
ThePicentes orPiceni[1] orPicentini were an ancientItalic people who lived from the 9th to the 3rd century BC in the area between theFoglia andAterno rivers, bordered to the west by the Apennines and to the east by the Adriatic coast. Their territory, known asPicenum, therefore included all of today'sMarche and the northern part ofAbruzzo. Recently, a genome-wide archaeogenetic study of individuals from two Picene necropoleis found that all the individuals associated with this culture display genetic continuity with earlier populations.[2]
The limits of Picenum depend on the era; during the earlyclassical antiquity the region between theApennines and the Adriatic Sea south ofAncona was Picenum (South Picenians), while between Ancona andRimini to the north the population was multi-ethnic (North Picenians) because after 390 BC theSenoni Gauls had combined with or supplanted earlier populations. In theRoman Republic the coastal part of northern Picenum was called theager Gallicus.


Picentes may have beenSabine colonists,[3][4] although this is doubted by more recent scholars, who see the South Picenes more closely related to theSabellians, as Steppe ancestry and Bell Beaker culture materials have been found in central Italy since c. 1600 BC.[5]Picentini date from the 9th c. BC as shown by archaeology.
The Piceni did not have a state-type organisation, had no predominant inhabited centre and therefore had no need for a capital. In 390 BC theSenoni Gauls invaded Italy from the north and occupied Picenum north of the Esino river and the centuries-old balance in Picenum underwent drastic changes. The archaeological evidence shows groups of Senones settled much further south of this river, in theMacerata area and even in theAscoli area, in sites such asFilottrano, San Genesio,Matelica, andOffida.
When in 299 BC the Romans capturedNequinum, they also concluded a treaty with the Picentes.[6] In 297 BC the Picentes warned the Roman Senate that they had been approached by theSamnites asking for alliance in renewed hostilities with Rome for which theSenate thanked them.[7]
The Romans in about 290 BC had absorbed the territory of thePretuzi, south of Picenum and after a series of victories with the help of the Piceni themselves, the Senones were expelled from the coastal region in 283 BC and the Romans annexed it down to Ancona when it became part of theAger publicus (Roman state land). The Romans had madeSenigallia a colony and were planning another colony a little further north. Following this progressive and unstoppable expansion of Rome around their territory the Piceni realised that they had supported a great power by which they were surrounded, and hence they broke the alliance and in 269 BC revolted and started the "Picentine war".
The consulsAppius Claudius Russus and Titus Sempronius Sophus were sent by the Roman Senate to Picenum. Sempronius arrived through the Tronto valley, while Appius passed through Umbria, descended into thePotenza valley through thePioraco straits and took the fortified city ofCamerino. To reunite the armies, the consuls conducted the military campaign by first invading the territories of the Agro Palmense (Fermo), so as to wedge themselves between the northern and southern Piceno territories. Sempronius led his troops into theAso valley, avoiding a frontal attack on the city of Ascoli Piceno, which would have greatly delayed the campaign. After defeating the Picene troops atInteramnia, he arrived in what is nowOrtezzano; following a new clash with the Picene resistance, the same city was devastated. Meanwhile, the Piceni forces had gathered at Truento, with a strong army; thus, Sempronius had to go back, in the valley of the Tronto, slowing down the advance. Before the battle started, a massive earthquake shook the earth, throwing men on both sides into panic; the first to awake from fear were the Romans, since the consul stated that the seismic event was a favourable omen for Rome and that, after the battle, he would erected a temple in Tellure. Once the initial fear was overcome, calm returned even among the ranks of the Piceni. The ensuing clash was so violent that few survived the battle, on either side. The negative outcome of the battle reduced the Piceni to sue for peace. For Rome, the victory against the Piceni was so important that, in addition to being given atriumph to the consuls, the Senate decided to mint memorial silver coins for the first time.
