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Viromandui

The Viromanduī or Veromanduī (Gaulish: *Uiromanduoi) were a Belgic tribe dwelling in the modern Vermandois region (Picardy) during the Iron Age and Roman periods. During the Gallic Wars (58–50 BC), they belonged to the Belgic coalition of 57 BC against Caesar.[1]

Plan of the oppidum of the Viromandui at Vermand by Édouard Fleury (1877)

Name Edit

They are mentioned as Viromanduos and Viromanduis (var. vero-) by Caesar (mid-1st c. BC),[2] Viromanduos by Livy (late 1st c. BC),[3] Veromandui (var. uir-) by Pliny (1st c. AD),[4] (Ou̓i)romándues (<Οὐι>ῥομάνδυες) by Ptolemy (2nd c. AD),[5] and as Veromandi by Orosius (early 5th c. AD).[6][7]

The ethnonym Viromanduī is a latinized form of Gaulish *Uiromanduoi (sing. Uiromanduos), which literally means 'horse-men' or 'male ponies'. It derives from the stem *uiro- ('man') attached to mandos ('pony'). It should perhaps be interpreted as the 'Centaurs' or as the '[men] virile in owning ponies'.[8][9][10] Pierre-Yves Lambert has also proposed the meaning 'those who trample upon men', by comparing the second element with the Welsh mathru.[11]

The city of Vermand, probably attested as Virmandensium castrum in the 9th c. AD (Virmandi in 1160), and the region of Vermandois, attested in 877 as Vermandensis pagus ('pagus of the Viromandui'), are named after the Belgic tribe.[12][13] A civitas Veromandorum is mentioned in the Notita Galliarum (ca. 400 AD), but we do not know if it refers to Vermand or to Saint-Quentin.[14][15]

Geography Edit

Territory Edit

 
The civitas of the Viromandui during the Roman period.[16]

The territory of the Viromandui corresponded for the most part to the limits of the Diocese of Vermandois, around the modern towns of Vermand, Saint-Quentin, Noyon and Moislains.[16] It was located on the 'sill of Vermandois', in an area partly surrounded by dense forests on the upper courses of the Somme and Oise rivers.[1]

They dwelled between the Ambiani and Bellovaci in the west, the Nervii and Atrebates in the north, the Remi in the east, and the Suessiones in the south.[17][16] The Oise river is traditionally regarded as the eastern border between the Viromandui and Remi. Ernest Desjardins, followed by some authors, has proposed that the Viromanduan territory stretched further east as far as Vervins, although this remains controversial.[18][19]

Settlements Edit

Pre-Roman period Edit

Their main oppidum (16–20 hectares) until the Roman period, corresponding to the modern town of Vermand, was situated on a promontory east of the Omignon river. Fortifications and continuous occupation emerged relatively late on the site, just before or during the Gallic Wars (58–50 BC), and it probably served only as a temporary refuge until the Roman invasion of Belgica. Some have also proposed that it was erected as a military camp by Belgic auxiliaries serving in the Roman army. The site remained densely occupied from the Augustan era until the beginning of the 5th century AD.[20]

Roman period Edit

Augusta Viromandorum (modern Saint-Quentin), founded closer to communication axis just 11 km away from the oppidum of Vermand during the reign of Augustus (27 BC–14 AD), soon replaced Vermand as the main settlement.[21] During the Roman period, Augusta Viromandorum reached a size of 40–60ha, in the average of Gallo-Roman chief towns.[22] During the 4th century, the settlement was apparently deserted or at least saw its population considerably reduced.[23] Some scholars have argued that Augusta (Saint-Quentin) was replaced by Virmandis (Vermand) as the chief town of the civitas during this period, and that it eventually regained its position in the 9th century, although this has been doubted by other scholars.[24][25][14]

Noviomagus (Gaulish: 'new market'), corresponding to modern Noyon, is first mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary (late 3rd c. AD) as a station on the route between Amiens and Reims.[26] By the 6th century, the influence of the town could rival other settlements of the region, and it became a local religious centre of power after the bishop Medardus transferred his episcopal siege to Noyon in 531.[27]

