Ceutrones (Alps)
The Ceutrones were a Gallic tribe dwelling in the Tarantaise Valley, in modern Savoie, during the Iron Age and Roman period.
Name
They are mentioned as Ceutrones by Caesar, Keútrōnes by Strabo, Ceutrones by Pliny, and as Keutrónōn by Ptolemy.The hamlet of Centron, located in the village of Montgirod, may be named after the Gallic tribe.
They had a homonym tribe in Gallia Belgica, documented in 54 BC, which was probably a pagus of the Nervii.
Geography
The Ceutrones dwelled in the Tarantaise Valley, along the upper Isère river, near the Little St Bernard Pass on the route stretching from the Rhône Valley to the north of the Italian Peninsula. Their territory was located north of the Graioceli and Medulli, southeast of the Allobroges, southwest of the Veragri, and west of the Salassi, on the other side of the Alps.Their chief town was known as Axima. Renamed to Forum Claudii Ceutronum under Claudius, probably when the Ceutrones were granted Latin Rights, it became the chief town of Alpes Graiae, one of the two divisions of the province of Alpes Graiae et Poeninae. The procurator of the province had an occasional residence in the Ceutronian chief town. In Late Antiquity, the city lost its position to Darentasia, which became the capital of the Diocese of Tarentaise in 426.