Scallabis (also Scallabi Castrum, Præsidium Iulium, Scallabis Praesidium Iulium or Colonia Scallabis Iulia) was the Ancient Rome name of Santarém, Portugal.
The Romans arrived at this region in 138 BC and settled in the city, then going by the name of Scallabis, and limited to the fortified area currently known as Alcáçova de Santarém.
A latter designation was " Scallabis Praesidium Iulium", given by Julius Caesar in 61 BC, with the installation of a military camp next to the previous fortifications. Most of the citizens were then inscribed in the Sergia gens Roman gens.
The city became one of the most important administrative centers of the Lusitania province in the 1st century AD, as head of a Conventus iuridicus, the Conventus Scallabitanus that included cities such as Olisipo, Seilium and Conímbriga. It was connected by important roads to Olisipo, Bracara Augusta and was the location of a Tagus river crossing.
In 460 Scallabis was conquered by Sunieric (along with Nepotianus and Theodoric II) as part of a campaign against the Suebi. Roman domain ended, with the city becoming part of the Visigoth kingdom.
With the Alans and Vandal invasions, the city became known as "Sancta Irene", the root of the current name "Santarém".
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