Ancona retained the statute ofcivitas foederata or ally of Rome andAsculum received the same status but the rest of Picenum was annexed and partiallyRomanised, their cities being made firstcivitas sine suffragio (268 BC) and thencivitas optimo iure (241 BC). The Romans made two more colonies to hold it:Ariminum in 268 andFirmum in 264.[8] Between these years part of the Piceno population was deported: the inhabitants ofOrtona toLake Fucino, some colonies founded inMarsica,Campania, giving them land atPaestum and on the riverSilarus and assisted them to build a city,Picentia.[9] They also placed a garrison atSalernum to monitor them. Strabo reports that in his time (64 BC – c. 24 AD) they had depopulated the city in favour of villages scattered about the Salerno region.[10] InPtolemy's time (2nd century AD) a population named by him the Picentini were still atSalernum andSurentum.[11]
Following the expansion of the Roman Republic in the 2nd century BC to which the Italians had contributed, they asked that Roman citizenship be extended to them but continued to be legally discriminated against.[12] It came to a head when theSocial War (91–87 BC) broke out following an insurrection in the city of Asculum: after having killed the Roman proconsulQuintus Servilius and the legateFonteius, the people of Asculum massacred the entire Roman population of the city.[13][14] Subsequently, the Piceni and the other Italic peoples (except theEtruscans and theUmbrians) joined together and made their own capital,Corfinium. The Piceni were therefore the main inspirers, withPeligni andMarsi, of the whole coalition; the Italian army, divided into two branches, one Sabellic led byQuintus Poppaedius Silo, the other Samnite led byGaius Papius Mutilus,[15] had contingents of numerous peoples while the Piceni were led byGaius Vidacilius[16] andPublius Ventidius Bassus.[17]
The initial phases of the conflict took place in Picenum, between Asculum and Firmum; the Picene commanders defeatedGnaeus Pompeius Strabo nearFalerone (90 BC), forcing him to retreat and find refuge in Firmum, which was besieged. Meanwhile in the summer of the same year the commanderVidacilius rushed to support the Peligni in battle and Ventidius Bassus was sent on a diplomatic mission to the Etruscans and Umbrians to induce them to support the Italian cause; parallel to this, Pompeius Strabo received the support of a Roman contingent, sent to break the siege of the Piceni. The latter thus found themselves having to contend with the Romans on two fronts: the threat was in fact brought both by the besieged inside the city, who could make sorties, and by the troops that had just arrived in Fermo; they were thus defeated, also suffering the loss of the general left to lead the siege, the MarsianTitus Lafrenius.[18]
Picentes were however divided during the War, with some fighting against Rome for the Roman citizenship and others remaining loyal.
With the troops left after thebattle of Firmum, Pompeius Strabo moved towards Asculum, besieging it. Shortly after, the commander Vidacilius went north with the intention of freeing the besieged; however, while managing to break through the enemy lines and enter the city, upon his arrival he did not find his fellow citizens willing to oppose the siege as he had requested; disappointed and indignant by this attitude, Vidacilius took his own life.
In 89 BC an army of Marsi tried to undermine the Roman encirclement of the Piceni capital, but failed; the city finally fell on that year, was razed to the ground and its citizens deprived of all property. The fall of Asculum marked the definitive defeat of the Italians. At the end of the conflict, the Piceni were ascribed to the Fabia tribe, obtaining Roman citizenship[19] and completing the Romanisation process of the Piceno population, which began in the 3rd century BC.

In 27 BC Augustus established a colony at Asculum. The territory inhabited by the Piceniduring the Augustan age was divided between Regio V (Picenum) and Regio VI (Umbria et ager gallicus picenus). It was reunified during the empire ofDiocletian in theFlaminia et Picenum region.
The long period of development of the Picenum civilisation has led to several periods (Picenum I to VI) being used to subdivide the period from the 9th to the 3rd c. BC.
The objects left by the Piceni are rich and strongly characteristic: in sculpture, in figurative art (which shows a remarkable imagination in figures and a tendency towards abstraction), in the originality of the forms of ceramics, in the abundant use of amber, in the great variety of weapons and in eye-catching female adornments.

The birth and spread of the Picene civilisation mark the transition from theBronze Age to theIron Age in the Marche region. In the first phase, the Piceni necropolises and settlements show a gradual passage between these two ages, given the close archaeological links with the previous Bronze Age civilisations widespread in the Marche: theApennine culture and theProto-Villanovan culture. From the point of view of funeral customs, the Picenes are distinguished from previous civilisations by the use of the burial ritual (curled up and on a bed of gravel), but among the elements of continuity with the cultures of the Bronze Age there is the continuation, although in small numbers only, of incineration tombs.
