The 'Carnutes' (
Latin ''Carnuti''), a powerful
Celtic people in the heart of independent
Gaul, dwelled in a particularly extensive territory between the Sequana (
Seine) and the Liger (
Loire) rivers. Their lands later corresponded to the dioceses of Chartres, Orleans and Blois, that is, the greater part of the modern departments of Eure-et-Loir, Loiret, Loir-et-Cher. The territory of the Carnutes had the reputation among Roman observers of being the political and religious center of the Gallic nations. The chief fortified towns were ''Cenabum'' (mistakenly "Genabum"), the modern
Orleans, where a bridge crossed the Loire, and ''Autricum'' (or ''Carnutes,'' thus
Chartres). The great annual
Druidic assembly mentioned by Caesar took place in one or the other of these towns.
Livy's history records the legendary tradition that the Carnutes had been one of the tribes which accompanied
Bellovesus in his invasion of Italy during the reign of
Tarquinius Priscus.

A map of
Gaul in the 1st century BC, showing the relative positions of the Celtic tribes.
In the 1st century BCE, the Carnutes minted coins, usually struck with dies, but sometimes cast in an alloy of high tin content called "potin." Their coinage turns up in hoards well outside their home territories, in some cases so widely distributed in the finds that the place of coinage is not secure. The
iconography of their
numismatics includes the motives of heads with traditional Celtic
torques; a wolf with a star; a galloping horse; the
triskelion. Many coins show an eagle, with the lunar crescent, with a
serpent or with a wheel with six or four spokes or a
pentagrammatic star, or beneath a hand holding a branch with berries,
holly perhaps. The wheel with four spokes forms a cross within a circle, an almost universal image since Neolithic times. Sometimes the circle is a ring of granules. It would be easy to make too much of the symbol as it appears on coinage, but among the Celts, rather than a solar symbol it may represent the cycle of the year divided in its four seasons
[1]. See
Cross.
In the time of Caesar the carnutes were dependents of the
Remi, who on one occasion interceded for them. In the winter of 58 - 57 BCE, Caesar imposed a protectorate over the Carnutes and set up his choice of king, Tasgetius, picked from the ruling clan. Within three years, the Carnutes had assassinated the puppet king. On
February 13, 53 BCE the Carnutes of Cenabum massacred all the Roman merchants stationed in the town as well as one of Caesar's commissariat officers. The uprising was swiftly a general one throughout Gaul, under the leadership of
Vercingetorix. Cenabum was burnt by Caesar, the men put to the sword and women and children sold as slaves, and the booty distributed among his soldiers, an effective way of financing the conquest of Gaul. During the war that followed, the Carnutes were able to send 12,000 fighting men to relieve
Alesia, but shared in the defeat of the Gallic army. Having attacked the
Bituriges Cubi, who appealed to Caesar for assistance, they were forced to submit. Cenabum, however, remained a mass of ruins garrisoned by two Roman legions for years.
After they had been pacified, though not Romanized, under Augustus, the Carnutes, as one of the peoples of
Gallia Lugdunensis, were raised to the rank of ''civitas soda'' or ''
foederati'', retaining their own self-governing institutions, continuing to mint coins, and only bound to render military service to the emperor. Up to the 3rd century Autricum (later Carnutes, whence Chartres) was the capital, but in 275
Aurelian refounded Cenabum ordaining it no longer a vicus but a ''
civitas'' and named it ''Aurelianum'' or ''Aurelianensis urbs'' (thus eventually "Orleans").
See
Livy, v.34;
Julius Caesar, ''Belli Gall.'' v. 25, 29, vii. 8, II, 75, viii. 5, 31 (see under "cenabuns);
Strabo ''Geographia'' iv.2 - 3;
Ptolemy ''Geographia,'' ii.8.
External links
★
Monnayage des Carnutes: detailed illustrations of numismatics
★
Coins minted by the Carnutes, 1st century BCE
★
Histoire de la ville d'Orléans": map of the Carnutes territory (in French)
★ R. Boutrays, ''Urbis gentisque Carnutum historia'' 1624
★ A. Desjardins, ''Géographie historique de la Gaule'', ii, I876 1893