[1813] Nothing is known of the Plestini, nor yet of the Pitulani, who seem to have been a different people to those mentioned in the First Region.
[1814] The town of Sentis, according to D’Anville and Mannert, was in the vicinity of the modern town of Sasso Ferrato.
[1815] The people of Sarsina, an important town of Umbria, famous as being the birth-place of the comic poet Plautus. It is now called Sassina, on the Savio.
[1816] The people of Spoletum, now Spoleto. It was a city of Umbria on the Via Flaminia, colonized by the Romans B.C. 242. In the later days of the Empire it was taken by Totilas, and its walls destroyed. They were however restored by Narses.
[1817] The people of Suasa; the remains of which, according to D’Anville and Mannert, are those seen to the east of the town of San Lorenzo, at a place called Castel Leone.
[1818] The monastery of Sestino is supposed to stand on the site of Sestinum, their town, at the source of the river Pesaro.
[1819] The site of their town is denoted by the modern Sigello in the Marches of Ancona.
[1820] Their town is supposed to have been also situate within the present Marches of Ancona, where they join the Duchy of Spoleto.
[1821] Their town was Trebia. The modern Trevi stands on its site.
[1822] The people of Tuficum, which Holsten thinks was situate between Matelica and Fabrianum, on the river called the Cesena.