Other secondary agglomerations were located at Gouy, Contraginum (Condren), Châtillon-sur-Oise, and possibly at Marcy. Gouy was occupied from the 1st century AD until at least the 3rd century. Located in the vicinity of Saint-Quentin, it reached a size of 12ha at its height.[24]

History Edit

La Tène period Edit

According to archaeologist Jean-Louis Brunaux, large-scale migrations occurred in the northern part of Gaul in the late 4th–early 3rd century BC, which may correspond to the coming of the Belgae. By the end of the 3rd century BC, the Viromandui were probably already culturally integrated to the Belgae.[28]

Gallic Wars Edit

The Viromandui are perhaps most famous for being a part of a Belgic alliance against the expansion of Julius Caesar. Alongside the Nervii and the Atrebates, they fought against Julius Caesar in the Battle of the Sabis, around 57 BC, named for the river that split the battlefield. We know about this battle because it is described extensively in Julius Caesar’s De Bello Gallico.[29] He tells how the Belgae surprised the Romans by charging out of the woods while the legions were still constructing the Roman camp. In the initial part of the battle, the Romans lost their camp and took heavy losses, prompting their Gallic allies to desert them. However, they reformed their lines and were finally able to rout the Viromandui and Atrebates, wiping out the Nervii, who reportedly “fought to the last, fighting on top of the corpses of their brethren.” After this battle Caesar went on to destroy all the strongholds of all the Belgic tribes, breaking their power and making them part of the Roman Empire.[30]

 
Stele erected by Bienus in honour of his father, the Viromandian Gatus, his mother and his two brothers. (CIL XIII 8342)[31]

The Viromandui and Nervi used cavalry in very small numbers, concentrating on infantry whenever possible. Defensively, they often defeated their enemies' cavalry by forming defensive "hedges", described by Caesar as impenetrable walls of sharpened branches and skillfully cut saplings wrapped in thorns. Using these tactics they resisted the Romans by striking from the safety of their dense forests and marshes.[29]

Roman period Edit

The Viromandui probably gained the status of civitas during the 1st century AD. Roman-era inscriptions mention two Viromanduan serving as magistrates.[32]

Religion Edit

The Gallo-Roman religious site of the Champ des Noyers (Marteville, 1 km from Vermand) was probably erected on an older Gallic sanctuary, where some weapons of the La Tène period, including a voluntary-deformed sword, seem to have been involved in a tradition of religious offerings. Three temples (fana) were built during the Roman period at this site.[33]

From the beginning of the 1st century AD, a sanctuary was located in Mesnil-Saint-Nicaise which initially centred on a cremation platform used for the sacrifice of caprinae.[34] A temple was erected on the site ca. 150 AD, then abandoned ca. 280–290 AD. A vase dedicated to Apollo Vatumarus and deposed with an offering was found at the site, along with the statuette of a mother-goddess, depictions of Risus, and effigies of the Nymphs and Sol.[35][36] The divine name Vatumaros ('High Seer') is composed of the Gaulish root vātis ('soothsayer, seer') attached to maros ('high').[37]

An inscription from Augusta Viromandorum mentions Suiccius, a Viromanduan priest honouring the Imperial numen, and attests the presence of a public cult to the god Vulcan.[32][38] In the town of Condren was found a bas-relief made of stone and depicting Mercury and Rosmerta.[39]

Inscriptions Edit

The Viromandui or their capital Augusta are also mentioned on following inscriptions:

  • Viromanduo = Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum XIII, 1465 (Clermont-Ferrand)
  • civi Viromanduo = CIL XIII, 8409, 8341 et 8342 (Koln, I c.)
  • Viromand(uo) = CIL XIII, 1688 (Lyon, autel des Gaules)
  • Civit (ati) Vi(romanduorum) = CIL XIII, 3528 (Saint-Quentin, end of II or III c.)
  • Avg(vstae) Viromandvorv(orum) = CIL VI, 32550 = 2822 et 32551 = 2821 (Rome, middle of III c.)

