Caledonia

E148601

Caledonia is the Latin name used by the Romans for the region roughly corresponding to modern-day Scotland and parts of northern Britain.

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Caledonia canonical 5
New Scotland 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (30)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Latin exonym
historical region
associatedWith Caledonii
Scottish Highlands
surface form: Highlands of Scotland
country Roman Empire
culturalLegacy poetic name for Scotland
used in Scottish literature and song
describedIn Almagest
surface form: Ptolemy's Geographia

Tacitus' Agricola
etymology possibly derived from a pre-Celtic or Celtic root
hasCapital none (region, not a unified state)
historicalStatus never fully conquered by Rome
knownFor forested landscape
mountainous terrain
resistance to Roman rule
languageOfName Latin
locatedIn modern-day Scotland
Northern Britain
surface form: northern Britain
mentionedBy Claudius Ptolemaeus
surface form: Ptolemy

Roman historians
Tacitus
modernEquivalent Scotland
parts of northern England
northOf Antonine Wall
Hadrian's Wall
opposedBy Caledonian tribes
Picts (early period)
surface form: Picts
partOf Roman Britain
timePeriod Roman Antiquity
surface form: Roman era
usedBy ancient Romans

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (6)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Caledonian orogeny namedAfter Caledonia
Colony of Nova Scotia nameMeaning Caledonia
this entity surface form: New Scotland
Britannia borderedBy Caledonia