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European Kingdoms

Barbarians

 

Agones / Agoni (Ligurians?)

Prior to domination by Rome, the Alpine region contained various populations which had a complex, obscure, and ethnically-multilayered history. Two major ethnic groups were recorded (aside from intrusions by the Etruscans and Veneti), these being the Euganei on the north Italian plain and the Alpine foothills, and the Raeti in the Trentino and Alto Adige valleys.

There were a great many more minor groups, all of which seem to have formed part of the initial phase of the Golasecca culture. Generally they belonged to one or the other of these though, or to the coastal Ligurians who had gradually penetrated the Alps from the south, but who also extended a considerable way westwards along the Mediterranean coast.

FeatureThere were many groups in Southern Europe which formed the Ligurian people, with not even a confederation uniting them all. In fact, many Ligurian groups formed confederations in their own right. The Agones or Agoni were mentioned by Polybius. Located probably near Tarvisio, close to the Carnic Alps, they belonged to the larger body of Ligurians (see feature link for more on the Ligurians in general).

The first century BC writer, Livy (Titus Livius Patavinus), wrote about the initial Celtic breakthrough into Italy through the western Alps, with the story dated to about 600 BC. Continuous waves of Celts followed that path over the next two or three hundred years to create a substantial Celtic population across the north Italian plain. This pushed out previously-dominant Etruscans and certainly would also have compressed the main Ligurian population southwards (primarily) towards the coast. Some were also pushed northwards.

Polybius associates the Agones with the Taurisci of Carinthia rather than the Taurini, the only Alpine tribe to be so labelled. Such an association would by necessity place them along one of the connecting corridors across the Alps of north-eastern Iron Age Italy, likely near Tarvisio which sits between the Carnic Alps and the Julian Alps.

The Celtic Tree database is one of the few modern online sources to mention the tribe, but links them to the Taurini. It does, however, give their location as being in the Alps, in north-eastern Italy. In fairness, it is only Polybius who associates them with the Taurisci. In fact the Taurini themselves seem once to have been associated with the Taurisci before the latter edged further eastwards. That does not fully explain the Taurini location in the western Alps, however.

A look at the region between the Taurisci and Taurini in the first century BC reveals the town of Tarvisio, just across the modern Italian border. This is also close to the border of Slovenia, later Taurisci territory, and with a name which can be linked to either tribe's name.

This is an important communications junction between Friuli-Venezia, Austria, and Slovenia so, if the Agones were associated neighbours of the Taurisci and were indeed living in the north-eastern Italian Alps then it is likely that their location was in this specific area, between the Carnic Alps and the Julian Alps. That, though, would make less likely their identification as Ligurians unless they had refused to remain in the southern foothills of the Alps like many Ligurians and had instead pushed outwards and eastwards.

The Alps

(Information by Trish Wilson, with additional information from Res Gestae, Livy (Titus Livius Patavinus), from Ligustica, Albert Karl Ernst Bormann (in three parts, 1864-1868), from Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, Harry Thurston Peck (New York, Harper and Brothers, 1898), from the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, William Smith, from Geography, Ptolemy, from Les peuples préromains du Sud-Est de la Gaule: Étude de géographie historique, Guy Barruol (De Boccard, 1999), from Die Kelten in Österreich nach den ältesten Berichten der Antike, Gerhard Dobesch (in German), from Urbanizzazione delle campagne nell'Italia antica, Lorenzo Quilici & Stefania Quilici Gigli (in Italian), from La frontiera padana, Mauro Poletti (in Italian), and from External Links: Indo-European Chronology - Countries and Peoples, and Indo-European Etymological Dictionary, J Pokorny, and Geography, Strabo (H C Hamilton & W Falconer, London, 1903, Perseus Online Edition), and The Natural History, Pliny the Elder (John Bostock, Ed), and Polybius, Histories, and L'Arbre Celtique (The Celtic Tree, in French), and Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz or Dictionnaire Historique de la Suisse or Dizionario Storico dell Svizzera (in German, French, and Italian respectively), and Le Alpi (Università di Trento), and Pleiades (Ancient World Mapping Center and Institute for the Study of the Ancient World).)

c.600 BC

The first century BC writer, Livy (Titus Livius Patavinus), writes of an invasion into Italy of Celts during the reign of Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, king of Rome. This event will reshape the Alpine populations into a pattern which is familiar to Romans of the first century BC.