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Schön 2006.
  2. ^ Caesar. Commentarii de Bello Gallico, 2:4; 2:16; 2:23.
  3. ^ Livy. Ab Urbe Condita Libri, 104.
  4. ^ Pliny. Naturalis Historia, 4:106.
  5. ^ Ptolemy. Geōgraphikḕ Hyphḗgēsis, 2:9:6.
  6. ^ Orosius. Historiae Adversus Paganos, 6:7:14.
  7. ^ Falileyev 2010, s.v. Viromandui.
  8. ^ Evans 1967, pp. 222–223, 286–289.
  9. ^ Delamarre 2003, pp. 215, 321.
  10. ^ Busse 2006, p. 199.
  11. ^ Lambert 1994, p. 36.
  12. ^ Nègre 1990, p. 158.
  13. ^ Collart 2007, pp. 378–380.
  14. ^ a b Beaujard & Prévot 2004, pp. 32–33.
  15. ^ Falileyev 2010, s.v. Augusta Viromanduorum and Viromandis.
  16. ^ a b c Ben Redjeb et al. 1992, p. 39.
  17. ^ Wightman 1985, pp. 12, 26.
  18. ^ Ben Redjeb et al. 1992, p. 40.
  19. ^ Pichon 2002, p. 76.
  20. ^ Collart & Gaillard 2004, p. 494.
  21. ^ Collart 2007, p. 367.
  22. ^ Collart 2007, pp. 367, 377.
  23. ^ Collart 2007, p. 378.
  24. ^ a b Pichon 2002, p. 82.
  25. ^ Collart & Gaillard 2004, p. 493.
  26. ^ Ben Redjeb et al. 1992, p. 37.
  27. ^ Ben Redjeb et al. 1992, p. 74.
  28. ^ Pichon 2002, p. 74.
  29. ^ a b C. Julius Caesar. De Bello Gallico. English translation by W. A. McDevitte and W. S. Bohn (1869) available on the Perseus Project.
  30. ^ John N. Hough "Caesar's Camp on the Aisne". The Classical Journal, Vol. 36, No. 6. (Mar., 1941), pp. 337-345.
  31. ^ "Epigraphik Datenbank". db.edcs.eu. Retrieved 2020-05-22.
  32. ^ a b Pichon 2002, p. 80.
  33. ^ Collart 2007, p. 376.
  34. ^ Cocu & Rousseau 2014, p. 109.
  35. ^ Cocu et al. 2013, pp. 315–316.
  36. ^ Cocu & Rousseau 2014, p. 116.
  37. ^ Cocu et al. 2013, p. 318.
  38. ^ Collart 1984, p. 249.
  39. ^ Pichon 2002, p. 84.

