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Listed 2 sub titles with search on: Various locations  for wider area of: "GERMANY Country EUROPE" .


Various locations (2)

Ancient place-names

Abusina, Abusena

ABENSBERG (Town) GERMANY
Abusina, Abusena, a town of Vindelicia, situated on the river Abens, and corresponding nearly to the modern Abensbery. Abusina stood near to the eastern termination of the high road which ran from the Roman military station Vindenissa on the Aar to the Danube. Roman walls are still extant, and Roman remains still discovered at Abensberg.

Albis river

GERMANY (Country) EUROPE
  Albis (Albis or Albios: die Elbe), one of the great rivers of Germany. It flows from SE. to NW., and empties itself in the Northern or German Ocean, having its sources near the Schneekcoppe on the Bohemian side of the Riesengebirge. Tacitus (Germ. 41) places its sources in the country of the Hermunduri, which is too far east, perhaps because he confounded the Elbe with the Eger; Ptolemy (ii. 11) puts them too far from the Asciburgian mountains. Dion Cassius (lv. 1) more correctly represents it as rising in the Vandal mountains. Strabo (p. 290) describes its courseas parallel,and as of equal length with that of the Rhine, both of which notions are erroneous. The Albis was the most easterly and northerly river reached by the Romans in Germany. They first reached its banks in B.C. 9, under Claudius Drusus, but did not cross it. (Liv. Epit. 140; Dion Cass. l. c.) Domitius Ahenobarbus, B.C. 3, was the first who crossed the river (Tacit. Ann. iv. 44), and two years later he came to the banks of the lower Albis, meeting the fleet which had sailed up the river from the sea. (Tacit. l. c.; Vell. Pat. ii. 106; Dion Cass. lv. 28.) After that time the Romans,not thinking it safe to keep their legions at so great a distance, and amid such warlike nations, never again proceeded as far as the Albis, so that Tacitus, in speaking of it, says: flumen inclutum et notum olim; nunc tantum auditor.

This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


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