The archaeological evidence of this first phase shows a concentration of the population in the coastal area and in particular in the area of the Conero promontory (Ancona,Numana,Camerano,Osimo) and the short stretch of high coast ofPorto Sant'Elpidio; inside, the settlements ofMonte Roberto and Moie di Pollenza are known. The guiding exhibit is the kothon, a small typically Piceneterracotta vase, with a flattened globular shape, with a narrow mouth and a single handle.[20]

The archaeological evidence bears witness to a diffusion of the Picene civilisation towards the north, up to the northern part of the Marche, where the very richnecropolis of Novilara was found, up to now the only one fully excavated and which has been able to enjoy a complete publication of the results of the excavation. The phase is characterised by a great development ofmetallurgy, also testified by typical Picene objects, such as the spiral armlets in laminate and the solar boat pectorals with wild duckprotomes on the bow and stern, rich in symbolic meanings. In this phase, among other things, the firstiron objects appear: short swords and cutlass. Despite this, bronze swords of the "antenna" type are still produced and used. Some metal objects bear witness to relations with the oppositeAdriatic shore; among these thefibulae with spectacles, subsequently accompanied by a vast range of typologies of fibulae of all sizes, which appear as a characterising element of Picene female ornaments.[21]
The diffusion area of the phase coincides with that of the previous phase: all the Marche; however, a concentration of testimonies can be observed in the area close to the Apennines, characterised by an orientalising culture, that is influenced by theMediterranean East:Egypt, Syria, Asia Minor. In fact, objects from these countries were imported into Picenum through the Greek emporiums of Ankón (Ancona) and Numana.[22] Also characteristic of this phase are the imports of Etruscan objects made in a style similar to the oriental one. Even the Etruscan civilisation, in fact, goes through a similar phase, also called "orientalising".Tumulus tombs and circle burials are typical of this phase, typologies that are influenced by oriental customs; in these tombs the buried are often accompanied by their war chariot. The best known centres of the orientalising Picenum area are located near the Apennine passes and are therefore linked to trade with the Etruscans: Fabriano, Pitino di San Severino, Taverne di Serravalle. The best known finds are theoinochoe made using anostrich egg, the lid with the dance around the totem, thewar chariots. In the Picenum the orientalising period begins around the middle of the 7th century.
Despite the external influences, local art is still flourishing and is characterised by the tendency to synthesise human and animal figures to the point of making them almost abstract; typical examples are the armour-discs decorated with human figures juxtaposed with fantastic animals. Furthermore, in this phase the production of extraordinary ceramics for variety and formal imagination begins. Metallurgy also produces objects of great originality, such asbreastplates decorated with human figures linked together by rings or by holding hands; the best known example is the one from Numana. The fibulae are also produced in the most varied typologies, such as those with a winding bow, adragon with antennas, a ship; another very typical item of women's clothing is the "disc-stole", made with solar symbols.
The Novilara inscriptions and the absorption of the Villanovan culture ofFermo within the Picene culture date back to this period.[23]

The phase is divided by archaeologists into "Picenum IV A" and "Picenum IV B", which are considered here together.
The territory saw a rarefaction of the testimonies to the north of the Esino and a flowering of testimonies in the south of the Marche and in the north of Abruzzo.
Some of the most typical and well-known elements of the Picene civilisation date to this period. In particular they are: the South Picene inscriptions, the monumental statuary of Numana and Capestrano, the extraordinary richness and variety of the female ornamentation of the fibulae, even more than in the previous phase and the enigmatic six-knot rings, which appeared in the early twentieth century as a symbol of the entire Picene civilisation.
The typical material of this period can be considered amber, already attested previously, but with which the best-known objects, coming from Belmonte Picenum, were made in this phase. An amber route has been identified which from the Baltic reached the coasts of Picenum, where the fossil resin was much appreciated, also due to the characteristics that put it in relation with the solar symbology. In the last century, the Piceni were also called "people of amber" because of their love for this material, and their very name was related to the Latin term pix, picis, i.e. amber.