Bibliography Edit

  • Beaujard, Brigitte; Prévot, Françoise (2004). "Introduction à l'étude des capitales "éphémères" de la Gaule (Ier s.-début VIIe s.)". Supplément à la Revue archéologique du centre de la France. 25 (1): 17–37. ISSN 1951-6207.
  • Ben Redjeb, Tahar; Amandry, Michel; Angot, Jean Pierre; Desachy, Bruno; Talon, Marc; Bayard, Didier; Collart, Jean Luc; Fagnart, Jean-Pierre; Laubenheimer, Fanette; Woimant, Georges-Pierre (1992). "Une agglomération secondaire des Viromanduens : Noyon (Oise)". Revue archéologique de Picardie. 1 (1): 37–74. doi:10.3406/pica.1992.1643.
  • Busse, Peter E. (2006). "Belgae". In Koch, John T. (ed.). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 195–200. ISBN 978-1-85109-440-0.
  • Cocu, Jean-Sébastien; Dubois, Stéphane; Rousseau, Aurélie; Van Andringa, William (2013). "Un nouveau dieu provincial chez les Viromanduens : Apollon Vatumarus". Gallia. 70 (2): 315–321. ISSN 0016-4119.
  • Cocu, Jean-Sébastien; Rousseau, Aurélie (2014). "Le sanctuaire de Mesnil-Saint-Nicaise: Mutations d'un lieu de culte chez les Viromanduens du I er au IV e s. apr. J.-C". Gallia. 71 (1): 109–117. ISSN 0016-4119.
  • Collart, Jean Luc (1984). "Le déplacement du chef lieu des Viromandui au Bas-Empire, de Saint-Quentin à Vermand". Revue archéologique de Picardie. 3 (1): 245–258. doi:10.3406/pica.1984.1446.
  • Collart, Jean-Luc; Gaillard, Michèle (2004). "Vermand /Augusta Viromanduorum (Aisne)". Supplément à la Revue archéologique du centre de la France. 25 (1): 493–496. ISSN 1951-6207.
  • Collart, Jean-Luc (2007). "Au Bas-Empire la capitale des Viromandui se trouvait-elle à Saint-Quentin ou à Vermand ?". In Hanoune, Roger (ed.). Les villes romaines du Nord de la Gaule, Actes du XXVe colloque international de Halma-IPEL UMR CNRS 8164. Collection Art et Archéologie. Vol. 10. Revue du Nord. pp. 349–393. ISSN 1295-1315.
  • Delamarre, Xavier (2003). Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental. Errance. ISBN 9782877723695.
  • Evans, D. Ellis (1967). Gaulish Personal Names: A Study of Some Continental Celtic Formations. Clarendon Press. OCLC 468437906.
  • Falileyev, Alexander (2010). Dictionary of Continental Celtic Place-names: A Celtic Companion to the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World. CMCS. ISBN 978-0955718236.
  • Lambert, Pierre-Yves (1994). La langue gauloise: description linguistique, commentaire d'inscriptions choisies. Errance. ISBN 978-2-87772-089-2.
  • Nègre, Ernest (1990). Toponymie générale de la France. Librairie Droz. ISBN 978-2-600-02883-7.
  • Pichon, Blaise (2002). Carte archéologique de la Gaule: 02. Aisne. Les Editions de la MSH. ISBN 978-2-87754-081-0.
  • Schön, Franz (2006). "Viromandui". Brill's New Pauly. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e12205660.
  • Wightman, Edith M. (1985). Gallia Belgica. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05297-0.

Further reading Edit

  • de Muylder, Marjolaine; Aubazac, Guillaume; Broes, Frédéric; Dubois, Stéphane; Dubuis, Bastien; Font, Caroline; Morel, Alexia (2015). "Un grand domaine aristocratique de la cité des Viromanduens : la "villa" de la Mare aux Canards à Noyon (Oise)". Gallia. 72 (2): 281–299. doi:10.4000/gallia.888. ISSN 0016-4119.

External links Edit

  • The Celtic Tribes of Britain on www.Roman-Britain.org.
  • Gallic Settlements: oppida from the French Ministry of Culture and Communication.
  • Antiquité : Les origines de la ville from a website on Saint-Quentin.
  • https://www.livius.org/a/battlefields/sabis/selle.html#2
  • Archéologie en Picardie (2000) from the French Ministry of Culture and Communication. (in French)

