
thumb|310px|A portion of the map, Gallia, from Butler's 1907 atlas showing the divisions of the diocese of Gaul in the late [[Roman Empire. According to the key, the map depicts 17 Provinciae Galliae, "Provinces of Gaul," of which the 17th, [Provincia] Maxima Sequanorum, "Greater Sequania," identified with an XVII shown in the Jura Mountains, contains the Sequani and Helvetii.]]
thumb|310px|A portion of the map, Gallia, from Butler's 1907 atlas showing the divisions of the diocese of Gaul in the late [[Roman Empire. According to the key, the map depicts 17 Provinciae Galliae, "Provinces of Gaul," of which the 17th, [Provincia] Maxima Sequanorum, "Greater Sequania," identified with an XVII shown in the Jura Mountains, contains the Sequani and Helvetii.]]
310 px|thumb|A map of Gaul in the 1st century BC, showing the locations of the Celtic tribes. The Sequani were a Gallic tribe dwelling in the upper river basin of the Arar river (Saône), the valley of the Doubs and the Jura Mountains during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).