Dictionary of Greek and Roman geography . oad from Andomatunum (^Langres) to Vesontio(^Besanqon). The Itin. gives the same road, liutomits Segobodium. DAnville supposes Segobodiumto be Seieiix, which is on the Suone, and in the di-rection between Besanqon and Lanqres. [G. L.] SEGOBRIGA (;S,iy6iptya, Ptol. ii. 6. § 58).I. The capital of the Celtiberi in Hispania Tarra-conensis. (Plin. iii. 3. s. 4.) It lay SW. of Caesar-angusta, and in the jurisdiction of Carthago Nova.(Plin. I. c.) The surrounding district was for its talc or selenite. (Id. xxxvi. 22. s. 45.)It must have been in t


Dictionary of Greek and Roman geography . oad from Andomatunum (^Langres) to Vesontio(^Besanqon). The Itin. gives the same road, liutomits Segobodium. DAnville supposes Segobodiumto be Seieiix, which is on the Suone, and in the di-rection between Besanqon and Lanqres. [G. L.] SEGOBRIGA (;S,iy6iptya, Ptol. ii. 6. § 58).I. The capital of the Celtiberi in Hispania Tarra-conensis. (Plin. iii. 3. s. 4.) It lay SW. of Caesar-angusta, and in the jurisdiction of Carthago Nova.(Plin. I. c.) The surrounding district was for its talc or selenite. (Id. xxxvi. 22. s. 45.)It must have been in the neighbourhood of Priego,where, near Pennaescrite, considerable ruins are stillto be found. (Florez, Esj). Sag7: vii. p. 61.) Forcoins see Sestini, i. p. 193. (Cf. Strab. iii. p. 162;Front. Si7-at. iii. 10. 6.) 2. A town of the Edetani in Hispania Tarra-conensis, known only from inscriptions and coins,the modern Segorbe. (Florez, Esp. Sagr. v. p. 21,viii. p. 97, and Med. pp. 573, 650; Mionnet, i. p. 50,and Supp. i. p. 102.) [T. H. D.]. COIN OF SEGOBRIGA. SEGOBRIGII. [Massilia, p. 290.] SEGODUNUM. SEGODUNUM (:S,ey6Sovvov). Ptolemy (ii. 7.§ 21) calls Segodunum the chief town of theKuteni [Kuteni], a Gallic people west of theEhone, in the Aquitania of Ptolemy. In someeditions of Ptolemy the reading is Segodunnm orEtodunura. In the Table the name is Segodum,which is probably a corrupt form; and it has themark of a chief town. It was afterwards calledCivitas Rutenoram, whence the modern name Rodez,on the Aveyron, in the department of Aveyron, ofwhich it is the chief town. [G. L.] SEGODUNUM (S.^yo^ovvov), a town of south-ern Germany, p;ol):ibly in the country of the Her-munduri, is, according to some, the modern Wilrz-burg. (Ptol. ii. 11. §29; comp. Wilhelm, Ger^na-nien, p. 209.) [L. S.] SEGONTIA. 1. A town of the Celtiberi inHispania Tarraconensis, 16 miles from Caesarau-gusta. {Itin. Ant. pp 437, 439.) Most probably iden-tical with the Seguntia of Livy (xssiv. 19). Themodern R


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