viromandui, viromanduī, veromanduī, gaulish, uiromanduoi, were, belgic, tribe, dwelling, modern, vermandois, region, picardy, during, iron, roman, periods, during, gallic, wars, they, belonged, belgic, coalition, against, caesar, plan, oppidum, vermand, Édouar. The Viromandui or Veromandui Gaulish Uiromanduoi were a Belgic tribe dwelling in the modern Vermandois region Picardy during the Iron Age and Roman periods During the Gallic Wars 58 50 BC they belonged to the Belgic coalition of 57 BC against Caesar 1 Plan of the oppidum of the Viromandui at Vermand by Edouard Fleury 1877 Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 2 1 Territory 2 2 Settlements 2 2 1 Pre Roman period 2 2 2 Roman period 3 History 3 1 La Tene period 3 2 Gallic Wars 3 3 Roman period 4 Religion 5 Inscriptions 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksName EditThey are mentioned as Viromanduos and Viromanduis var vero by Caesar mid 1st c BC 2 Viromanduos by Livy late 1st c BC 3 Veromandui var uir by Pliny 1st c AD 4 Ou i romandues lt Oὐi gt ῥomandyes by Ptolemy 2nd c AD 5 and as Veromandi by Orosius early 5th c AD 6 7 The ethnonym Viromandui is a latinized form of Gaulish Uiromanduoi sing Uiromanduos which literally means horse men or male ponies It derives from the stem uiro man attached to mandos pony It should perhaps be interpreted as the Centaurs or as the men virile in owning ponies 8 9 10 Pierre Yves Lambert has also proposed the meaning those who trample upon men by comparing the second element with the Welsh mathru 11 The city of Vermand probably attested as Virmandensium castrum in the 9th c AD Virmandi in 1160 and the region of Vermandois attested in 877 as Vermandensis pagus pagus of the Viromandui are named after the Belgic tribe 12 13 A civitas Veromandorum is mentioned in the Notita Galliarum ca 400 AD but we do not know if it refers to Vermand or to Saint Quentin 14 15 Geography EditTerritory Edit The civitas of the Viromandui during the Roman period 16 The territory of the Viromandui corresponded for the most part to the limits of the Diocese of Vermandois around the modern towns of Vermand Saint Quentin Noyon and Moislains 16 It was located on the sill of Vermandois in an area partly surrounded by dense forests on the upper courses of the Somme and Oise rivers 1 They dwelled between the Ambiani and Bellovaci in the west the Nervii and Atrebates in the north the Remi in the east and the Suessiones in the south 17 16 The Oise river is traditionally regarded as the eastern border between the Viromandui and Remi Ernest Desjardins followed by some authors has proposed that the Viromanduan territory stretched further east as far as Vervins although this remains controversial 18 19 Settlements Edit Pre Roman period Edit Their main oppidum 16 20 hectares until the Roman period corresponding to the modern town of Vermand was situated on a promontory east of the Omignon river Fortifications and continuous occupation emerged relatively late on the site just before or during the Gallic Wars 58 50 BC and it probably served only as a temporary refuge until the Roman invasion of Belgica Some have also proposed that it was erected as a military camp by Belgic auxiliaries serving in the Roman army The site remained densely occupied from the Augustan era until the beginning of the 5th century AD 20 Roman period Edit Augusta Viromandorum modern Saint Quentin founded closer to communication axis just 11 km away from the oppidum of Vermand during the reign of Augustus 27 BC 14 AD soon replaced Vermand as the main settlement 21 During the Roman period Augusta Viromandorum reached a size of 40 60ha in the average of Gallo Roman chief towns 22 During the 4th century the settlement was apparently deserted or at least saw its population considerably reduced 23 Some scholars have argued that Augusta Saint Quentin was replaced by Virmandis Vermand as the chief town of the civitas during this period and that it eventually regained its position in the 9th century although this has been doubted by other scholars 24 25 14 Noviomagus Gaulish new market corresponding to modern Noyon is first mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary late 3rd c AD as a station on the route between Amiens and Reims 26 By the 6th century the influence of the town could rival other settlements of the region and it became a local religious centre of power after