翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Coilia
・ Coilia dussumieri
・ Coilia nasus
・ Coilin
・ Coilin Devlin
・ Cohonina
・ Cohons
・ Cohoquinoque Creek
・ Cohors amicorum
・ Cohors I Aelia Dacorum
・ Cohors I Aelia Gaesatorum milliaria sagitt
・ Cohors I Alpinorum equitata
・ Cohors I Alpinorum peditata
・ Cohors I Antiochensium equitata
・ Cohors I Aquitanorum
Cohors I Aquitanorum veterana
・ Cohors I Aurelia Antonina Hemesenorum milliaria
・ Cohors I Batavorum milliaria eq c.R. pf
・ Cohors I Bracaraugustanorum eq c.R.
・ Cohors I Brittonum milliaria
・ Cohors I Cananefatium
・ Cohors I Cretum sagittaria
・ Cohors I Cypria c.R.
・ Cohors I Delmatarum
・ Cohors I Delmatarum milliaria equitata
・ Cohors I Flavia Commagenorum equitata
・ Cohors I Hispanorum
・ Cohors I Hispanorum pia fidelis
・ Cohors I Raetorum
・ Cohors I Raetorum equitata


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Cohors I Aquitanorum veterana : ウィキペディア英語版
Cohors I Aquitanorum veterana


Cohors prima Aquitanorum veterana ("1st veteran Cohort of Aquitani") was a Roman auxiliary infantry regiment. It was probably originally raised in Gallia Aquitania in the reign of founder-emperor Augustus after the revolt of the Aquitani was suppressed in 26 BC.〔Holder (1980) 111〕 Unlike most Gauls, the Aquitani were not Celtic-speaking but spoke Aquitanian, a now extinct non- Indo-European language closely related to Basque.
There is scholarly controversy about whether there were one or two infantry ''cohortes'' called I Aquitanorum. This is because a regiment of that name is repeatedly attested both in Germania Superior and Britannia. Holder sees them as two separate units, one of which carried the title ''veterana'' and was permanently based in Germania Sup., the other in Britannia.〔Holder (2003) 136, 143〕 Spaul considers it more likely there was a single unit, which alternated between the two provinces, although this was unusual for auxiliary regiments.〔Spaul (2000) 143〕 Holder's view is supported by the fact that none of the British inscriptions carry the title ''veterana'', whereas several of the German ones do. Holder is followed here: this article concerns the unit in Germania Sup. For the unit in Britannia, see cohors I Aquitanorum.
The regiment was initially sent to the Danubian region, where it presumably saw action in the conquest of the Pannonii in 9-6 BC.〔 It first appears in the datable epigraphic record in AD 74, when it was stationed in Germania Superior (Pfalz/Alsace). It remained there until at least the early 3rd century, when it is attested by a votive altar dedicated in 213-6. The following Roman forts have yielded inscriptions attesting the regiment: Arnsburg, Butzbach, Friedburg, Kleestadt, Saalburg and Stockstadt am Main.〔Spaul (2000) 141〕 The latter has the only datable inscription, 213-6.
The names of several ''praefecti'' (regimental commanders) are preserved, of which two have discernible origins: I. Rufus Papirianus Sentius Gemellus from ''Berytos'' (Beirut, Lebanon) and L. Caecilius Caecilianus from ''Thaenae'' (Sfax, Tunisia), both undatable. A ''pedes'' (ranker foot soldier) is recorded from ''Ancyra'' (Ankara, Turkey) and a Thracian ''eques'' (cavalryman).
== See also ==

* Roman auxiliaries
* List of Roman auxiliary regiments

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Cohors I Aquitanorum veterana」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.