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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PYR-RAY |
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RAETIA (so always in inscriptions; in classical MSS. usually RHAETIA) , in ancient geography, a province of the Roman Empire, bounded on the W. by the country of the Helvetii, on the E. by Noricum, on the N. by Vindelicia and on the S. by Cisalpine Gaul. It thus comprised the districts occupied in modern times by the Grisons, the greater part of Tirol, and part of Lombardy. The land was very mountainous, and the inhabitants, when not engaged in predatory expeditions, chiefly supported themselves by cattle-breeding and cutting timber, little attention being paid to agriculture. Some of the valleys, however, were rich and fertile, and produced corn and wine, the latter considered equal to any in Italy. Augustus
Niebuhr and Mommsen). A tradition reported by Justin (xx. s) and Pliny (Nat. Hist. iii. 24, 133) affirmed that they were a portion of that people who had settled in the plains of the Po and were driven into the mountains by the invading Gauls, when they assumed the name of Raetians from their leader Raetus; a more probable derivation, however, is from Celtic Tait, " mountain land." Even if their Etruscan origin be accepted, at the time when the land became known to the Romans, Celtic tribes were already in possession of it and had amalgamated so completely with the original
Polybius
Horace , Odes, iv. 4 and 14). At first Raetia formed a distinct province, but towards the end of the 1st century A.D. Vindelicia was added to it; hence Tacitus (Germania, 41) could speak of Augusta Vindelicorum (Augsburg) as " a colony of the province of Raetia." The whole province (including Vindelicia) was at first under a military prefect, then under a procurator; it had no standing
commander
stated generally as a line drawn
chief
Innsbruck
See P. C. Planta, Das alte Ratien (Berlin, 1872) ; T. Mommsen in Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, iii. p. 706; J. Marquardt, Romische Staatsverwaltung, i. (2nd ed., 1881) p. 288; L. Steub, fiber die Urbewohner Ratiens and ihren Zusammenhang mit den Etruskern (Munich, 1843); J. Jung, Romer and Romanen in den Donauldndern ( Innsbruck
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