Latin, the ancient people of Latium (q.v.).
Latin
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ancient Italic people: The LatinsThe Latin nation had a relatively limited territory, south of the Tiber, which was reduced, in historic times, by the invasion of the Volsci to the region between the Alban hills and the Aurunci mountains (the so-called Latium Novum). The principal Latin centres… -
LatiumThe Latins (or Latini) were sprung from those Indo-European tribes that, during the 2nd millennium
bc , came to settle in the Italian peninsula. By the first centuries of the 1st millenniumbc , the Latins had developed as a separate people, originally established on the mass of… -
AeneidOther Latins (encouraged by the gods) resent the arrival of the Trojans and the projected marriage alliance between Aeneas and Lavinia, Latinus’s daughter; notable among the resentful are Latinus’s wife and Turnus, leader of a local tribe known as the Rutuli and heretofore Lavinia’s favoured suitor.…
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LatinusLatinus, in Roman legend, king of the aborigines in Latium and eponymous hero of the Latin race. The Greek poet Hesiod (7th century bc), in Theogony, calls him the son of the Greek hero Odysseus and the enchantress Circe. The Roman poet Virgil, in the Aeneid, makes him the son of the Roman god…
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Ancient Italic peopleAncient Italic people, any of the peoples diverse in origin, language, traditions, stage of development, and territorial extension who inhabited pre-Roman Italy, a region heavily influenced by neighbouring Greece, with its well-defined national characteristics, expansive vigour, and aesthetic and…