the bishop Medardus transferred his episcopal siege to Noyon in 531 27 Other secondary agglomerations were located at Gouy Contraginum Condren Chatillon sur Oise and possibly at Marcy Gouy was occupied from the 1st century AD until at least the 3rd century Located in the vicinity of Saint Quentin it reached a size of 12ha at its height 24 History EditLa Tene period Edit According to archaeologist Jean Louis Brunaux large scale migrations occurred in the northern part of Gaul in the late 4th early 3rd century BC which may correspond to the coming of the Belgae By the end of the 3rd century BC the Viromandui were probably already culturally integrated to the Belgae 28 Gallic Wars Edit Main article Battle of the SabisThe Viromandui are perhaps most famous for being a part of a Belgic alliance against the expansion of Julius Caesar Alongside the Nervii and the Atrebates they fought against Julius Caesar in the Battle of the Sabis around 57 BC named for the river that split the battlefield We know about this battle because it is described extensively in Julius Caesar s De Bello Gallico 29 He tells how the Belgae surprised the Romans by charging out of the woods while the legions were still constructing the Roman camp In the initial part of the battle the Romans lost their camp and took heavy losses prompting their Gallic allies to desert them However they reformed their lines and were finally able to rout the Viromandui and Atrebates wiping out the Nervii who reportedly fought to the last fighting on top of the corpses of their brethren After this battle Caesar went on to destroy all the strongholds of all the Belgic tribes breaking their power and making them part of the Roman Empire 30 Stele erected by Bienus in honour of his father the Viromandian Gatus his mother and his two brothers CIL XIII 8342 31 The Viromandui and Nervi used cavalry in very small numbers concentrating on infantry whenever possible Defensively they often defeated their enemies cavalry by forming defensive hedges described by Caesar as impenetrable walls of sharpened branches and skillfully cut saplings wrapped in thorns Using these tactics they resisted the Romans by striking from the safety of their dense forests and marshes 29 Roman period Edit The Viromandui probably gained the status of civitas during the 1st century AD Roman era inscriptions mention two Viromanduan serving as magistrates 32 Religion EditThe Gallo Roman religious site of the Champ des Noyers Marteville 1 km from Vermand was probably erected on an older Gallic sanctuary where some weapons of the La Tene period including a voluntary deformed sword seem to have been involved in a tradition of religious offerings Three temples fana were built during the Roman period at this site 33 From the beginning of the 1st century AD a sanctuary was located in Mesnil Saint Nicaise which initially centred on a cremation platform used for the sacrifice of caprinae 34 A temple was erected on the site ca 150 AD then abandoned ca 280 290 AD A vase dedicated to Apollo Vatumarus and deposed with an offering was found at the site along with the statuette of a mother goddess depictions of Risus and effigies of the Nymphs and Sol 35 36 The divine name Vatumaros High Seer is composed of the Gaulish root vatis soothsayer seer attached to maros high 37 An inscription from Augusta Viromandorum mentions Suiccius a Viromanduan priest honouring the Imperial numen and attests the presence of a public cult to the god Vulcan 32 38 In the town of Condren was found a bas relief made of stone and depicting Mercury and Rosmerta 39 Inscriptions EditThe Viromandui or their capital Augusta are also mentioned on following inscriptions Viromanduo Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum XIII 1465 Clermont Ferrand civi Viromanduo CIL XIII 8409 8341 et 8342 Koln I c Viromand uo CIL XIII 1688 Lyon autel des Gaules Civit ati Vi romanduorum CIL XIII 3528 Saint Quentin end of II or III c Avg vstae Viromandvorv orum CIL VI 32550 2822 et 32551 2821 Rome middle of III c References Edit a b Schon 2006 Caesar Commentarii de Bello Gallico 2 4 2 16 2 23 Livy Ab Urbe Condita Libri 104 Pliny Naturalis Historia 4 106 Ptolemy Geōgraphikḕ Hyphḗgesis 2 9 6 Orosius Historiae Adversus Paganos 6 7 14 Falileyev 2010 s v Viromandui Evans 1967 pp 222 223 286 289 Delamarre 2003 pp 215 321 Busse 2006 p 199 Lambert 1994 p 36 Negre 1990 p 158 Collart 