This list of ancient Italic peoples includes names of Indo-European peoples speaking Italic languages or otherwise considered Italic in sources from the late early 1st millennium BC to the early 1st millennium AD.
Map 1: Indo-European migrations as described in The Horse, the Wheel, and Language by David W. Anthony
Map 2: Possible area of origin and migration route of Proto-Italic speaking people towards Italian peninsula
Map 3: Ethnicities of today's Italy in 400 BC. The Italic tribes lived at this point in the south-central part of the Italian peninsula .
Map 4: Ethnolinguistic map of Italy in the Iron Age , before the Roman expansion and conquest of Italy
Map 5: The linguistic and peoples landscape of Central Italy at the beginning of Roman expansion
Falisci
Aborigines (mythology) (Casci Latini) - Latium Sicels
Prisci Latini (Old Latins) (according to tradition and legend they were formed by the merger of Aborigines and Latium Sicels )
Latini [ 1] [ 2] (Latins (Italic tribe) )
Abolani
Aesulani
Acienses
Albans (Albani ) (Populi Albenses ) (in Alba Longa Land, between the modern-day Lake Albano and Monte Cavo )
Antemnates (in Antemnae ) (sometimes regarded as Sabines )
Bolani / Bovillani
Bubetani
Cusuetani (originally Latin tribe that was conquered and assimilated by the Volsci )
Coriolani , Old / Old Coriolani (originally Latin tribe that was conquered and assimilated by the Volsci )
Ficani (in Ficana Land)
Latin Fidenates (originally Latin tribe that was conquered and assimilated by the Etruscans , for some centuries Fidenates were Etruscans - the Fidenates Etruscans, however in the 8th century BC, Rome , after a war with Veii and Fidenae , conquered Fidenae and established a Roman Latin colony there - Fidenae Novae , and the Fidenae land was Latinized again)[ 3]
Foreti / Foretii
Hortenses
Latinienses / Romans (Romani ) (Ancient Romans ) (originally in Rome and Ager Romanus or Ager Latinienses , Roman land , later throughout the Roman Empire )
Longulani (originally Latin tribe that was conquered and assimilated by the Volsci )
Macrales
Manates
Munienses
Mutucumenses
Numinienses
Octulani
Olliculani
Pedani
Polluscini (originally Latin tribe that was conquered and assimilated by the Volsci )
Querquetulani
Sicani, Latium (Latium Sicani ) (not to be confused with the Sicily 's Sicani )
Sisolenses
Tolerienses (in Toleria or Tolerium Land)
Tutienses
Velienses
Venetulani , Latium / Latium Venetulani (may have been an originally Venetian tribe that was Latinized and assimilated)
Vimitellarii
Vitellenses
Opici
Other possible Italic peoples [ edit ]
Usually[when? ] they are included as an Italic people by many[quantify ] scholars.[who? ] However other scholars[who? ] argue[where? ] that they could have been a transitional people between Celts and Italics , a Celticized Italic people or a Para-Celtic people.
^ Barthold Georg Niebuhr (1845). The History of Rome, Volume 1 , p. 154.
^ Gary D. Farney, Guy Bradley, eds. (2017). The Peoples of Ancient Italy , P. 478.
^ Barthold Georg Niebuhr (1845). The History of Rome, Volume 1 , p. 154.
^ Š. Batović, Liburnska kultura, Matica Hrvatska i Arheološki muzej Zadar, Zadar, 2005, UDK: 904 (398 Liburnija), ISBN 953-6419-50-5 , pages 64-66
Gianna G. Buti e Giacomo Devoto , Preistoria e storia delle regioni d'Italia , Sansoni Università, 1974
Giovanni Pugliese Carratelli , Italia, omnium terrarum alumna , Officine grafiche Garzanti Milano, Garzanti-Schewiller, 1990
Giacomo Devoto , Gli antichi Italici, 2a ed. Firenze, Vallecchi, 1951.
Gary D. Farney, Guy Bradley (edits.) (2018). The Peoples of Ancient Italy . Boston, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
Sabatino Moscati , Così nacque l'Italia: profili di popoli riscoperti , Società editrice internazionale, Torino 1998.
Niebuhr, Barthold Georg . (1835). The History of Rome . Philadelphia: Thomas Wardle
Francisco Villar , Gli Indoeuropei e le origini dell'Europa , Bologna, Il Mulino, 1997. ISBN 88-15-05708-0
Vittore Pisani , Lingue preromane d'Italia. Origini e fortune, 1978.
[1] - Source texts of ancient Greek and Roman authors
[2] - Strabo's work The Geography (Geographica ). Books 5 and 6 are about Italy (each region has a chapter).