Ligures

Iron Age groups within the Italian peninsula.

The Ligures (singular Ligus or Ligur; English: Ligurians, Greek: Λίγυες) were an ancient Indo-European people who gave their name to Liguria, a region of north-western Italy.[1] They spoke the old Ligurian language which is generally believed to have been an Indo-European language (close to Celtic and Italic languages).

Because of the strong Celtic influences on their language and culture, they were known already in antiquity as Celto-Ligurians (in greek Κελτολίγυες, Keltolígues).[2]:112

Liguria in Roman Italy between the rivers of the Var and the Magra

Classical sources

According to Plutarch they called themselves Ambrones, but this does not necessarily indicate a relationship with the Ambrones of northern Europe. They were ignorant of their own origin.[3]

Classical references and toponomastics suggest that the Ligurian sphere once extended further than the present boundary of Liguria. Ligurian toponyms have been found in Sicily, the Rhône valley, Languedoc, Corsica, Sardinia and the Iberian peninsula.

Aeschylus represents Hercules as contending with the Ligures on the stony plains near the mouths of the Rhone, and Herodotus speaks of Ligures inhabiting the country above Massilia (modern Marseilles, founded by the Greeks). Thucydides also speaks of the Ligures having expelled the Sicanians, an Iberian tribe, from the banks of the river Sicanus, in Iberia.[4] The Periplus of Pseudo-Scylax describes the Ligyes (Ligures) living along the Mediterranean coast from Antion (Antibes) as far as the mouth of the Rhone; then intermingled with the Iberians from the Rhone to Emporion in Spain.[5] People with Ligurian names were living south of Placentia, in Italy, as late as 102 AD.[3]

19th-century origins theories

In the 19th century, the Ligures' question got the attentions of not a few scholars. Amédée Thierry, a French historian, linked them to the Iberians,[6] while Karl Müllenhoff, professor of Germanic antiquities at the Universities of Kiel and Berlin, studying the sources of the Ora maritima by Avienus (a Latin poet who lived in the 4th century AD, but who used as source for his own work a Phoenician Periplum of the 6th century BC),[7] held that the name Ligurians generically referred to various peoples who lived in Western Europe, including the Celts, but thought the real Ligurians were a Pre-Indo-European population.[8]

Dominique-François-Louis Roget, Baron de Belloguet, claimed a "Gallic" origin.[9]

In favor of a Pre-Indo-European origin thesis were Henri d'Arbois de Jubainville, 19th-century French historian, who argued that the Ligurians, together with the Iberians, constituted the remains of the native population that had spread in Western Europe with the Cardium Pottery culture cardial ceramic,[10] or related to the Bell Beakerfolk and Arturo Issel, a Genoese geologist and paleontologist, who considered them direct descendants of the Cro-Magnon men that lived throughout Gaul from the Mesolithic.[11]

Ligurian language

Little is known of the Ligurian language. Only place-names and personal names remain. It appears to be an Indo-European branch with both Italic and particularly strong Celtic affinities. Strabo tells us that they were of a different race from the Celts (by which he means Gauls) who inhabited the rest of the Alps, though they resembled them in their mode of life.[12]

Physical appearance

Lucan in his Pharsalia (c. 61 AD) described Ligurian tribes as being long-haired, and their hair a shade of auburn (a reddish-brown):

...Ligurian tribes, now shorn, in ancient days

First of the long-haired nations, on whose necks
Once flowed the auburn locks in pride supreme.[13]

History

Peoples of Cisalpine Gaul 391-192 BC.

The Ligures seem to have been ready to engage as mercenary troops in the service of others. Ligurian auxiliaries are mentioned in the army of the Carthaginian general Hamilcar in 480 BC.[14] Greek leaders in Sicily continued to recruit their mercenary forces from the same quarter as late as the time of Agathocles.[15][4]

The Ligures fought long and hard against the Romans, but as a result of these hostilities many were displaced from their homeland[16] and eventually assimilated into Roman culture during the 2nd century BC. Roman sources describe the Ligurians as smaller framed than the Gauls, but physically stronger, more ferocious and fiercer as warriors, hence their reputation as mercenary troops.

Tribes

Numerous tribes of Ligures are mentioned by ancient historians, among them:

In the island of Corsica and far northeast Sardinia dwelt a group of tribes called Corsi, although they are classified as nuragic tribes (that may been related to the Iberians, the Aquitanians or to the Etruscans) they also may have been a group of ligurian tribes, like the Ilvates in the neighboring Ilva (Elba) island (nuragic tribes, in Corsica and Sardinia, were not necessarily from the same ethnic origin or spoke the same language):

See also

References

  1. "Liguria", in William Smith (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854)
  2. Baldi, Philip (2002). The Foundations of Latin. Walter de Gruyter.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Boardman, John (1988). The Cambridge ancient history: Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean c. 525-479 BC. p. 716.
  4. 4.0 4.1 William Smith, ed. (1854). "Liguria". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography.
  5. Shipley, Graham (2008). "The Periplous of Pseudo-Scylax: An Interim Translation".
  6. Amédée Thierry, Histoire des Gaulois depuis les temps les plus reculés.
  7. Postumius Rufius Festus (qui et) Avienius, Ora maritima, 129-133 (nel quale in modo oscuro indica i Liguri come abitanti a nord delle "isole oestrymniche"; 205 (Liguri a nord della città di Ophiussa nella penisola iberica); 284-285 (il fiume Tartesso nascerebbe dalle "paludi ligustine").
  8. Karl Viktor Müllenhoff, Deutsche Alterthurnskunde, I volume.
  9. Dominique François Louis Roget de Belloguet, Ethnogénie gauloise, ou Mémoires critiques sur l'origine et la parenté des Cimmériens, des Cimbres, des Ombres, des Belges, des Ligures et des anciens Celtes. Troisiéme partie. Preuves intellectuelles. Le génie gaulois, Paris 1868.
  10. Henri d'Arbois de Jubainville, Les Premiers Habitants de l'Europe d'après les Écrivains de l'Antiquité et les Travaux des Linguistes: Seconde Édition, volume II, Paris 1894, libro II, capitolo 9.
  11. Arturo Issel Liguria geologica e preistorica, Genova 1892, II volume, pp.356-357.
  12. Strabo, Geography, book 2, chapter 5, section 28.
  13. Lucan, Pharsalia, I. 496, translated by Edward Ridley (1896).
  14. Herodotus 7.165; Diodorus Siculus 11.1.
  15. Diodorus Siculus 21.3.
  16. Broadhead, William (2002). Internal migration and the transformation of Republican Italy (PDF) (Ph.D.). University College London. p. 15.

Bibliography

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