Weapons are now all made of iron, and present a great variety and continuous updating, a rare thing in Italic peoples of the same period; among the offensive weapons of the period we remember the scimitar broadsword of the machaira type and, among those of defense, the typical helmets with reliefs in the shape of animal horns, which however coexist with other helmets of the Greek-Corinthian type. The production of armor-discs continues, but they too are strongly influenced by Greek art in their ornamentation. The inhumation is now fully extended.[24]
From a territorial point of view we note a revitalisation of the Picenum centres north of theEsino; south of this river all the centres already vital in the previous phase continue their activities.
The dominant archaeological feature of this phase is the massive importation of Greekred-figure pottery, which then spread throughout the Picenum territory through the ports of Numana and Ancona. In particular, the complex ofvases from Numana is exceptionally rich, with specimens also monumental[25] and with rich mythological representations.
This abundance can be explained by thinking of the fact that, after the naval battle of Alalia (540 BC), the Etruscans and the Carthaginians managed to prevent the Greeks from trading freely in theTyrrhenian Sea. Thus the Adriatic cities ofNumana,Spina andAdria flourished, which in any case allowed a commercial outlet for the rich Greek vase production. Interestingly, a form of Attic pottery was produced by the Greeks specifically for the Piceni; it is the "plate with a high foot", which some archaeologists think was used to serve a typical Picenum product during banquets:olives.
TheBattle of Sentinum conventionally marks, according to archaeology, the dissolution of the Picene culture, which from then was gradually absorbed within the Roman one.[26] Naturally, even after this date, the history of the Piceni continues, even if its vitality is no longer expressed so much on a cultural (and therefore archaeological) level, as in the important role they played during the Romanisation of the Adriatic coast. This explains the fact that, despite the Picenum phase VI is the last described by the archaeologists, the history of the Picenes continues even after this phase, and is the subject of the following paragraphs.
A fundamental event of the period is the arrival of the Senoni Gauls, who occupied the northern part of the Picenum territory, reaching as far as the Esino river, with temporary or limited expansions even further south. The Senones partially merged with the Piceni of the occupied areas, but profoundly influencing their culture.[27] After the Gallic invasion, the control by the Piceni of the Adriatic coastal area is approximately included between the Castellano torrent, Numana and the Conero.[28] The Picenum territory occupied by the Gauls was later called by the Romans Ager Gallicus or specifically the Ager Gallicus Picenus.
Another event that contributed to modifying the ethnic balance of the Picenum territory was the arrival of Greeks, coming from Syracuse, who founded the colony of Ankón (Ancona) which absorbed the previous Picenum village.[29]
Despite these factors, the Picene culture precisely in this period produced a highly original type of vase, defined by archaeologists as "upper Adriatic ceramics", characterised by female figures seen in profile, so stylised as to recall some forms of modern art.
There is a legend that awoodpecker (Latin:picus) led the way to Picenum for the people who became the Picentini and afolk etymology of their ethnonym was "those of the woodpecker."[30] For this reason the green woodpecker is the modern emblem of the Marche region.
