CHAP. 34. (20.)—NEARER SPAIN, ITS COAST ALONG THE GALLIC OCEAN.
At the Promontory of the Pyrenees Spain begins, more narrow, not only than Gaul, but even than itself1 in its other parts, as we have previously mentioned2, seeing to what an immense extent it is here hemmed in by the ocean on the one side, and by the Iberian Sea on the other. A chain of the Pyrenees, extending from due east to south-west3, divides Spain into two parts, the smaller one to the north, the larger to the south. The first coast that presents itself is that of the Nearer Spain, otherwise called Tarraconensis. On leaving the Pyrenees and proceeding along the coast, we meet with the forest ranges of the Vascones4, Olarso5, the towns of the Varduli6, the Morosgi7, Menosca8, Vesperies9, and the Port of Amanus10, where now stands the colony of Flaviobriga. We then come to the district of the nine states of the Cantabri11, the river Sauga12, and the Port of Victoria of the Juliobrigenses13, from which place the sources of the Iberus14 are distant forty miles. We next come to the Port of Blendium15, the Orgenomesci16, a people of the Cantabri, Vereasueca17 their port, the country of the As- tures18, the town of Noega19, and on a peninsula20, the Pæsici. Next to these we have, belonging to the jurisdiction of Lucus21, after passing the river Navilubio22, the Cibarci23, the Egovarri, surnamed Namarini, the Iadoni, the Arrotrebæ24, the Celtic Promontory, the rivers Florius25 and Nelo, the Celtici26, surnamed Neri, and above them the Tamarici27, in whose peninsula28 are the three altars called Sestianæ, and dedicated29 to Augustus; the Capori30, the town of Noela31, the Celtici surnamed Præsamarci, and the Cilen32: of the islands, those worthy of mention are Corticata33 and Aunios. After passing the Cileni, belonging to the jurisdiction of the Bracari34, we have the Heleni35, the Gravii36, and the fortress of Tyde, all of them deriving their origin from the Greeks. Also, the islands called Cicæ37, the famous city of Abobrica38, the river Minius39, four miles wide at its mouth, the Leuni, the Seurbi40, and Augusta41, a town of the Bracari, above whom lies Gallæcia. We then come to the river Limia42, and the river Durius43, one of the largest in Spain, and which rises in the district of the Pelendones44, passes near Numantia, and through the Arevaci and the Vaccæi, dividing the Vettones from Asturia, the Gallæci from Lusitania, and separating the Turduli from the Bracari. The whole of the region here mentioned from the Pyrenees is full of mines of gold, silver, iron, and lead, both black and white45.