Raetia (so always in inscriptions; classical manuscripts usually use the form
Rhaetia), in. ancient geography, a
province of the
Roman Empire, bounded on the west by the country of the
Helvetii, on the east by
Noricum, on the north by
Vindelicia[?] and on the south 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
Italia.
Augustus Caesar preferred Raetian wine to any other.
Considerable trade in pitch, honey, wax and cheese occurred.
Little is known of the origin or history of the Raetians, who appear in the records as one of the most powerful and warlike of the
Alpine tribes.
Livy states distinctly (v. 33) that they were of
Etruscan origin (a view favoured by
Niebuhr and
Mommsen). A tradition reported by
Justin (xx. 5) and
Pliny the Elder (
Naturalis Historia, 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
rait (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 inhabitants that, generally speaking, the Raetians of later times may be regarded as a Celtic people, although non-Celtic tribes (Lepontii, Euganei) were settled among them.
The Raetians are first mentioned (but only incidentally) by Polybius (xxxiv. 10, iS), and little is heard of them till after the end of the Republic. There is little doubt, however, that they retained their independence until their subjugation in 15 B.C. by Tiberius and Drusus (compare 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 army quartered in it but relied on its own native troops and militia for protection
In the reign of Marcus Aurelius Raetia was governed by the commander of the Legio iii. Italica. Under Diocletian it formed part of the diocese of the vicarius Italiae, and was subdivided into Raetia prima and Raetia secunda (each under a praeses), the former corresponding to the old Raetia, the latter to Vindelicia. The boundary between them is not clearly defined, but may be stated generally as a line drawn eastwards from the lacus Brigantinus (Lake Constance) to the Oenus (River Inn).
During the last years of the Western Empire[?], the land was in a desolate condition, but its occupation by the Ostrogoths in the time of Theodoric the Great, who placed it under a dux, to some extent revived its prosperity.
The chief towns of Raetia (excluding Vindelicia) were
Tridentum (
Trent) and
Curia (Coire or
Chur). It was traversed by two great lines of Roman roads -- one leading from
Verona and Tridentum across the
Brenner Pass (in which the name of the
Brenni[?] has survived) to
Oenipons (
Innsbruck) and thence to
Augusta Vindelicorum; the other from
Brigantium (
Bregenz) on Lake Constance by Chur and
Chiavenna[?] to
Como and
Milan.
See:
- P. C. Planta, Das alte Rätien (Berlin, 1872)
- T. Mommsen in Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, iii. p. 706
- J. Marquardt, Römische Staatsverwaltung, 1. (2nd ed., 1881) p. 288
- L. Steub, Ueber die Urbewohner Rätiens und ihren Zusammenhang mit den Etruskern (Munich, 1843)
- J. Jung, Römer und Romanen in den Donauländern (Innsbruck, 1877)
- Smith’s Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1873)
- T. Mommsen, The Roman Provinces (English translation, 1886), i. pp. 16, 161, 196
- Mary B. Peaks, The General Civil and Military Administration of Noricum and Raetia (Chicago, 1907).
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