in the one case was situated near Agnone, in the other
near Bojano—from the ox which led them
Bovianum. A second band was led by the woodpecker
of Mars; these were the Picentes, “the woodpecker-people,”
who took possession of what is now the March of Ancona.
A third band was led by the wolf (-hirpus-) into
the region of Beneventum; these were the Hirpini.
In a similar manner the other small tribes branched
off from the common stock—the Praetuttii
near Teramo; the Vestini on the Gran Sasso; the Marrucini
near Chieti; the Frentani on the frontier of Apulia;
the Paeligni on the Majella mountains; and lastly
the Marsi on the Fucine lake, coming in contact with
the Volscians and Latins. All of these tribes
retained, as these legends clearly show, a vivid sense
of their relationship and of their having come forth
from the Sabine land. While the Umbrians succumbed
in the unequal struggle and the western offshoots of
the same stock became amalgamated with the Latin or
Hellenic population, the Sabellian tribes prospered
in the seclusion of their distant mountain land, equally
remote from collision with the Etruscans, the Latins,
and the Greeks. There was little or no development
of an urban life amongst them; their geographical position
almost wholly precluded them from engaging in commercial
intercourse, and the mountain-tops and strongholds
sufficed for the necessities of defence, while the
husbandmen continued to dwell in open hamlets or wherever
each found the well-spring and the forest or pasture
that he desired. In such circumstances their
constitution remained stationary; like the similarly
situated Arcadians in Greece, their communities never
became incorporated into a single state; at the utmost
they only formed confederacies more or less loosely
connected. In the Abruzzi especially, the strict
seclusion of the mountain valleys seems to have debarred
the several cantons from intercourse either with each
other or with the outer world. They maintained
but little connection with each other and continued
to live in complete isolation from the rest of Italy;
and in consequence, notwithstanding the bravery of
their inhabitants, they exercised less influence than
any other portion of the Italian nation on the development
of the history of the peninsula.
Their Political Development
On the other hand the Samnite people decidedly exhibited the highest political development among the eastern Italian stock, as the Latin nation did among the western. From an early period, perhaps from its first immigration, a comparatively strong political bond held together the Samnite nation, and gave to it the strength which subsequently enabled it to contend with Rome on equal terms for the first place in Italy. We are as ignorant of the time and manner of the formation of the bond, as we are of its federal constitution; but it is clear that in Samnium no single community was preponderant, and still less was there any town to