Excavations in Picenum have given much insight into the region during the Iron Age. Excavated tombs in Novilara of the Molaroni and Servici cemeteries show that the Piceni laid bodies in the ground wrapped in garments they had worn in life.[31]
Warriors were buried with a helmet, weapons and vessels for food and drinks. Buried beads, bone, fibulae andamber seem to demonstrate that there was an active trade in the ninth and perhaps tenth centuries on the Adriatic coast, especially in the fields of amber and beads ofglass paste. In women’s graves there is a large abundance of ornaments made of bronze and iron.[32]
Origins of these items may also show that the Piceni may have looked to the south and east for development.[33]
The warrior tombs seem to show that the Piceni were a war-like people. Every man’s grave contained more or less a complete outfit of a warrior, with the most frequent weapon being a spear. Piceni swords appear to be imported from theBalkans.[34]
A 2024 study analysed theAncient DNA of 71 Iron Age Picene individuals from the necropoleis of Novilara and Sirolo-Numana.[2]
Genome analysis showed that the two Picene groups are genetically homogeneous and in continuity with earlier cultures. Moreover, despite an overall genetic similarity among Iron Age Italic populations, the analysis revealed small but significant differences in their genetics. In particular, the Adriatic populations (Picentes andDaunians) display a greater proportion of a genetic component deriving from thePontic–Caspian steppe than the Tyrrhenian populations—theEtruscans and theLatins.[2]
The principal genetic ancestries of the two Picene groups consist of components from the Anatolian Neolithic orEarly European Farmers and fromEastern Hunter-Gatherers (EHG)/Yamnaya (also known asWestern Steppe Herders); together these account for 90 % of their genetic heritage. In addition, despite the overall genetic homogeneity of populations belonging to the Picene culture, some individuals show non-local ancestries. This evidence, together with data for other contemporary peoples, suggests that theIron Age (or the immediately preceding period) was characterised by intense population movements and marked the beginning of a cosmopolitan society in Italy.[2]
Two main paternal haplogroups are observed among the Picenes, namely R1b-M269/L23 (58 % of the total) and J2-M172/M12 (25 % of the total), which may represent direct links withCentral Europe and theBalkan Peninsula.[2]
Finally, phenotype analysis shows that individuals associated with the Picene culture possessed lighter pigmentation than contemporary peoples. A higher frequency of blond hair and blue eyes occurs among the Picenes when compared with the Etruscans, Latins and Daunians.[2]
A 2017 analysis of maternal haplogroups from ancient and modern samples indicated a substantial genetic similarity among the modern inhabitants of Central Italy and the area's ancient pre-Roman inhabitants of settlement of Novilara in the province ofPesaro, and evidence of substantial genetic continuity in the region from pre-Roman times to the present with regard tomitochondrial DNA.[35]
From Ancona southward a language of theUmbrian group was originally spoken, today calledSouth Picene, attested mainly in inscriptions.[36] North of Ancona aroundPesaro a non-Italic language termedNorth Picene, written in a version of theOld Italic script, is attested by four inscriptions (three of which are very brief). Both the meaning of the inscriptions and the relationship of North Picene to other languages remain unknown. There isphonological evidence that it was linked more closely to theIndo-European language family (than to, for example,Etruscan).[37]
Oneendonym of the Picentes, or at least the South Picenes, may bePupeneis or, according toEdward Togo Salmon "something similar", as this apparently ethnic name is used in four South Picenian language inscriptions found nearAscoli Piceno.[38] Later refinements of the argument connected it to the Latin namePoponius, as in inscription TE 1 found nearTeramo:
The connection between Poponian and Picentes, if any, remains obscure.[39]
There is no mention in ancient sources of the endonym used by the North Picenes.
The first document to mention the Latin exonym Picentes is theFasti triumphales, which record for 268/267 BC a triumph given to Publius Sempronius Sophus for a victoryde Peicentibus, "over the Picentes," where the -ei- is anOld Latin form. The entire group of Latin Picene words delivered subsequently appear to follow the standard rules for Latin word formation. The root is Pīc-, provenience and meaning yet unknown. The extended Pīc-ēn- is used to form a second-declension adjective, appearing in such phrases asPīcēnus ager, "Picene country,"Pīcēnae olivae, "Picene olives", and the neuter used as a noun,Pīcēnum. These are not references to any people, *Pīcēni, but to the country. Pīcēnus used alone impliesPīcēnus ager, the "Picene (country)" and does not mean one resident of Picenum. This adjective is never used of the people.
For the people, a third-declension adjective stem is formed: Pīc-ent-, used inPīcens andPīcentes, "a Picentine" and "the Picentines," which are nouns formed from the adjective. This adjective can be used of people or of other words, as well as in a second formation of the name of the country,Pīcentum. From it comes a final name of the people, Pīcentini.[40] The historical order in which these words appeared or whether they came from each other remains unknown.
The Picentini are originally from the Sabine country, a woodpecker having led the way ... and hence their name, for they call this bird 'picus', and consider it sacred toMars
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Four of those found north of the Tronto or near Ascoli Piceno allude to a people called Pupeneis or something similar: could these be the Italic Picentes known to the Romans?