Caletes
The Caletes or Caleti were a Celtic tribe dwelling in Pays de Caux, in present-day Normandy, during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
Name
They are mentioned as Caletes by Caesar, as Káletoi and Kalétous by Strabo, as Galetos by Pliny, as Kalē̃tai by Ptolemy, and as Caleti by Orosius.The Gaulish ethnonym Caletoi literally means 'the hard ones', that is to say 'the stubborn' or 'the tough'. It derives from the Proto-Celtic stem *kaleto-, itself from Proto-Indo-European *ḱelto-, meaning 'cold'.
The Pays de Caux, attested in 843 as Pago Calcis, is named after the tribe.
Geography
The Calates occupied the coastal part of what is now the Seine-Maritime department, namely the Pays de Caux and the Pays de Bray. They dwelled north of the neighbouring Veliocasses, and were separated from the Ambiani in the northeast by a minor tribe, the Catoslugi.Their pre-Roman oppida were the Cité de Limes at Bracquemont, a cliff-edge site, and the Camp du Canada at Fécamp, which is often regarded as a representative example of so-called 'Belgic-type' fortifications.
In the early Roman Empire, the capital of the Caletes was Juliobona. Founded in the Augustan period, the city developed mainly during the 1st and 2nd centuries AD, before being destroyed by a fire toward the end of the 3rd century and subsequently losing its status as a civitas capital. Another Caletes settlement was located on the Seine estuary at Caracotinum/Gravinum, founded around 15 AD.