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Lutetia was the Latin name for the city known today as Paris.
Paris
The Galic (and later also used by the Romans) name of Paris was Lutetia.
Lutece was the French name of the Gallo-Roman city of Lutetia. Much further on in history, this town became the French city of Paris.
The tribe living there was the Parisii( in Latin). Thus the place became known as Lutetia Parisiorum - Lutetia of the Parisii. There is a general tendency for people to use only the latter half of a two-word place name, and that's what happened here.
Yes. Under Roman rule, this was the name of modern day France.
The name Paris derives from that of its inhabitants, the Gaulish tribe known as the Parisii. The city was called Lutetia (/lutetja/) (more fully, Lutetia Parisiorum, "Lutetia of the Parisii"), during the first- to sixth-century Roman occupation, but during the reign of Julian the Apostate (360-363) the city was renamed Paris.[14]Others consider that the name of the Parisii tribe comes from the Celtic Gallic word parisio meaning "the working people" or "the craftsmen."(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris)
Indirectly, Julius Caesar. The town was called LUTETIA and was occupied by a tribe whose (latinised) name was the PARISII. Caesar therefore called the place LUTETIA PARISIORUM (Lutetia of the Parisii), and down the centuries the first part dropped away.
The original meaning was swamp or mud-flat. Lutetia was the first name for Paris.
After the tribe which was inhabiting the place when the Romans arrived, the Parisii, The town was known to the Romans as Lutetia Parisiorum.
Paris France
The old name of Pris was Lutetia Parisiorum.