Sefes

The Sefes were a people of ancient Iberia said to have lived on the coast of modern day Portugal and Galicia.

In his poem Ora Maritima, the 4th century Roman author Avienus wrote that they were neighbours of the Cynetes, placing them in an upland district of the Ophiussa region (near the mouth of the Tagus) close to an island he named Poetanion and that, along with another tribe called the Cempsi they had taken that territory by force from the previous rulers.[1]

Notes

  1. Avienus, Ora Maritima, 190-199
gollark: Well, I have 5 things you can vaguely consider computers. Everyone is identical to me, of course. And I've met more than 200 people. QED.
gollark: There are more than *1000* computers in the world right now, you know.
gollark: I mean, computers are quite popular.
gollark: They probably *should* learn how to computer at least a bit, but...
gollark: I don't know, scuba diving, car maintenence, electrical engineering, whatever.
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