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ADRIANUM

Volume 1 · 130 words · 1815 Edition

(or ADRIATICUM) MARE, in Ancient Geography, now the gulf of Venice, a large bay in the Mediterranean, between Dalmatia, Slavonia, Greece, and Italy. It is called by the Greeks Αδριανός; and Adria by the Romans, (as Arbiter Adriae Notus, Hor.) Cicero calls it Hadrianum Mare; Virgil has Hadriaticas Undas. It is commonly called Mare Adriaticum without an aspiration; but whether it ought to have one, is a dispute: if the appellation is from Hadria, the town of the Piceni, it must be written Hadriaticum, because the emperor's name, who thence derives his origin, is on coins and stones Hadrianus; but if from the town in the territory of Venice, as the more ancient, and of which that of the Piceni is a colony, this will justify the common appellation Adriaticum.