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Gallia Narbonensis (Southeastern France.) |
Gallia Narbonensis
Gallia Narbonensis was a Roman province
located in what is now Languedoc and
Provence, in southern France.
It became a province in 121 BC,
originally under the name of Gallia
Transalpina (Transalpine Gaul).
The Romans called it Provincia Nostra
("our province") or simply
Provincia ("the province"), a
name which has survived in the modern
name of the region, Provence.
The name Gallia Narbonensis stems from
the Roman colony of Narbo Martius
(Narbonne) which was founded on the
coast in 118 BC.
Bordering directly on Italy, control of
the province gave the Roman state
several advantages, such as control of
the land route between Italy and the
Iberian peninsula; a buffer against
attacks on Italy by tribes from Gaul;
and control of the lucrative trade
routes of the Rhone valley, over which
commercial goods flowed between Gaul and
the trading center of Massalia, modern
Marseille.
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items are from 16 Dec 2006.