The Vediantii dwelled on the
Mediterranean coast, between the
Var river and the
Mont Agel, around the
Massaliote colony of
Nikaea (modern
Nice). Their territory was located east of the
Deciates and
Nerusii, west of the
Intimilii, and south of the
Vesubiani. Their chief town was the
oppidum Vediantiorum, known as
Cemenelum by the 2nd century AD. Corresponding to modern
Cimiez, now a neighbourhood of Nice, the settlement controlled an important trading route from the Mediterranean coast towards the hinterland and the Alps. The acropolis stood about two kilometres inland, north of the Massaliote port of Nice, at the starting point of routes leading into the Alpine hinterland, in a position from which its inhabitants could defend themselves against pirates and mountain raiders. After the subjugation of the Ligurian tribes in 14 BC, Cemenelum became the centre of the local Roman military government, then served as the capital of the new Roman province from its creation by
Nero in 63 AD. The territory contained several ports, reflecting both land-based and maritime activity. In addition to Nice, a Massaliote trading post, local landing places recorded in the
Itinerarium maritimum Antonini included Anao, Olivula and Avisio.
Monaco (
Portus Herculis Monoeci), another Massaliote port, also lay within their territory. Epigraphy records the name of a Gallo-Roman settlement in the hinterland, the
vicus Cuntinus (modern
Contes), whose inhabitants honoured a protective deity,
Segomo Cuntinus. Another small settlement,
vicus Navelis in the
pagus Licirrus, is attested but cannot be precisely located, though it lay within the territory of the
civitas of Cemenelum. == History ==