The Vennones or Vennonetes were a Gallic or Rhaetian tribe dwelling in the northern Alps, between Chur and Lake Constance, during the Iron Age and the Roman era.
They are mentioned as Ouénnà Ânes (ÃÂá½ÂÃÂýýÃÂýõÃÂ) by Strabo (early 1st c. AD), as Vennonenses (<small>var.</small> -') by Pliny (1st c. AD), and as Ouénnà Ânetes (ÃÂá½ÂÃÂýýÃÂýõÃÂõÃÂ) by Ptolemy (2nd c. AD).
The etymology of the name remains obscure. If Celtic, and not Rhaetic, it can be derived from the root '- ('friend'), with a sound shift -n- > -nn- attested in other cases (e.g. Vena / Venna), or else from to '- (< *'-), meaning 'chariot'.
The Vennones dwelled in the northern Alps, between Chur and Lake Constance. Their territory was located north of the Calucones, west of the Estiones, Focunates and Genaunes, south of the Brigantii.
Pliny described the Vennones and Sarunetes as "Rhaetian tribes living near the sources of the river Rhine".
They were subjugated by the Roman forces of Publius Silius Nerva in 16 BC.
The Vennonetes appear as the third tribe in the inscription on the Tropaeum Alpium. In the secondary tradition of the text by Pliny the Elder their position in the list was exchanged with the Venostes and the Vennonetes appear as the fourth tribe.