2007 pp 378 380 a b Beaujard amp Prevot 2004 pp 32 33 Falileyev 2010 s v Augusta Viromanduorum and Viromandis a b c Ben Redjeb et al 1992 p 39 Wightman 1985 pp 12 26 Ben Redjeb et al 1992 p 40 Pichon 2002 p 76 Collart amp Gaillard 2004 p 494 Collart 2007 p 367 Collart 2007 pp 367 377 Collart 2007 p 378 a b Pichon 2002 p 82 Collart amp Gaillard 2004 p 493 Ben Redjeb et al 1992 p 37 Ben Redjeb et al 1992 p 74 Pichon 2002 p 74 a b C Julius Caesar De Bello Gallico English translation by W A McDevitte and W S Bohn 1869 available on the Perseus Project John N Hough Caesar s Camp on the Aisne The Classical Journal Vol 36 No 6 Mar 1941 pp 337 345 Epigraphik Datenbank db edcs eu Retrieved 2020 05 22 a b Pichon 2002 p 80 Collart 2007 p 376 Cocu amp Rousseau 2014 p 109 Cocu et al 2013 pp 315 316 Cocu amp Rousseau 2014 p 116 Cocu et al 2013 p 318 Collart 1984 p 249 Pichon 2002 p 84 Bibliography Edit Beaujard Brigitte Prevot Francoise 2004 Introduction a l etude des capitales ephemeres de la Gaule Ier s debut VIIe s Supplement a la Revue archeologique du centre de la France 25 1 17 37 ISSN 1951 6207 Ben Redjeb Tahar Amandry Michel Angot Jean Pierre Desachy Bruno Talon Marc Bayard Didier Collart Jean Luc Fagnart Jean Pierre Laubenheimer Fanette Woimant Georges Pierre 1992 Une agglomeration secondaire des Viromanduens Noyon Oise Revue archeologique de Picardie 1 1 37 74 doi 10 3406 pica 1992 1643 Busse Peter E 2006 Belgae In Koch John T ed Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 195 200 ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Cocu Jean Sebastien Dubois Stephane Rousseau Aurelie Van Andringa William 2013 Un nouveau dieu provincial chez les Viromanduens Apollon Vatumarus Gallia 70 2 315 321 ISSN 0016 4119 Cocu Jean Sebastien Rousseau Aurelie 2014 Le sanctuaire de Mesnil Saint Nicaise Mutations d un lieu de culte chez les Viromanduens du I er au IV e s apr J C Gallia 71 1 109 117 ISSN 0016 4119 Collart Jean Luc 1984 Le deplacement du chef lieu des Viromandui au Bas Empire de Saint Quentin a Vermand Revue archeologique de Picardie 3 1 245 258 doi 10 3406 pica 1984 1446 Collart Jean Luc Gaillard Michele 2004 Vermand Augusta Viromanduorum Aisne Supplement a la Revue archeologique du centre de la France 25 1 493 496 ISSN 1951 6207 Collart Jean Luc 2007 Au Bas Empire la capitale des Viromandui se trouvait elle a Saint Quentin ou a Vermand In Hanoune Roger ed Les villes romaines du Nord de la Gaule Actes du XXVe colloque international de Halma IPEL UMR CNRS 8164 Collection Art et Archeologie Vol 10 Revue du Nord pp 349 393 ISSN 1295 1315 Delamarre Xavier 2003 Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Une approche linguistique du vieux celtique continental Errance ISBN 9782877723695 Evans D Ellis 1967 Gaulish Personal Names A Study of Some Continental Celtic Formations Clarendon Press OCLC 468437906 Falileyev Alexander 2010 Dictionary of Continental Celtic Place names A Celtic Companion to the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World CMCS ISBN 978 0955718236 Lambert Pierre Yves 1994 La langue gauloise description linguistique commentaire d inscriptions choisies Errance ISBN 978 2 87772 089 2 Negre Ernest 1990 Toponymie generale de la France Librairie Droz ISBN 978 2 600 02883 7 Pichon Blaise 2002 Carte archeologique de la Gaule 02 Aisne Les Editions de la MSH ISBN 978 2 87754 081 0 Schon Franz 2006 Viromandui Brill s New Pauly doi 10 1163 1574 9347 bnp e12205660 Wightman Edith M 1985 Gallia Belgica University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05297 0 Further reading Editde Muylder Marjolaine Aubazac Guillaume Broes Frederic Dubois Stephane Dubuis Bastien Font Caroline Morel Alexia 2015 Un grand domaine aristocratique de la cite des Viromanduens la villa de la Mare aux Canards a Noyon Oise Gallia 72 2 281 299 doi 10 4000 gallia 888 ISSN 0016 4119 External links EditThe Celtic Tribes of Britain on www Roman Britain org Gallic Settlements oppida from the French Ministry of Culture and Communication Antiquite Les origines de la ville from a website on Saint Quentin https www livius org a battlefields sabis selle html 2 Archeologie en Picardie 2000 from the French Ministry of Culture and Communication in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Viromandui amp oldid 1169401210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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