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It may seem straight forward, Ionia is named after Ione, but Ionia is in Asia Minor and in context, he's listing places in Italy

However, lest it appear as though I have left Italy entirely untouched, it seems by no means absurd for me to exert my mind about those things which are less familiar...For who does not know that Janiculum was either named or founded by Janus? That Latium and Saturnia were founded by Saturn, Ardea by Danae, and Polycle by the companions of Hercules? Who does not know that Pompeii was founded in Campania by Hercules himself...Or that Ionia takes its name from Ione, the daughter of Aulochus, whom they say Hercules slew, as she impudently sat down in the road?

I have searched but have been unable to find any information on an Ionia in Italy. I wondered if it could be a mistranslation, and Solinus actually said the Ionian Sea, so I checked the Latin text, but it says

regionem Ionicam ab Ione Aulochi filia

I am unaware of the Latin word "regionem" meaning Sea. Could it be used in that sense, and was probably meant here? Or was there an Ionian region of Italy I can't find information on?

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In 1629, Claude de Saumaise, who also styled himself by a Latinised form of his name, as Claudius Salmasius, wrote a commentary on Solinus's Polyhistor text to which you are referring. He was just as puzzled as you are about this reference to an Ionian region of Italy, and so spends a good chunk of paragraph, dealing with the exact-same selection of text that you have highlighted in an attempt to explain it, in which he starts off by stating, simply, that, "I know of no Ionian region [regionem Ionicam] in Italy."

He then goes on to cite the African writer Martianus Capella "who, when he wrote this passage, changed 'the Ionian region [regionem Ionicam]' into 'the Ionian Sea [mare Ionium]'", apparently having thought along similar lines as yourself regarding possible meaningful solutions to the quandary.

From what de Saumaise goes on to say, however, he clearly thinks it to be a much bigger mistake than this:

Thus he writes: the same also gave Ionia its name, for he killed Ione, daughter of Aulochus, who was blocking the highways like a bandit. It is indeed published here and there in Martianus, he gave the same name to Ionia, but all his written copies read Ionio. Solinus meant something else. Stephanus says that some want it to be called "Ionian" from the Italian Ionius, others from the Illyrian Ionius. Servius says that Ionius was king of the island opposite Illyria. This has nothing to do with the Ionian region.

Moreover, who is this Naulochus whose daughter was Ione, or, as other books call him, Aulochus? In the written books of Martianus Capella it is said Autoclus. It could be Αὕτοκλος, as Οἵνοκλος, Ἄνδροκλος. However, I think it better written as the daughter of Autolycus, the notorious thief known from fables, who had a daughter similar to himself, Ione, impudently obstructing the roads. Ἰόνη was one of the Nereids according to Apollodorus.

Upon the Ionian region, however, still we hesitate. What if Solinus had written Chonica, and chone? The Chonic region, ἡ Χωνικὴ, from the city of Chone in Italy, whence the Chones themselves were called χῶνες. Some make them a people of Oenotria, others separate them from the Oenotrians. Strabo, in Book VI, reports from the opinion of some, that Philoctetes founded a city, Chone, in Italy, from which the people are χῶνες. Aristotle says that they held sway over Iapygia and Ionia. Lycophron calls their country Χωνίαν...

This Chonic region, Solinus says, followed by his authorities, is named after Chone, the daughter of Autolycus. We noted above that the Ionians came to Italy and founded cities according to Lycophron and Strabo, but no one has written that any region was named Ionian by them, nor does Solinus say this. However, it is easy to mistake and turn Chonica into Ionicam, especially for someone unfamiliar with Chonica and trying to make it more recognisable.

That is my own translation of de Saumaise's Latin text, excerpting the portion of his commentary relevant to your question, for the print publication of which, see below.

enter image description here
Abstracted from p. 42 of Vol. 1 of Plinianae Exercitationes in Caii Iulii Solini Polyhistora at the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, obtained via the Münchener DigitalisierungsZentrum (MDZ) Digitale Bibliothek.

As de Saumaise notes, certain versions of the Polyhistor refer to Ione's father as Naulochus, rather than Aulochus, and he has his ingenious ideas, as above, for how to make sense of the otherwise completely obscure Aulochus.

Naulochus, however, is more intelligible to me as quite likely the eponym of the ancient city of the same name on Sicily's northeastern coast, famous for being the scene of a naval battle between Sextus Pompeius and Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa during the Roman civil war in the 30s BC leading up to Octavian (later Augustus Caesar) taking control of the Roman empire.

The Paris 1847 C.L.F. Panckoucke edition of the Polyhistor, which has Ione's father as Naulochus, entitles this section of the text "De Italia" ("About Italy"), so as you observe, indeed this regionem Ionicam contextually should be a place in Italy. De Saumaise's commentary appears to completely dismiss this as a possibility, whence his explanations that boil the matter down to scribal errors or such.

The closest I could arrive at an alternative position on this would be essentially that perhaps what is intended here is the coastline of Italy bounding the Ionian Sea, which is to say the "sole" of Italy's "boot." Calabria, the "toe" of Italy, abuts the corner of Sicily in which the city of Naulochus would have been located. At least two towns in the region, Gioiosa Ionica and Roccella Ionica, bear the idea in their names.

Spadafora Map_
Supposedly ancient Naulochus was somewhere near what is now Spadafora.

The shores on this side of the country are referred to at present day as its costa ionica, "Ionian coast", but I don't know that this would have been a normal way to think of it in ancient times nor whether this would have been equivalent to regionem Ionicam.

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  • I welcome correction of my translation of the Latin
    – Adinkra
    Commented Feb 5, 2023 at 6:49
  • Thank you so much for your well thought out answer with sources, translations and images to boot (heh). You have answered this obscure question as well as anyone ever could.
    – Ben Warner
    Commented Feb 17, 2023 at 6:24
  • LOL! Took me a moment to catch the footwear pun. You're most welcome.
    – Adinkra
    Commented Feb 18, 2023 at 0:23
  • Would you also happen to know where "Polycle" Solinus said the companions of Hercules founded is? The only results I find for it are that very passage. Does anyone know where that city was?
    – Ben Warner
    Commented Jun 19 at 23:09
  • No, I've not encountered that anywhere else; like you, I'm only finding it in this passage. You could ask that as its own Question.
    – Adinkra
    Commented Sep 9 at 2:45

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