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Topic: Regnenses


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  Regnenses - TheBestLinks.com - Claudius, Celt, Chichester, 80, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Regnenses, Claudius, Celt, Chichester, 80, Roman invasion of Britain, Sussex...
The Regnenses or Regni is a British Celtic kingdom formed only after the Roman invasion of Britain, located in modern west Sussex.
The Regnenses were a confederation of tribes, previously under the rule of the Atrebates, joint by Roman influence client kingdom of Rome.
www.thebestlinks.com /Regnenses.html   (164 words)

  
 Regnenses   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The Regnenses were a confederation of tribes under the rule of the Atrebates joint by Roman influence client kingdom Rome.
The king was Cogidubnus possibly an noble made a Roman citizen by emperor Claudius with the name Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus and given the dignity of legatus augusti (legate of the emperor).
After his in around 80 AD the Regnenses' lands were divided into civitas.
www.freeglossary.com /Regnenses   (95 words)

  
 Atrebates
After Roman conquest, part of the Atrebates' lands were organized into the pro-Roman kingdom of the Regnenses under Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus, possibly Verica's son.
The tribal territory was later organised as the civitates (administrative districts within a Roman province) of the Atrebates, Regnenses and possibly the Belgae.
Li payis des Atrebates divénrè li royåme romin-amishtåve des Regnenses.
www.geocities.com /jorgenpfhartogs2/Atrebates.html   (3285 words)

  
 History of Kent biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The modern name Kent is derived from the Brythonic word 'Cantus' meaning a rim or border, being applied as a name to the eastern part of the modern county, and meaning 'border land' or 'coastal district.' Julius Caesar described it as Cantium, home of the Cantiaci in 51 BC.
The extreme west of the modern county was occupied by other Iron Age tribes; the Regnenses and possibly another ethnic group occupying The Weald.
East Kent became one of the kingdoms of the Jutes during the fifth century AD (see Kingdom of Kent) and the area was later known as Cantia in around AD 730 and Cent in AD 835.
www.biography.ms /History_of_Kent.html   (419 words)

  
 Ludi Funebres   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The Regnenses, the Kents, and the other British tribes were there.
The Kentish sailors were preparing a sky-blue boat, and the Regnensian sailors a yellow boat.
Dumnorix, the chief of the Regnenses, who was in charge of the yellow boat, was a most skillful helmsman.
www.courses.rochester.edu /argetsinger/LAT101/ludi.html   (189 words)

  
 Roman Britain - Revolt in 60 CE
Yet the Romans who first fought were the tough soldiers who pushed out the Empire's boundary and were hardly going to civilise those who had fought against them.
They did give allied status to Queen Cartimandua of the Brigantes (despite her husband Venutius being anti-Roman), Cogidubnus of the Regnenses and Prasutagus or Subidasto of the Iceni.
As for the rest, there was strong opposition when they reached Wales, where Caratacus was able to fight again (after losing at Medway) between 49 and 51 CE, leading, this time, the Silures and Ordovices tribes.
www.pluralist.freeuk.com /learning/history/boudica.html   (1083 words)

  
 Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus (or Togidubnus) was a 1st century king of the Regnenses in early Roman Britain.
Cogidubnus may therefore have been an heir of Verica, the Atrebatian king whose overthrow prompted the Roman conquest.
After the conquest they were part of the civitas of the Regnenses, which was probably Cogidubnus's kingdom before being incorporated into the Roman province.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/T/Tiberius-Claudius-Cogidubnus.htm   (348 words)

  
 Middle East Open Encyclopedia: History of Kent   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Pottery studies indicate the county east of the River Medway was inhabited by Belgic peoples who were part of an economic and cultural region embracing south east England and the lands across the English Channel.
The extreme west of the modern county was occupied by other Iron Age tribes; the Regnenses and possibly another ethnic group occupying The Weald known today as the Wealden People.
During the late pre-Roman Iron Age the names of a few Kentish kings are known, such as Dumnovellaunus and Adminius.
www.baghdadmuseum.org /ref/index.php?title=History_of_Kent   (668 words)

  
 atrebates   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The Atrebates kings are known from cross-referencing in the ancient sources and by numismatic evidence.
After Roman conquest, the Atrebates' lands were organized into the pro-Roman kingdom of the Regnenses.
Commius, the Gaul, escapes from the continent to Britain, ruled until ca.35 BC.
www.yourencyclopedia.net /atrebates.html   (328 words)

  
 CSCP - Cambridge Latin Course - Online Activities Book 2 Stage 15   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
A British king and Roman rituals: enter Cogidubnus, king of the Regnenses, who must perform a strange ceremony involving wax statues and sacrificial animals.
Information on King Cogidubnus (sometimes called Cogidumnus or Togidubnus) and his tribe, the Regnenses.
Excellent, straightforward information about the Atrebates tribe (the forerunners of the Regnenses), Cogidubnus and Fishbourne.
www.cambridgescp.com /latin/clc/onlineA/clc_onlineA_b2_s15.php   (680 words)

