[985] The people of the present Tortosa.
[986] Probably not the same people as the Edetani, in whose district Saguntum and Valencia were situate.
[987] The people of Gerunda or Gerona.
[988] They are nowhere else mentioned. Ukert supposes that their city stood in the district between the Sicoris and Nucaria.
[989] Their city was Tiara Julia.
[990] The people of Aquæ Calidæ or the ‘Hot Springs,’ called at the present day Caldes, four leagues from the city of Barcelona.
[991] Ptolemy places Bæcula between Ausa and Gerunda.
[992] The people of the present Belchite.
[993] The people of the present Xelsa, on the Ebro.
[994] The inhabitants of Calagurris, now Calahorra, a city of the Vascones, on the banks of the Ebro. They remained faithful to Sertorius to the last, and after slaughtering their wives and children and eating their flesh, their city was taken and destroyed; which event put an end to the Sertorian war. It was called “Nassica,” in contradistinction to Calagurris Fibularia, which is afterwards mentioned by Pliny. The latter is mentioned by Cæsar as forming one community with Osca (now Huesca), and was probably the present Loarre, though some writers take the first-named Calagurris to be that place, and the latter one to be the present Calahorra.