[1263] The site of Caletra is quite unknown. It was situate at some point in the present valley of the Albegna.
[1264] The First Region extended from the Tiber to the Gulf of Salernum, being bounded in the interior by the Apennines. It consisted of ancient Latium and Campania, comprising the modern Campagna di Roma, and the provinces of the kingdom of Naples.
[1265] Livy, B. i. c. 3, and Ovid, Fasti, B. iii. l. 389, inform us that the name of Albula was changed into Tiberis in consequence of king Tiberinus being accidentally drowned in it.
[1266] Still known by that name. The Glanis is called la Chiana.
[1267] According to D’Anville, now known as Citta di Castello.
[1268] A municipal town of Umbria, situate near the confluence of the rivers Nar and Tiber, and on the Flaminian Way. There are the ruins of an aqueduct, an amphitheatre, and some temples, now the modern Otricoli.
[1269] The territory of Umbria extended from the left bank of the Tiber, near its rise, to the Adriatic.
[1270] The Sabines occupied the left bank of the Tiber from the Umbri to the Anio. The Crustumini and the Fidenates probably occupied the southern part of the district about the river Alba.
[1271] The Nera and the Teverone. The exact situation of the district of Vaticanum has not been ascertained with exactness.
[1272] As not so much causing mischief by its inundations, as giving warning thereby of the wrath of the gods and of impending dangers; which might be arrested by sacrifices and expiatory rites.—See Horace, Odes, B. i. 2. 29.