[1472] West of the Rhine.
[1473] Ptolemy names it Lucotecia; Cæsar, Lutetia. Julian, who was proclaimed emperor by his army in this city, names it Leucetia.
[1474] The inhabitants of Vannes and the surrounding country.
[1475] Neque enim his nostræ rostro nocere poterant; tanta erat in his firmitudo. Cæsar, lib. iii. c. 13.
[1476] Vide Cæsar, lib. iii. c. 14.
[1477] The Boii, who passed into Italy, established themselves near to Bologna.
[1478] The Senones, or inhabitants of Sens, are thought to have founded Sienna in Italy.
[1479] The promontory of Calbium, the present Cape Saint-Mahé, is here alluded to.
[1480] Gosselin observes, “These people called themselves by the name of Kelts; the Greeks styled them Galatæ, and the Latins Galli or Gauls.”
[1481] The Cimbri inhabited Denmark and the adjacent regions.