Gallia Narbonensis

Gallia Narbonensis was a Roman province located in what is now Languedoc and Provence, in southern France. Bordering directly on Italy, control of the province gave the Roman state several advantages, such as control of the land route between Italy and the Iberian peninsula; a buffer against attacks on Italy by tribes from Gaul; and control of the lucrative trade routes of the Rhone valley, over which commercial goods flowed between Gaul and the trading center of Massalia, modern Marseille. It became a province in 121 BC, originally under the name of Gallia Transalpina. The Romans called it Provincia Nostra ("our province") or simply Provincia ("the province"), a name which has survived in the modern name of the region, Provence. The name Gallia Narbonensis stems from the Roman colony of Narbo Martius (Narbonne) which was founded on the coast in 118 BC

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the divine secrets of the ya ya sisterhood
john collier gallery
tom hamilton
u.s. presidential nominating convention
sunday league football
dassault etendard
joey kramer
kunststiftung nrw
in search of...
brad whitford
ser
little lulu
grand palace, bangkok
universit du qubec trois rivires
nationwide building society
ray tabano
irish bulletin
tiffany towers
ong teng cheong
lagging strand
guarneri quartet
rnase h
ronquil
dna polymerase i
penobscot river
met
dnab helicase
william weld
baluran
sign function
wedge issue
black 47
firedamp
robert barton
dnaa
eyeglass prescription
kevin h. white
list of michigan related topics
cooperativity
filter binding assay
bangs
daybreak star cultural center
spermatogenesis
list of national parks of slovakia