MEDOACUS
MEDOACUS or
MEDUACUS (
Μεδόακος:
Brenta), a river of Northern Italy, in the province of Venetia, falling into the extensive lagunes which border the coast of the Adriatic, in the neighbourhood of the modern
Venice. According to Pliny (
3.16. s. 20), there were two rivers of the name, but no other author mentions more than one, and Livy, a native of the region, mentions the “Meduacus amnis” without any distinctive epithet. (
Liv. 10.2.)
There can be no doubt that this is the river now known as the
Brenta, which is a very considerable stream, rising in the mountains of the
Val Sugana, and flowing near
Padua (Patavium).
A short distance from that city it receives the waters of the
Bacchiglione, which may probably be the other branch of the Medoacus meant by Pliny. Strabo speaks of a port of the same name at its mouth (
Μεδόακος λιμήν, v. p. 213), which served as the port of Patavium.
This must evidently be the same to which Pliny gives the name of Portus Edro, and which was formed by the “Medoaci duo ac Fossa Clodia :” it is in all probability the one now called
Porto di Lido, close to
Venice. The changes which have taken place in the configuration of the lagunes and the channels of the rivers, which are now wholly artificial, render the identification of the ports along this coast very obscure, but Strabo's statement that the Medoacus was navigated for a distance of 250 stadia, from the port at its mouth to Patavium, seems conclusive in favour of the
Porto di Lido, rather than the more distant one of
Chiozza. At the present day the
Brenta flows, as it were, round the lagunes, and enters the sea at
Brondolo, evidently the Portus Brundulus of Pliny (
l.c.) ; while a canal called the
Canale di Brenta, quitting the river of that name at
Dolo, holds a more direct course to the lagunes at
Fusina. This canal may perhaps be the Fossa Clodia of Pliny.
Livy tells us that, in B.C. 301, Cleonymus the Lacedaemonian arrived at the mouth of the Medoacus, and having ascended the
river with some of his lighter vessels, began to ravage the territory of the Patavini, but that people repulsed his attacks,
[p. 2.306]and destroyed a considerable part of his fleet. (
Liv. 10.2.)
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E.H.B]