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Basilicata

Basilicata is a region in the south of Italy, bordering on Campania to the west, Puglia to the east, Calabria to the south, it has one short coastline on the Tyrrhenian Sea and another of the Gulf of Taranto in the Ionian Sea to the south-east. The region covers 9,992 km² and has a 2001 population of 597,768 (pop. density 60) The regional capital is Potenza. The region is divided into two provinces: Potenza and Matera.

The region is as a whole mountainous, the highest point of the southern Apennines being Monte Pollino (7325 ft.). Monte Vulture, in the northwest corner, is an extinct volcano (4365 ft.). The mountainous terrain made communications difficult until modern times, and Basilicata was one of the least developed provinces of Italy.

 
History
In Roman times the district was called Lucania and was administrated together with the district of Bruttii, to the south. The district of Lucania was so called from the people bearing the name Lucani (Lucanians), who invaded the country about the middle of the 5th century BCE, driving the indigenous tribes, known to the Greeks as Oenotrians and Chones, into the mountainous interior. The coasts on both sides were occupied by powerful Greek colonies, part of Magna Graecia.

The Lucanians spoke an Oscan language. Strabo reported that they had a democratic constitution, save in time of war, when a dictator was chosen from among the regular magistrates. The few surviving Oscan inscriptions and coins that survive from the 4th or 3rd century BCE use the Greek alphabet.

After this we find them engaged in hostilities with the Tarentines, and with Alexander, king of Epirus, who was called in by the Tarentine people to their assistance, in 326 BCE, thus providing a precedent for Epirote interference in the affairs of Magna Graecia..

In 298 BCE, Livy records, they made alliance with Rome, and Roman influence was extended by the colonies of Venusia (291 B.C.), Paestum (Greek Posidonia, refounded in 273), and above all Roman Tarentum (refounded in 272). Subsequently, however, the Lucanians suffered by choosing the losing side in the various wars on the peninsula in which Rome took part. They were sometimes in alliance with Rome, but more frequently engaged in hostilities, during the Samnite wars. When Pyrrhus of Epirus landed in Italy, 281 BCE they were among the first to declare in his favor, and after his abrupt departure they were reduced to subjection, in a ten year campaign (272 B.C.). Enmity continued to run deep; they espoused the cause of Hannibal during the Second Punic War (216 BCE), and Lucania was ravaged by both armies during several campaigns. The country never recovered from these disasters, and under the Roman government fell into decay, to which the Social War, in which the Lucanians took part with the Samnites against Rome (90 - 88 B.C.), gave the finishing stroke. In the time of Strabo the Greek cities on the coast had fallen into insignificance, and owing to the decrease of population and cultivation malaria began to obtain the upper hand. The few towns of the interior were of no importance. A large part of the province was given up to pasture, and the mountains were covered with forests, which abounded in wild boars, bears and wolves.

Reference

History based on Encyclopaedia Brittanica, 1911.