Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 1.djvu/337
Ariminum, like Ravenna, is an ancient colony of the Ombri, but both of them have received also Roman colonies. Ariminum has a port and a river[p 1] of the same name as itself. From Placentia to Ariminum there are 1300 stadia. About 36 miles above Placentia, towards the boundaries of the kingdom of Cottius, is the city of Ticinum,[p 2] by which flows a river[p 3] bearing the same name, which falls into the Po, while a little out of the route are Clastidium,[p 4] Derthon,[p 5] and Aquæ-Statiellæ.[1] But the direct route as far as Ocelum,[p 6] along the Po and the Doria Riparia,[g 1] is full of precipices, intersected by numerous other rivers, one of which is the Durance,[p 7] and is about 160 miles long. Here commence the Alpine mountains and Keltica.[p 8] Near to the mountains above Luna is the city of Lucca. Some [of the people of this part of Italy] dwell in villages, nevertheless it is well populated, and furnishes the greater part of the military force, and of equites, of whom the senate is partly composed. Derthon is a considerable city, situated about half way on the road from Genoa to Placentia, which are distant 400 stadia from each other. Aquæ-Statiellæ is on the same route. That from Placentia to Ariminum we have already described, but the sail to Ravenna down the Po requires two days and nights. A[2] great part of Cispadana likewise was covered by marshes, through which Hannibal passed with difficulty on his march into Tyrrhenia.[p 9] But Scaurus drained the plains by navigable canals from the Po[3] to the country of the Parmesans. For the Trebia meeting the Po near Placentia, and having previously received many other rivers, is over-swollen near this place. I allude to the Scaurus[4] who also made the Æmilian road through Pisa and Luna as far as Sabbatorum, and thence through Derthon. There is another Æmilian road, which continues the Flaminian. For Marcus Lepidus and Caius Flaminius being colleagues in the consulship, and having vanquished the Ligurians, the one made the Via Flaminia from Rome across
- ↑ Δουρίας.