The original meaning was swamp or mud-flat. Lutetia was the first name for Paris.
Lutetia was the Latin name for the city known today as Paris.
The Roman town Lutetia was the forerunner of Paris, France.
Lutetia was a pre-Roman Gallic town. The Romans called it Lutetia Parisiorum. This town was the "ancestor" of present-day Paris.
The capital of Gallia is Lutetia.
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 Galic (and later also used by the Romans) name of Paris was Lutetia.
i dont no
Paris
Paris France
I think it's "Loo-tess-iya"
Paris in france
Lutèce (in French)or, Lutetia (in Latin)