The Paeligni or Peligni were an
Italic tribe
The Italic peoples were an ethnolinguistic group identified by their use of Italic languages, a branch of the Indo-European language family.
The Italic peoples are descended from the Indo-European speaking peoples who inhabited Italy from at le ...
who lived in the
Valle Peligna, in what is now
Abruzzo
Abruzzo (, , ; nap, label=Neapolitan language, Abruzzese Neapolitan, Abbrùzze , ''Abbrìzze'' or ''Abbrèzze'' ; nap, label=Sabino dialect, Aquilano, Abbrùzzu; #History, historically Abruzzi) is a Regions of Italy, region of Southern Italy wi ...
, central
Italy.
History
The Paeligni are first mentioned as a member of a confederacy that included the
Marsi,
Marrucini, and
Vestini, with which the Romans came into conflict in the
Second Samnite War, 325 BC. Like other Oscan-Umbrian populations, they were governed by supreme magistrates known as
meddixes. Their religion included deities, such as the
Dioscuri, Cerfum (a water god), and Anaceta (the Roman
Angitia), a goddess associated with snakes.
On the submission of the
Samnites
The Samnites () were an ancient Italic people who lived in Samnium, which is located in modern inland Abruzzo, Molise, and Campania in south-central Italy.
An Oscan-speaking people, who may have originated as an offshoot of the Sabines, they for ...
, they all came into alliance with
Rome in 305-302 BC, the Paelignians having fought hard against even this degree of subjection. Each member of the confederacy entered the alliance with Rome as an independent unit, and in none was there any town or community politically separate from the tribe as a whole. Thus the Vestini issued coins of its own in the 3rd century; each of them appears in the list of the allies in the
Social War. How purely Italic in sentiment these communities of the mountain country remained appears from the choice of the mountain fortress of Corfinium as the rebel capital. It was renamed Vitellio, the
Oscan form of ''Italia'', a name which appears, written in Oscan alphabet, on the coins struck there in 90 BC. The Paeligni were granted
Roman Citizenship after the Social War, and that was the beginning of the end of their national identity, as they began to adopt Roman culture and language.
Gentes of Paeligni origin
*
Ovidia gens
Language
The known Paeligni inscriptions show that the dialect spoken by these tribes was substantially the same from the northern boundary of the Frentani to some place in the upper
Aternus valley not far from
Amiternum, and that this dialect closely resembled the
Oscan of
Lucania and
Samnium, though presenting some peculiarities of its own, which warrant, perhaps, the use of the name North Oscan. The clearest of these is the use of postpositions, as in Vestine , ""; , i.e. , "on to what lies before you". Others are the sibilation of consonantal and the assibilation of to some sound like that of English ''j'' (denoted by in the local variety of Latin alphabet), as in , "," i.e. ""; = Lat. ; and the loss of ''d'' (in pronunciation) in the ablative, as in (i.e. ), where the contrast of the last with the other two forms shows that the was an
archaism
In language, an archaism (from the grc, ἀρχαϊκός, ''archaïkós'', 'old-fashioned, antiquated', ultimately , ''archaîos'', 'from the beginning, ancient') is a word, a sense of a word, or a style of speech or writing that belongs to a hi ...
still occasionally used in writing. The last sentence of the interesting epitaph from which this phrase is taken may be quoted as a specimen of the dialect; the stone was found in
Corfinio, the ancient Corfinium, and the very perfect style of the Latin alphabet in which it is written shows that it cannot well be earlier than the last century BC: , la, ite vos porro pacati (cum bona pace), qui hoc scriptum
bar, 3rd declination neut.legistis. The form (2nd plural perfect indicative) is closely parallel to the inflection of the same person in
Sanskrit and of quite unique linguistic interest.
The name Paeligni may belong to the NO-class of ethnica (see
Marrucini), but the difference that it has no vowel before the suffix suggests that it may rather be parallel with the suffix of Latin . If it has any connection with Latin , "concubine", it is conceivable that it meant “halfbreeds” and was a name coined in contempt by the conquering Sabines, who turned the ''touta marouca'' into the community of the
Marrucini. But, when unsupported by direct evidence, even the most tempting etymology is an unsafe guide.
[For the history of the Paeligni after 90 BC see the references given in C.I.L. ix. 290 (Sulmona, esp. Ovid, e.g. Fasti, iv. 79, Anior. ii. 16; Florus ii. 9; ]Julius Caesar
Gaius Julius Caesar (; ; 12 July 100 BC – 15 March 44 BC), was a Roman general and statesman. A member of the First Triumvirate, Caesar led the Roman armies in the Gallic Wars before defeating his political rival Pompey in a civil war, and ...
i. 15) and 296 (Corfinium, e.g. Diodorus Siculus
Diodorus Siculus, or Diodorus of Sicily ( grc-gre, Διόδωρος ; 1st century BC), was an ancient Greek historian. He is known for writing the monumental universal history ''Bibliotheca historica'', in forty books, fifteen of which su ...
xxxvii. 2, 4, Caes., BC, i. 15).
Paelignian and this group of inscriptions generally form a most important link in the chain of the Italic dialects, as without them the transition from Oscan to Umbrian would be completely lost. The unique collection of inscriptions and antiquities of Pentima and the museum at Sulmona were both created by Professor Antonio de Nino, whose devotion to the antiquities of his native district rescued every single Paelignian monument that we possess.
Fate
None of the Latin inscriptions of the district need be older than
Sulla
Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix (; 138–78 BC), commonly known as Sulla, was a Roman general and statesman. He won the first large-scale civil war in Roman history and became the first man of the Republic to seize power through force.
Sulla had ...
, but some of them both in language and script show the style of his period (e.g. 3087, 3137); and, on the other hand, as several of the native inscriptions, which are all in the Latin alphabet, show the normal letters of the
Ciceronian period, there is little doubt that, for religious and private purposes at least, the Paelignian dialect lasted down to the middle of the 1st century BC.
See also
*
List of ancient Italic peoples
References
;Attribution
*
{{Italic languages
Ancient Italic peoples
Osco-Umbrian languages
Languages extinct in the 1st century BC
Languages attested from the 2nd century BC