135): at a later period it was more noted for its oil, which was celebrated as the best in Italy, and supplied the choicest tables of the great at Rome under the Empire. (Hor. Carm. ii. 6. 16, Sat. ii. 4. 69; Juv. v. 86; Martial, xiii. 98; Strab. v. pp. 238, 242; Varr. R. R. i. 2. § 6; Plin. xv. 2. s. 3.)
The only occasion on which Venafrum figures prominently in history is during the Social War, 88 BCE, when it was betrayed into the hands of the Samnite leader Marius Egnatius, and two Roman cohorts that formed the garrison were put to the sword. (Appian, B.C. i. 41.) Cicero more than once alludes to the great fertility of its territory (Cic. de Leg. Agr. ii. 2. 5, pro Planc. 9), which was one of those that the tribune Rullus proposed by his agrarian law to divide among the Roman citizens. This project proved abortive, but a colony was planted at Venafrum under Augustus, and the city continued henceforth to bear the title of a Colonia, which is found both in Pliny and in inscriptions. (Plin. iii. 5. s. 9; Lib. Col. p. 239; Zumpt, de Colon. p. 347; Mommsen, Inscr. R.N. 4643, 4703.) These last, which are very numerous, sufficiently attest the flourishing condition of Venafrum under the Roman Empire: it continued to subsist throughout the middle ages. It retains the ancient site as well as name, but has few vestiges of antiquity, except the inscriptions above mentioned and some shapeless fragments of an edifice supposed to have been an amphitheatre. The inscriptions are published by Mommsen. (Inscr. R. N. pp. 243-249.)
Venafrum, in ancient times assigned to Campania, was situated in the upper valley of the Vulturnus (modern Volturno), and on the Via Latina, 25 km from Casinum (modern Cassino) and 30 from Teanum. It was the last city of Campania towards the north, its territory adjoining on the west that of Casinum (Cassino), which was included in Latium, in the more extended sense of that name, and that of Aesernia (modern Isernia) on the northeast, which formed part of Samnium. It stood on a hill rising above the valley of the Vulturnus, at a short distance from the right bank of that river. No mention is found in history of Venafrum before the Roman conquest of this part of Italy, and it is uncertain to what people it originally belonged; but it is probable that it had fallen into the hands of the Samnites before that people came into collision with Rome. Under the Roman government it appears as a flourishing municipal town: Cato, the most ancient author by whom it is mentioned, notices it as having manufactures of spades, tiles, and ropes at a later period it was more noted for its oil, which was celebrated as the best in Italy, and supplied the choicest tables of the great at Rome under the Empire. The only occasion on which Venafrum figures prominently in history is during the Social War, 88 BCE, when it was betrayed into the hands of the Samnite leader Marius Egnatius, and two Roman cohorts that formed the garrison were put to the sword. Cicero more than once alludes to the great fertility of its territory, which was one of those that the tribune Rullus proposed by his agrarian law to divide among the Roman citizens. This project proved abortive, but a colony was planted at Venafrum under Augustus, and the city continued henceforth to bear the title of a Colonia, which is found both in Pliny and in inscriptions. These last, which are very numerous, sufficiently attest the flourishing condition of Venafrum under the Roman Empire: it continued to subsist throughout the middle ages. It retains the ancient site as well as name, but has few vestiges of antiquity, except the inscriptions above mentioned and some shapeless fragments of an edifice supposed to have been an amphitheatre. The inscriptions are published by Mommsen.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography by William Smith (1857).