History Files
 

Help the History Files

Contributed: £0

Target: £760

2023
Totals slider
2023

The History Files is a non-profit site. It is only able to support such a vast and ever-growing collection of information with your help. Last year's donation plea failed to meet its target so this year your help is needed more than ever. Please make a donation so that the work can continue. Your help is hugely appreciated.

European Kingdoms

Barbarians

 

Bagienni / Vagenni / Vagenni (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 Bagienni were mentioned by Pliny. Otherwise known as the Vagenni or Vagenni - cited by Pliny - they belonged to the larger body of Ligurians (see feature link for more on the Ligurians in general).

Etymologically they seemed to have taken their name from the beech tree. They settled in the upper Tanaro Valley in ancient north-western Italy, principally in south-western Piedmont. Their capital was within the area of the city which, under Roman control, was known as Julia Augusta Bagiennorum (and today is Bene Vagienna in the province of Cuneo).

With good reason they can be considered the first Piedmontese dwellers, together with other populations such as the Taurini, the Statielli, and the Salassi. Later driven out by Celtic migrants, especially the Boii, they moved into the Val Trebbia in Emilia-Romagna, in the Bobbio area. They founded a new tribal centre there, and archaeologists have matched artefacts to them.

Under Roman controls, Bobbio became the seat of the Pagus Bagiennorum under the municipality of Velleia within the Roman region of Liguria. They were conquered by the Roman republic in the middle of the second century BC and then incorporated into the Roman empire at the end of the first century BC.

The Alps

(Information by Trish Wilson, with additional information by Edward Dawson, Peter Kessler, and Maurizio Puntin, 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 The History of Rome, Volume 1, Titus Livius, translated by Rev Canon Roberts, from Les peuples pre-romains du Sud-Est de la Gaule, Guy Barruol, from Die Kelten in Österreich nach den ältesten Berichten der Antike, Gerhard Dobesch, from Le Alpi Online (Università di Trento), from Urbanizzazione delle campagne nell'Italia antica, Lorenzo Quilici & Stefania Quilici Gigli, from La frontiera padana, Mauro Poletti, 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).)

c.600 BC

Bellovesus and his massed horde of people from the Bituriges, Insubres, and several other tribes, reaches the barrier of the Alps with an enormous force of horse and foot. This barrier is one which has apparently not previously been breached by Celts, and they make the crossing with some trepidation after attacking the Salyes (Ligurians).

Map of the Etruscans
This map shows not only the greatest extent of Etruscan influence in Italy, during the seventh to fifth centuries BC, but also Gaulish intrusion to the north, which compressed Etruscan borders there (click or tap on map to view on a separate page)

Their path takes them through the passes of the Taurini, to the north of the Bagienni, and the valley of the Douro and, once across the mountain barrier, they defeat Etruscans in battle not far from the Ticinus. Bellovesus and his mainly Insubres people settle around the Ticinus and build a settlement called Mediolanum (modern Milan).

Over the next two centuries, other bodies of Celts follow the route set by Bellovesus. The Cenomani under Elitovius are first, and then the Libui, Saluvii, Boii, and Lingones and finally the Senones, in 391 BC.

It is highly likely that the Bagienni and Taurini start to receive their first influences from the culturally-dominant Celts and, within a century at most, can probably be classed as Celto-Ligurians.

Source of the Ticino
The mountainous Alpine country of the Raeti into which some Ligurians also penetrated would have supplied a relatively tough tribal life, with little thriving or expansion, and relatively easy absorption into Celtic and Latin cultures

218 - 217 BC

The Second Punic War starts at Saguntum (near modern Valencia) in Iberia. Using Gadir as a base, Hannibal Barca sets out to attack Rome, leading his Carthaginian armies over the Alps into Italy.

He has to fight off resistance by Gaulish tribes such as the Allobroges along the way (and also by the Taurini, presumably for what they see as an invasion of their territory), but is supported by other Gauls such as the Insubres, who rebel against their Roman occupiers.

At first he wins great victories at Trasimeno and Cannae which all but destroys Roman military strength, but he is denied the reinforcements to pursue his victory by an opposing political faction back at home.

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)

As the tidal wave of invasion passes by and dies down, Roman domination of the Boii, Gaesatae, Insubres, Lingones, and Taurini is renewed (and therefore probably also the unmentioned Bagienni). The now-Celto-Ligurian Bagienni gradually become Latinised and subsequently disappear from history.

 
Images and text copyright © all contributors mentioned on this page. An original king list page for the History Files.