Turoni


The Turoni or Turones were a Gallic tribe of dwelling in the later Touraine region during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
They were among the first tribes to give support to the Gallic coalition against Rome led by Vercingetorix in 52 BC, then to the revolt of Sacrovir in 21 AD.

Name

They are mentioned as Turonos and Turonis by Caesar, Turones by Pliny, Turoni by Tacitus, and as Touroúpioi by Ptolemy.
The etymology of Turoni is uncertain. Pierre-Yves Lambert has proposed to see an altered form of Proto-Indo-European *tauro-, but Alexander Falileyev finds it unlikely.
A folk etymology that the Turoni were named after Turnus from the Aeneid appears in the Historia Brittonum: " was exiled on account of the death of Turnus, slain by Aeneas. He then went among the Gauls and built a city of the Turones, called Turnis ". Geoffrey of Monmouth later expanded this story in the Historia Regum Britanniae, where Tours was named after Brutus' nephew, also called Turnus, who had died fighting against Goffar the Pictone, king of Aquitaine.
The city of Tours, attested in the 6th c. AD as apud Toronos, and the Touraine region, attested in 774 as Turonice civitatis, are named after the Gallic tribe.

Geography

The Turoni on the middle reaches of the Loire river. Their territory was located south of the Cenomani, east of the Andecavi and the Pictones.
The oppidum des Châtelliers at Ambacia was a major settlement that replaced the earlier principal oppidum at the end of the La Tène period. Archaeological and numismatic evidence suggests that Ambacia was the chief town of the Turones in the late Iron Age, possibly serving as their civitas capital until the Augustan period, before the foundation of Caesarodunum.
During the Roman era, their chief town became Caesarodunum. The settlement is first mentioned in the early 2nd century AD by Ptolemy. During the early Roman period, it held the status of a free city, and in Late Antiquity it became the capital of the province of Lugdunensis Tertia.