CatalauniThe Catalauni (Gaulish: *Catu-uellaunoi 'war-chiefs') were a Belgic tribe dwelling in the modern Champagne region during the Roman period.[1] The Catalauni probably belonged to a larger tribe, either the Remi in the north or the Lingones in the south.[2] The Catuvellauni, who migrated to southern Britain in the 1st century BC, are likely part of the same tribal group.[1] NameThey are mentioned as Catalaunos by Eutropius (4th c. AD),[3] and as (Cat)alaunorum in the Notitia Dignitatum (5th c. AD).[4][5] The ethnonym Catalauni is probably a latinized contracted form of Gaulish *Catu-uellaunoi ('war-chiefs, chiefs-of-war'), deriving from the stem catu- ('combat') attached to uellauni ('chiefs, commandants').[2][6] The name Catuvellauni, borne by a Celtic tribe of southern Britain, is thus likely related.[1][7] The city of Châlons-sur-Marne, attested in the 4th century as Durocatelaunos (Cathalaunum in 1185), is named after the Belgic tribe.[8] GeographyThey probably originally settled in the area of the Remi, within the modern Champagne region.[1] Their chief town, known as civitas Catalaunorum (modern-day Châlons-sur-Marne), is not mentioned before the 4th century AD.[8][1] References
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