Ligurian coastline
The Ligurian coastline of modern Italy owes its name to the Ligurian people, a pre-Indo-European grouping which probably consisted of several influences prior to being Latinised by the Romans

As archaeology seems to point to a start date of around 500 BC for the beginning of a serious wave of Celtic incursions into Italy, this event has either been misremembered by later Romans or is an early precursor to the main wave of incursions, probably as a result of the same apparent overpopulation which doubtless forces the start of migration into Iberia around a century earlier than this.

That overpopulation is very evident in Gaul, as this is the direction from which the Celts travel. Their advance into the Po Valley means confrontation with Etruscans who dwell between the Apennines and the Alps.

It also forces the Ligurians southwards, and the ancestors of the Lepontii northwards, while the Raeti also have to relocate, concentrating themselves in the Alps (according to Pliny the Elder).

It is possible that the Ligurian relocation serves to fracture once-large tribes into the many smaller units which are later recorded in the western Alps (and beyond in the case of a potential component of the Cantabri tribe). Celticisation follows relocation to create a swathe of Celto-Ligurian tribes, many of which are located in what is now France, close to the Italian border.

Map of Alpine and Ligurian tribes, c.200-15 BC
The origins of the Euganei, Ligurians, Raeti, Veneti, and Vindelici are confused and unclear, but in the last half of the first millennium BC they were gradually being Celticised or were combining multiple influences to create hybrid tribes (click or tap on map to view full sized)

c.60 - 40 BC

From the latter part of the first century BC and into the next century, various historians mention a variety of tribes and their affiliates which are uniformly identified as being Taurisci, together with a variety of other Cisalpine tribes which include the Norici and Iapydes (not all of which are Celtic in origin).

Other tribes which are mentioned as individual groups of the Taurisci confederation include the Carni, who occupy the Carnian Alps on the edge of the south-eastern Alps, the Latovici between Krka and Sava, the Varciani along the Sava towards Sisak, the Serapili and Sereti along the River Drava on the edge of Pannonia, and the Iasi towards Varaždin.

Ancient authors also list several smaller indigenous communities, such as the Illyrian Colapiani along the River Kolpa, the Celtic Ambisontes in the Soča Valley, the Subocrini around Razdrto, and the Rundicti in the Kras and Notranjska regions.

Ritually destroyed sword
The Taurisci burial site at Zvonimirovo lies midway between Zagreb and Osijek in modern Croatia, and has yielded artefacts which can be dated between the Middle Ages and the third century BC, including this ritually destroyed sword

The greater Tauriscan tribal community with some identified smaller associated tribes (such as the Agones (probably) and Latovici) has never developed into a state formation, but it is becoming known collectively as the Norici.

49 BC

With the Albici confederation constantly descending to the coast to help the beleaguered in Massalia, Julius Caesar now deals with this dual problem once and for all by decisively ending the threat.

The Roman empire soon unquestionably controls the entire Alpine region - giving it free access to Gaul and Germania. This probably serves to hasten the final decline and disappearance of any non-Indo-European traits, customs, and languages here.

Map of European Tribes
This vast map covers just about all possible tribes which were documented in the first centuries BC and AD, mostly by the Romans and Greeks, and with an especial focus on 52 BC (click or tap on map to view at an intermediate size)

16 - 15 BC

The Norican kingdom is subdued by Rome, at the hands of Drusus and Tiberius. The Ambidravi are included in this defeat, although they seem not to have been included in the recent Alpine Wars. The Agones are not mentioned, although they likely share the fate of their conquered neighbours.

Ligurians remain identifiable for some time but, in time, they and their Celto-Ligurian relations are subsumed by Roman (Latin) culture and language.

 
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