Ubii

The Ubii around AD 30
Fannius, a member of the Ubii, corporis custos, the Germanic bodyguard of Nero, Museo Epigrafico, Terme di Diocleziano, Rome

The Ubii were a Germanic tribe[1][2] first encountered dwelling on the east bank of the Rhine in the time of Julius Caesar, who formed an alliance with them in 55 BC in order to launch attacks across the river. They were transported in 39 BC by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa to the west bank, apparently at their own request, as they feared the incursions of their neighbors, the Chatti.[3]

A colony for Roman veterans was founded in 50 AD under the patronage of Agrippa's granddaughter, Agrippina the Younger,[4] who had been born at Ara Ubiorum, the capital of the Ubii. The colony derived its title from the names of Agrippina and her husband, the emperor Claudius, and received the name Colonia Claudia Ara Augusta Agrippinensium, which is the origin of the city's modern name, Cologne. Alongside the allotment of land to veterans, the existing town of Ara Ubiorum was elevated to the status of a colonia, which would have conferred many privileges on the inhabitants.[5] The Ubii were also at Bonna (Bonn) of the Eburones.

The Ubii remained loyal allies of Rome; they were instrumental in crushing the Batavian rebellion in 70 AD and, although some of them made part of the invasion of Pannonia in 166 AD, they become foederati supporting Roman troops in the Marcomannic Wars in 166–67 AD.

They seem to have been so thoroughly Romanized that they adopted the name Agrippinenses in honour of their "founder",[6] and their later history is submerged with other Franks in that of eastern Gaul as a whole.

  1. ^ Brogan, Olwen Phillis Frances; Drinkwater, John Frederick (2012). "Ubii". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony; Eidinow, Esther (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (4 ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191735257. Retrieved 26 January 2020. Ubii, a German tribe just east of the Rhine
  2. ^ "De Gruyter".
  3. ^ William Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography s.v. "Colonia Agrippina".
  4. ^ Tacitus, Annales 12.27.1–2.
  5. ^ Barrett, Anthony A. (1996). Agrippina: Sex, Power, and Politics in the Early Empire, New Haven and London: Yale.
  6. ^ Tacitus, Germania c.28 and Histories, iv.28 (as noted in Smith, loc. cit.).

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