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Lemovices
Lĕmŏvīces, um, m., a people of Aquitanian Gaul, neighbors of the Arverni; their name, as applied to...
A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.
LEMOVICES(Λεμόβικες, Strab. p.190; Λεμουίκοι, Ptol. 2.7.10), a Gallic people who were bounded by the Arverni on the east, the Bituriges Cubi and the Pictones on the north, and the Santones on the west. Their chief town was Augustoritum or Limoges. [AUGUSTORITUM] The diocese of Limoges, comprehending the diocese of Tulle, which has been separated from it, represents the limits of the Lemovices; but the diocese of Limogesextends somewhat beyond the limits of the old province of Limousine, which derives its name from the Lemovices, and into that province which was called La Marche. An inscription in Gruter, found at Rancon, in the diocese of Limoges, proves that there was included in the territory of the Lemovices a people named Andecamulenses; and another Gallic inscription shows that Mars was called Camulus. Camulogenus was a Gallic name. (Caes. B. G. 7.59, 62.)
Caesar ( B. G. 7.4) enumerates the Lemovices among the peoples whom Vercingetorix stirred up against the Romans in B.C. 52: they are placed in the text between the Aulerci and Andes. The Lemovices sent 10,000 men to assist their countrymen at the siege of Alesia ( B. G. 7.75) But in the same chapter (7.75) the Lemovices are again mentioned: universis civitatibus quae Oceanum attingunt quaeque eorum consuetudine Ar. moricae appellantur, quo sunt in numero Curiosolites, Redones, Ambibari, Caletes, Osismi, Lemovices, Veneti, Unelli, sex millia.Here the Lemovices are placed in a different position, and are one of the Armoric States. [ARMORICAE CIVITATES.] Some critics erase the name Lemovices from Caesar's text; but there is good authority for it. Davis remarks (Caes. Oudendorp, 1. p. 427), that all the MSS. (known to him) have the reading Lemovices, and that it occurs also in the Greek translation. He also observes, that as there were three Aulerci [AULERCI], so there might be two Lemovices; and we may add that there were two Bituriges, Bituriges Cubi and Bituriges Vivisci; and Volcae Arecomici and Volcae Tectosages. If the text of Caesar then is right, there were Armoric Lemovices as well as the Lemovices of the Limousin;and we must either keep the name as it is, or erase it. The emendation of some critics, adopted by D'Anville, rests on no foundation. Walckenaer finds in the district which he assigns to the Lemovices Armoricani, a place named La Limousinière, in the arrondissement of Nantes, between Machecoul, Nantesand Saint-Léger;and he considers this an additional proof in favour of a conjecture about the text of Ptolemy in the matter of the Lemovices; as to which conjecture his own remarks may be read. ( Géog. &c. des Gaules, vol. 1. p. 369.)
[G.L]
Lĕmŏvīces, um, m., a people of Aquitanian Gaul, neighbors of the Arverni; their name, as applied to...
A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.