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.
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]
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
CelticizedItalic people or a Para-Celtic people.
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.
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]
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
CelticizedItalic people or a Para-Celtic people.