  
 Lower School Curriculum: An Introduction
They will also have developed their understanding of how language works and improved their own vocabulary, as they realise the debt of English to Latin.
In Year 8, continuing to follow the fortunes of members of Caecilius’s family, the scene moves to Roman Britain and centres on life around and about the palace of Cogidubnus, King of the Regnenses.
Later we move to another part of the Roman Empire, Alexandria in Egypt.
www.dauntseys.wilts.sch.uk /main/publicweb/Docs/Academic/LOWER/Latin.htm   (228 words)

  
 Regnenses -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Their capital was Noviomagus Regnorun, known today as (additional info and facts about Chichester) Chichester.
The Regnenses were a confederation of tribes, previously under the rule of the (additional info and facts about Atrebates) Atrebates, joint by Roman influence client kingdom of Rome.
See also: (additional info and facts about List of Celtic tribes) List of Celtic tribes
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/R/Re/Regnenses.htm   (83 words)

  
 (GC8C49) Roman Bridges by orebelo   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
This bridge is located in Pulborough W. Sussex England and it is where the Roman road "Stane Street" crossed the River Arun.
Stane Street linked Noviomagus, Chichester the tribal capital of the Regnenses, with Londinium.
The Roman settlement lay just to the south of the crossing at the confluence of the River Rother with the River Arun.
www.geocaching.com /seek/cache_details.aspx?guid=1fc9be4d-f6df-4caa-8889-6912db3b952d   (383 words)

  
 The uniqueness of Londinium (essay)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Of course there was a cultural blending of the British and the Roman in London.
But it was much more heavily in favour of the latter than seems to have been possible anywhere else in the Province, and not just among the anti-Roman rebels like the Silures, but also among the Romanophile Regnenses, where romanitas took no greater longterm root than anywhere else.
Perhaps, in the end, we CAN attempt a relatively uncomplicated answer to the question "Why was London administratively and socially distinct?".
www.ancientworlds.net /aw/Post/75901   (1180 words)

  
 Culture settings   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Unit II of the CLC begins in southern Roman Britain and includes visits to the following sites: Fishbourne, London, Chichester, Bath, and Colchester.
Tribes such as the Regnenses and the Atrebates are introduced along with the client-king Cogidubnus and the Italian-born senator and lawyer, Salvius.
Salvius' role in Britain was mainly to control the southern area of Britain while the governor, Agricola, was away in the North working on expanding Roman territories.
www.vroma.org /~araymer/Culture_settings.html   (297 words)

  
 Roman Britain 43AD - 400AD - VillageNet History
The Romans divided the country into self governing areas known as Civitates, two of which covered our area.
The Canti area from East Kent to a line from the Hastings area to London, and the Regnenses was the rest of Sussex, and to Portsmouth.
The main reason for the Romans to come into this part of Kent and East Sussex, was to obtain the iron which had been exported by the Celts to Europe until the invasion.
www.villagenet.co.uk /history/0040-romans.html   (585 words)

  
 [No title]
In a few generations, these Celtic tribes will be *Roman*, in every way that counts." Much of this land was ruled by the Catevellauni, whose energetic and impulsive king, Caractacus, was in large part responsible for the Roman invasion.
He initiated a campaign against the Regnenses, and that tribe, a client of Rome since Caesar's time, appealed to Rome for help.
The invasion force sent by the young Emperor Claudius was the response.
www.amadan.org /HDR/archives/CIARAN9.TXT   (9643 words)

  
 Celtic coins in Britain
This is Part 1 'Celtic Coinage' the other parts and publishing dates are shown above.
By the middle of the first century BC the Celts had established several kingdoms, the Cantiaci in Kent, the Regnenses in Sussex, Atrebates in Surrey, Durotriges in Dorset, Dobunni around the Severn, Catuvellauni in Hertfordshire, Coritani in Lincolnshire, Iceni in Norfolk and the Trinovantes in Suffolk and Essex.
Celtic expansion into the rest of England continued until after the Roman conquest.
www.predecimal.com /p1celtic.htm   (1892 words)

  
 Celtic Tribes Portal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Barry Cunliffe does not discuss the Parisii in his "The Ancient Celts" (1997).
Regnenses (Regni): for Regni coins, see BEAN, S.C., "The Coinage of Atrebates and Regni" (Studies in Celtic Coinage, number 4, 2000)
Silures: an early pre-Roman (and Roman) Celtic tribe that lived in southeast Wales.
www.duerinck.com /celts.html   (1868 words)

  
 P A L A E S T R A :: Cimbri
The Cimbri do not use patronyms, rather they use their clan names.
Atrebates, Bibroci, Boresti, Brigantes, Caereni, Caledonii, Cantium, Carnonacae, Carvetii, Catuvellauni, Corielsolilii, Corieltauvi, Corionotatae, Coritani, Cornovii, Creones, Damnonii, Decantae, Deceangli, Delgovices, Demetae, Dobunni, Dumnonii, Durotriges, Epidii, Gabrantovices, Ganganii, Iceni Magni, Iceni Parvi, Longovices, Lugi, Novantae, Ordovices, Parisi, Petuarii, Regnenses, Selgovae, Setanti, Silures, Smertae, Taexali, Teutoni, Trinovantes, Vacomagi, Venicones and Votadini
It is true that sidhe or ljosalfar that mate with humans often produce children indistinguishable from many Cimbri.
webpages.charter.net /wpeacock/palaestra/cultures/faerie/cimbri.htm   (308 words)

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