The Sotiates were a Gallic-Aquitani tribe dwelling in the region surrounding the modern town of Sos (Lot-et-Garonne) during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
They were subjugated in 56 BC by the Roman forces of Caesar's legatus P. Licinius Crassus.
mentioned as Sotiates (var. sontiates, sociates) by Caesar (mid-1st c. BC), and as Sottiates by Pliny (1st c. AD). The meaning of the ethnonym Sotiates remains...
Soule/Xüberoa and also Saubusse; the same of Cæsar’s Sibuzates/Sibusates? Sotiates in the north around Sos-en-Albret (south of Lot-et-Garonne department)...
Montségur. Adolphe Garrigou sought to demonstrate the presence of the Sotiates, a mysterious Aquitainian people mentioned in the Gallic Wars, in Ariège...
the border of modern Spain and France. Along the way, he fought off the Sotiates, who attacked while the Romans were marching. Defeating the Vocates and...
civitas Elusa, is named after the tribe. The Elusates dwelled south of the Sotiates, north of the Onobrisates, east of the Tarusates, west of the Lactorates...
territory was located east of the Atlantic Ocean, west of the Oscidates and Sotiates, north of the Tarbelli and Tarusates, and south of the Boii. Their chief...
of the Bituriges Vivisci, west of the Cadurci and Ruteni, north of the Sotiates, Volcae Tectosages and the Ausci, and east the Vasates. Their chief town...