2
|
|
Liguria
|
2
|
|
Venetia
|
2
|
|
II. Italia, properly so called
|
2
|
|
Etruria
|
2
|
|
Umbria
|
2
|
|
Picenum
|
2
|
|
Sabini
|
3
|
|
Marsi
|
3
|
|
Peligni
|
3
|
|
Vestini
|
3
|
|
Marrucini
|
3
|
|
Frentani
|
3
|
|
Latium: its two senses
|
3
|
|
The Campagna
|
3
|
|
The Pontine Marshes
|
4
|
|
Campania
|
4
|
|
Bay of Naples
|
4
|
|
Samnium
|
4
|
|
Apulia
|
4
|
|
Calabria
|
4
|
|
Lucania
|
4
|
|
Bruttii
|
4
|
|
Fertility of Italy
|
5
|
|
Its productions
|
5
|
|
Its inhabitants
|
5
|
|
I. Italians proper
|
5
|
|
1. Latins
|
5
|
|
2. Umbro-Sabellians
|
5
|
|
II. Iapygians
|
5
|
|
III. Etruscans
|
5
|
|
Their name
|
5
|
|
Their language
|
5
|
|
Their origin
|
5
|
|
Their two confederacies
|
6
|
|
1. North of the Po
|
6
|
|
2. South of the Apennines
|
6
|
|
Foreign races—
|
|
|
IV. Greeks
|
6
|
|
Gauls
|
6
|
|
CHAPTER II.
|
|
|
THE FIRST FOUR KINGS OF ROME. B.C. 753–616.
|
|
|
Position of Rome
|
7
|
|
Its inhabitants
|
7
|
|
1. Latins
|
7
|
|
2. Sabines
|
7
|
|
3. Etruscans
|
7
|
|
|